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Historical Biology
An International Journal of Paleobiology
Volume 15, 2001 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Diversification of the Metazoa: Ediacarans, colonies, and the origin of eumetazoan complexity by nested modularity

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Pages 193-218 | Received 14 Jan 2001, Accepted 16 Apr 2001, Published online: 10 Jan 2009
 

Abstract

The Ediacaran biota is profoundly mysterious. There is a growing realization that these organisms should not be grouped in a single taxon, such as Petalonamae or Vendobionta, but debate continues on what the group as a whole represents. It is argued here that the Ediacarans constitute a broad, megascopic, paraphyletic grade of organization which overlaps the stem groups (and perhaps some crown groups) of the Porifera, Ctenophora, Cnidaria and Bilateria.

The modular organization of many Ediacarans suggests that they were fundamentally colonial organisms. The early disc‐shaped forms may have been solitary individuals, perhaps with a choanoflagellate or simple sponge‐like grade of organization; the modular forms may represent bud colonies of those entities. The more complex fronds, as well as other segmented and bilaterally symmetrical Ediacarans, seem to exhibit a trend toward higher levels of integration and individuation. This trend is comparable to those observed among more recent colonial organisms. Interpretation of modular Ediacarans as colonial organisms leads to a new perspective on the evolution of metazoans. It suggests that the earliest solitary Ediacarans furnished a framework for the development of cell and tissue specialization, including the formation of epithelia and complex connective tissues. Later colonial forms provided a mechanism to increase nested or hierarchical complexity, through duplication, integration, and individuation. Early acquisition of complexity had a profound impact on the subsequent evolution of metazoan body plans.

The Ediacarans seem to have evolved the range of colonial forms required to give rise to the radiation of complex bilaterians in the Cambrian. If this is true, it obviates the need to postulate the existence of the microscopic, acoelomate ancestors of basal metazoan taxa that are required by prevailing hypotheses bearing on the early evolution of the Metazoa.

Notes

Corresponding author. E‐mail: [email protected].

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