Publications by authors named "Javier Ortega Hernandez"

Background: Panarthropods, a major group of invertebrate animals comprised of arthropods, onychophorans, and tardigrades, are the only limb-bearing members of Ecdysozoa. The complexity and versatility of panarthropod paired limbs has prompted great interest in their development to better understand the formation of these structures and the genes involved in this process. However, studies of limb patterning and development are overwhelmingly focused on arthropods, followed by select work on onychophorans but almost entirely lacking for tardigrades.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Modern poriferans are divided into four classes based on spicule structure, but classifying fossil specimens is complicated due to their varied forms and structures.
  • Fossils from early periods, notably those from the Cambrian and Ordovician, show features—like hexactine spicules—that don't fit neatly into current classifications of modern sponges.
  • A newly identified poriferan from the Drumian Marjum Formation in Utah displays unique anatomical features, suggesting that the body plan of hexactinellids may have originated much earlier than previously thought, shedding light on the evolution of early glass sponges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tardigrades are a diverse phylum of microscopic invertebrates widely known for their extreme survival capabilities. Molecular clocks suggest that tardigrades diverged from other panarthropods before the Cambrian, but their fossil record is extremely sparse. Only the fossil tardigrades Milnesium swolenskyi (Late Cretaceous) and Paradoryphoribius chronocaribbeus (Miocene) have resolved taxonomic positions, restricting the availability of calibration points for estimating for the origin of this phylum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The fossil record suggests that chordates might have been minor components of marine ecosystems during the first major diversification of animal life in the Cambrian. Vertebrates are represented by a handful of rare soft-bodied stem-lineage taxa known from Konservat-Lagerstätten, including and from the Stage 3 of South China, and and from Stage 4-Drumian deposits of northeast USA and British Columbia. Here, we describe the first soft-bodied vertebrate from the American Great Basin, a region home to a dozen Cambrian Konservat-Lagerstätten.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Trilobites were diverse and abundant euarthropods in the Paleozoic Era, but our detailed understanding of their anatomy is mainly from exceptional fossil sites like the Walcott-Rust Quarry in New York.
  • The quarry provides well-preserved trilobite fossils that help clarify the anatomy of two common species, Ceraurus pleurexanthemus and Flexicalymene senaria, although there have been disagreements about their features due to past preparation methods.
  • The similarities in the fossilized appendages of C. pleurexanthemus and a related species from Morocco suggest that certain body structures persisted through millions of years, hinting at evolutionary patterns linked to locomotion and feeding adaptations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Scalidophoran worms were common in early and middle Cambrian fossil deposits and show similarities to modern priapulids, particularly in their tube-dwelling habits.
  • New findings from the Lower Ordovician Fezouata Shale in Morocco indicate that these worms survived beyond the Cambrian, extending their existence by 25 million years and linking Cambrian and Ordovician marine life.
  • The tube structure of these worms remained largely unchanged for over 40 million years, suggesting a significant level of morphological stability during the Early Paleozoic era.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ability to enrol for protection is an effective defensive strategy that has convergently evolved multiple times in disparate animal groups ranging from euarthropods to mammals. Enrolment is a staple habit of trilobites, and their biomineralized dorsal exoskeleton offered a versatile substrate for the evolution of interlocking devices. However, it is unknown whether trilobites also featured ventral adaptations for enrolment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For much of terrestrial biodiversity, the evolutionary pathways of adaptation from marine ancestors are poorly understood and have usually been viewed as a binary trait. True crabs, the decapod crustacean infraorder Brachyura, comprise over 7600 species representing a striking diversity of morphology and ecology, including repeated adaptation to non-marine habitats. Here, we reconstruct the evolutionary history of Brachyura using new and published sequences of 10 genes for 344 tips spanning 88 of 109 brachyuran families.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Evidence of interspecific interactions in fossils is rare but provides important clues about ancient ecosystems, mainly found in Cambrian sites.
  • A newly discovered fossil from the Lower Fezouata Shale in Morocco reveals an orthocone cephalopod covered with pterobranch hemichordates, showcasing a unique cross-phylum interaction.
  • The findings suggest that the scarcity of Paleozoic rhabdopleurid epibionts was likely due to their need for hard surfaces to settle on, while also indicating a long-standing evolutionary relationship between pterobranchs and mollusks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Large igneous provinces (LIPs) are major magmatic events that have a significant impact on the global environment and the biosphere, for example as triggers of mass extinctions. LIPs provide an excellent sedimentological and geochemical record of short but intense periods of geological activity in the past, but their contribution towards understanding ancient life is much more restricted due to the destructive nature of their igneous origin. Here, we provide the first paleontological evidence for organic walled microfossils extracted from wet peperites from the Early Cretaceous Paraná-Etendeka intertrappean deposits of the Paraná basin in Brazil.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tunicates are an evolutionarily significant subphylum of marine chordates, with their phylogenetic position as the sister-group to Vertebrata making them key to unraveling our own deep time origin. Tunicates greatly vary with regards to morphology, ecology, and life cycle, but little is known about the early evolution of the group, e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Early euarthropod evolution involved a major transition from lobopodian-like taxa to organisms featuring a segmented, well-sclerotized trunk (arthrodization) and limbs (arthropodization). However, the precise origin of a completely arthrodized trunk and arthropodized ventral biramous appendages remain controversial, as well as the early onset of anterior-posterior limb differentiation in stem-group euarthropods. New fossil material and micro-computed tomography inform the detailed morphology of the arthropodized biramous appendages in the carapace-bearing euarthropod from the early Cambrian Chengjiang biota.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Fezouata Biota (Morocco) is a unique Early Ordovician fossil assemblage. The discovery of this biota revolutionized our understanding of Earth's early animal diversifications-the Cambrian Explosion and the Ordovician Radiation-by suggesting an evolutionary continuum between both events. Herein, we describe Taichoute, a new fossil locality from the Fezouata Shale.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The artiopodans represent a diverse group of euarthropods with a typically flattened dorsal exoskeleton that covers numerous pairs of biramous ventral appendages, and which are ubiquitous faunal components of the 518-million-year-old Chengjiang Lagerstätte in South China. Despite their abundance, several Chengjiang artiopodans remain poorly known, such as the large euarthropoda Hou, Chen & Lu, 1989, which is distinguished by the presence of mesh-like ornamentation on its dorsal exoskeleton. Although only a few ventral details were described in a single study in 25 years, it has been frequently featured in phylogenetic analyses that explore the relationships between Cambrian euarthropods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Calcium carbonate (CaCO) biomineralizing organisms have played major roles in the history of life and the global carbon cycle during the past 541 Ma. Both marine diversification and mass extinctions reflect physiological responses to environmental changes through time. An integrated understanding of carbonate biomineralization is necessary to illuminate this evolutionary record and to understand how modern organisms will respond to 21st century global change.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Once considered 'weird wonders' of the Cambrian, the emblematic Burgess Shale animals and are now recognized as lower stem-group euarthropods and have provided crucial data for constraining the polarity of key morphological characters in the group. and its relatives (radiodonts) had worldwide distribution and survived until at least the Devonian. However, despite intense study, remains the only formally described opabiniid to date.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Cambrian Stage 3 Chengjiang biota in South China is one of the most influential Konservat-Lagerstätten worldwide thanks to the fossilization of diverse non-biomineralizing organisms through pyritization. Despite their contributions to understanding the evolution of early animals, several Chengjiang species remain poorly known owing to their scarcity and/or incomplete preservation. Here, we use micro-computed tomography to reveal in detail the ventral appendage organization of the enigmatic non-trilobite artiopod -one of the rarest euarthropods in Chengjiang-and explore its functional ecology and broader evolutionary significance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent years have witnessed a steady increase in reports of fossilized nervous tissues among Cambrian total-group euarthropods, which allow reconstructing the early evolutionary history of these animals. Here, we describe the central nervous system of the stem-group chelicerate Mollisonia symmetrica from the mid-Cambrian Burgess Shale. The fossilized neurological anatomy of M.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Stem-group euarthropods are important for understanding the early evolutionary and ecological history of the most species-rich animal phylum on Earth. Of particular interest are fossil taxa that occupy a phylogenetic position immediately crownwards of radiodonts, for this part of the euarthropod tree is associated with the appearance of several morphological features that characterize extant members of the group. Here, we report two new euarthropods from the Cambrian Stage 4 Guanshan Biota of South China.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A recent study indicates that developmental gene expression hints at a hidden division in the front part of the brain of euarthropods.* -
  • Researchers analyzed exceptionally well-preserved fossils from China that are around 500 million years old.* -
  • The findings support the idea that the anterior brain evolved in two parts among Cambrian-era species.*
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Tardigrades are unique, microscopic invertebrates known for their resilience to extreme conditions, but their fossil record is limited.
  • Molecular studies suggest they diverged from other related species before the Cambrian period, with only two confirmed fossils from the Cretaceous found in North America.
  • This report introduces a new Miocene fossil tardigrade from Dominican amber, marking it as the first from the Cenozoic era and highlighting the rarity of such finds due to specific conditions for fossil preservation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ctenophores are a group of predatory macroinvertebrates whose controversial phylogenetic position has prompted several competing hypotheses regarding the evolution of animal organ systems. Although ctenophores date back at least to the Cambrian, they have a poor fossil record due to their gelatinous bodies. Here, we describe two ctenophore species from the Cambrian of Utah, which illuminate the early evolution of nervous and sensory features in the phylum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Furongian period represents an important gap in the fossil record of most groups of non-biomineralizing organisms, owing to a scarcity of Konservat-Lagerstätten of that age. The most significant of these deposits, the Jiangshanian strata of the Sandu Formation near Guole Township (Guangxi, South China), have yielded a moderately abundant, but taxonomically diverse soft-bodied fossil assemblage, which provides rare insights into the evolution of marine life at that time. In this contribution, we report the first discovery of a radiodont fossil from the Guole Konservat-Lagerstätte.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Radiodonts have long been known from Cambrian deposits preserving non-biomineralizing organisms. In Utah, the presence of these panarthropods in the Spence and Wheeler (House Range and Drum Mountains) biotas is now well-documented. Conversely, radiodont occurrences in the Marjum Formation have remained scarce.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF