Publications by authors named "Daniel Goujet"

Placoderms are considered as the first jawed vertebrates and constitute a paraphyletic group in the stem-gnathostome grade. The acanthothoracid placoderms are among the phylogenetically most basal and morphologically primitive gnathostomes, but their neurocranial anatomy is poorly understood. Here we present a near-complete three-dimensional skull of Romundina stellina, a small Early Devonian acanthothoracid from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, scanned with propagation phase contrast microtomography at a 7.

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Extant vertebrates form two clades, the jawless Cyclostomata (lampreys and hagfishes) and the jawed Gnathostomata (all other vertebrates), with contrasting facial architectures. These arise during development from just a few key differences in the growth patterns of the cranial primordia: notably, the nasal sacs and hypophysis originate from a single placode in cyclostomes but from separate placodes in gnathostomes, and infraoptic ectomesenchyme migrates forward either side of the single placode in cyclostomes but between the placodes in gnathostomes. Fossil stem gnathostomes preserve cranial anatomies rich in landmarks that provide proxies for developmental processes and allow the transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates to be broken down into evolutionary steps.

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Article Synopsis
  • The planet has approximately 1.9 million described species, with around 17,000 new ones identified each year, primarily from tropical regions, despite a crisis in taxonomy due to lack of manpower and funding.
  • Contrary to common belief, well-studied areas like Europe are also key sources of undiscovered species, with over 770 new multicellular species named annually since the 1950s, contributing to the known 125,000 species in the region.
  • Notably, over 60% of these new species are identified by non-professional taxonomists, highlighting the need for better support for amateur contributions to biodiversity research, especially in light of the ongoing Taxonomic Impediment.
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