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Watsonella

Watsonella is an extinct genus of mollusc known from early (Terreneuvian) Cambrian strata. It has been hypothesized to be close to the origin of bivalves. It contains a single species, Watsonella crosbyi.

Watsonella
Temporal range: Cambrian Stage 2, c. 530–525 Ma
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca (?)
Genus: Watsonella
Grabau, 1900
Type species
Watsonella crosbyi
Accepted species
Synonyms

The genus is closely related to Anabarella, with which it bears many morphological similarities, including a laminar internal shell microstructure said to connect it with the early bivalves Fordilla and Pojetaia.

Taxonomy edit

Watsonella was described by Amadeus William Grabau in 1900, with the type species Watsonella crosbyi.[1] The type specimen was found in a fossil-filled boulder collected by Thomas Augustus Watson, the assistant of Alexander Graham Bell who received the first-ever telephone call.[2] The genus name honors Watson and the species name honors Professor William Otis Crosby. Grabau initially interpreted Watsonella as a heteropod gastropod similar to the modern genus Carinaria.[1] In 1935, E. S. Cobbold named the genus Heraultia based on specimens from France, with the type species Heraultia varensalensis. He tentatively interpreted it as a notostracan crustacean. He noted "striking" similarity between it and Watsonella, but concluded that it was "impossible to bring them together" without more information on the affinities of Watsonella.[3] Because the name Heraultia had already been used for a genus of fly, in 1976 John Pojeta and Bruce Runnegar proposed the name Heraultipegma as a replacement. Pojeta and Runnegar reinterpreted Heraultipegma and Watsonella as the earliest known rostroconchs.[4] In 1988, Martin Kerber hesitantly synonymized Heraultipegma and Watsonella, and Ed Landing affirmed their synonymy in 1989.[5] In 2001, P. Yu. Parkhaev included Watsonella in Stenothecidae and proposed the subfamily Watsonellinae to include it.[6]

Only one species of Watsonella is recognized as valid, the type species W. crosbyi. The species Heraultia varensalensis, Heraultia sibirica, and Heraultipegma yunnanensis are all considered synonyms of W. crosbyi.[7] Another species, Heraultipegma charaulachica, has been reassigned to the genus Xianfengella.[6]

Description edit

Watsonella was a small, laterally-compressed animal, generally less than 5 millimetres (0.20 in) long.[5] It had a single "pseudobivalved" shell.[5] It is not known with certainty which end of the shell is the front.[8]

The external surface of the shell was ornamented with comarginal growth lines and ribs.[8]

Unlike rostroconchs, Watsonella lacked a pegma, although the curvature of the shell may have served a functionally similar role.[9] Although Pojeta and Runnegar[4] and Landing[5] interpreted a pegma as present, several studies have rejected this interpretation.[9] Li and colleagues interpreted the putative pegma as an artifact of the curvature of the shell.[7]

The shell of Watsonella was probably originally aragonitic in composition.[5] It was composed of two layers with distinct microstructure. The outer layer was composed of regular, tightly-packed prismatic units that were oriented perpendicular to the shell wall. The inner layer was composed of flattened units called lamellae that produced a stepwise texture.[10] Unlike many modern mollusks, the shell was not nacreous.[11]

Paleobiology edit

Watsonella was probably a burrowing animal. Because of the limited flexibility of its hingeless shell, its burrowing ability would have been less efficient than modern burrowing clams.[5]

Evolutionary relationships edit

Anabarella was probably the ancestor of Watsonella.[11] Morphological intermediates linking Anabarella and Watsonella are known.[12] The shell microstructure is very similar between Anabarella, Watsonella, and the early bivalves Fordilla and Pojetaia.[11]

A phylogenetic analysis conducted in 2000 by a team of researchers led by J. G. Carter recovered Watsonella as more closely related to bivalves than rostroconchs.[13]

In 2023, a team of researchers led by Hao Song argued that Watsonella was too early to be a stem-group bivalve, based on molecular clock results that suggested that bivalves and scaphopods diverged from each other approximately 520 million years ago. They suggested that Watsonella should be reinterpreted as stem-group members of Diasoma, the clade uniting bivalves and scaphopods.[14]

Biostratigraphic significance edit

Watsonella has been proposed as an index fossil of the Cambrian, defining a W. crosbyi zone. Notwithstanding the weakness of a first appearance datum as a definition for the base of a period,[15] the species has been proposed as a marker for the base of the presently unratified second stage of the Terreneuvian (i.e. Cambrian Stage 2). However, the species has now been found late in the Fortunian, drawing back its first occurrence.[16] But that said its occurrence in Australia seems to begin rather near the base of Stage 2.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Grabau, Amadeus William (1900). "Palaeontology of the Cambrian Terranes of the Boston Basin". Occasional Papers of the Boston Society of Natural History. 4 (3).
  2. ^ Watson, Thomas A. (1926). Exploring life: the autobiography of Thomas A. Watson.
  3. ^ Cobbold, E.S. (1935). "Lower Cambrian faunas from Hérault, France". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 16 (91): 25–48. doi:10.1080/00222933508655023. ISSN 0374-5481.
  4. ^ a b Pojeta, John; Runnegar, Bruce (1976). "The paleontology of rostroconch mollusks and the early history of the phylum Mollusca". Geological Survey Professional Paper. 968.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Landing, Ed (1989). "Paleoecology and distribution of the Early Cambrian rostroconch Watsonella crosbyi Grabau". Journal of Paleontology. 63 (5): 566–573. doi:10.1017/S0022336000041196. eISSN 1937-2337. ISSN 0022-3360.
  6. ^ a b Parkhaev, P. Yu (2001). "Molluscs and siphonoconchs". The Cambrian biostratigraphy of the Stansbury Basin, South Australia. pp. 133–210. ISBN 5-7846-0095-8.
  7. ^ a b Li, Guoxiang; Zhao, Xin; Gubanov, Alexander; Zhu, Maoyan; Na, Lin (2011-04-24). "Early Cambrian mollusc Watsonella crosbyi: A potential GSSP Index Fossil for the base of the Cambrian Stage 2". Acta Geologica Sinica - English Edition. 85 (2): 309–319. doi:10.1111/j.1755-6724.2011.00400.x. eISSN 1755-6724. ISSN 1000-9515.
  8. ^ a b Guo, Jun-Feng; Li, Guo-Xiang; Qiang, Ya-Qin; Song, Zu-Chen; Zhang, Zhi-Fei; Han, Jian; Wang, Wen-Zhe (2021). "Watsonella crosbyi from the lower Cambrian (Terreneuvian, Stage 2) Yanjiahe Formation in Three Gorges Area, South China". Palaeoworld. 30 (1): 1–19. doi:10.1016/j.palwor.2020.04.006. ISSN 1871-174X.
  9. ^ a b Peel, J.S. (2021-04-11). "Pseudomyona from the Cambrian of North Greenland (Laurentia) and the early evolution of bivalved molluscs". Bulletin of Geosciences: 195–215. doi:10.3140/bull.geosci.1827. eISSN 1802-8225. ISSN 1214-1119.
  10. ^ Kouchinsky, Artem V. (1999). "Shell microstructures of the Early Cambrian Anabarella and Watsonella as new evidence on the origin of the Rostroconchia". Lethaia. 32 (2): 173–180. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1999.tb00537.x. eISSN 1502-3931. ISSN 0024-1164.
  11. ^ a b c Vendrasco, Michael J.; Checa, Antonio G.; Kouchinsky, Artem V. (2011). "Shell microstructure of the early bivalve Pojetaia and the independent origin of nacre within the mollusca". Palaeontology. 54 (4): 825–850. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2011.01056.x. eISSN 1475-4983. ISSN 0031-0239.
  12. ^ Gubanov, Alexander P.; Kouchinsky, Artem V.; Peel, John S. (1999). "The first evolutionary‐adaptive lineage within fossil molluscs". Lethaia. 32 (2): 155–157. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1999.tb00534.x. eISSN 1502-3931. ISSN 0024-1164.
  13. ^ Carter, J. G.; Campbell, D. C.; Campbell, M. R. (2000). "Cladistic perspectives on early bivalve evolution". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 177 (1): 47–79. doi:10.1144/GSL.SP.2000.177.01.04. eISSN 2041-4927. ISSN 0305-8719.
  14. ^ Song, Hao; Wang, Yunan; Shao, Haojing; Li, Zhuoqing; Hu, Pinli; Yap-Chiongco, Meghan K.; Shi, Pu; Zhang, Tao; Li, Cui; Wang, Yiguan; Ma, Peizhen; Vinther, Jakob; Wang, Haiyan; Kocot, Kevin M. (2023-10-03). "Scaphopoda is the sister taxon to Bivalvia: Evidence of ancient incomplete lineage sorting". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 120 (40): –2302361120. doi:10.1073/pnas.2302361120. eISSN 1091-6490. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 10556646.
  15. ^ 1. Landing, E., Geyer, G., Brasier, M.D., and Bowring, S.A. (2013). Cambrian evolutionary radiation: context, correlation, and chronostratigraphy—overcoming deficiencies of the first appearance datum (FAD) concept. Earth-Science Rev. 123, 133–172.
  16. ^ Landing, E., and Kouchinsky, A. V. (2016). Correlation of the Cambrian Evolutionary Radiation: geochronology, evolutionary stasis of earliest Cambrian (Terreneuvian) small shelly fossil (SSF) taxa, and chronostratigraphic significance. Geol. Mag. 153, 750–756.
  17. ^ Jacquet, Sarah M.; Brougham, Thomas; Skovsted, Christian B.; Jago, James B.; Laurie, John R.; Betts, Marissa J.; Topper, Timothy P.; Brock, Glenn A. (2017). "Watsonella crosbyi from the lower Cambrian (Terreneuvian, Stage 2) Normanville Group in South Australia". Geological Magazine. 154 (5): 1088–1104. doi:10.1017/S0016756816000704. eISSN 1469-5081. ISSN 0016-7568.

watsonella, extinct, genus, mollusc, known, from, early, terreneuvian, cambrian, strata, been, hypothesized, close, origin, bivalves, contains, single, species, crosbyi, temporal, range, cambrian, stage, preꞒ, scientific, classification, domain, eukaryota, kin. Watsonella is an extinct genus of mollusc known from early Terreneuvian Cambrian strata It has been hypothesized to be close to the origin of bivalves It contains a single species Watsonella crosbyi WatsonellaTemporal range Cambrian Stage 2 c 530 525 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Mollusca Genus WatsonellaGrabau 1900 Type species Watsonella crosbyiGrabau 1900 Accepted species Watsonella crosbyi Grabau 1900 Synonyms Heraultia Cobbold 1935 Heraultipegma Pojeta and Runnegar 1976 The genus is closely related to Anabarella with which it bears many morphological similarities including a laminar internal shell microstructure said to connect it with the early bivalves Fordilla and Pojetaia Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Paleobiology 4 Evolutionary relationships 5 Biostratigraphic significance 6 ReferencesTaxonomy editWatsonella was described by Amadeus William Grabau in 1900 with the type species Watsonella crosbyi 1 The type specimen was found in a fossil filled boulder collected by Thomas Augustus Watson the assistant of Alexander Graham Bell who received the first ever telephone call 2 The genus name honors Watson and the species name honors Professor William Otis Crosby Grabau initially interpreted Watsonella as a heteropod gastropod similar to the modern genus Carinaria 1 In 1935 E S Cobbold named the genus Heraultia based on specimens from France with the type species Heraultia varensalensis He tentatively interpreted it as a notostracan crustacean He noted striking similarity between it and Watsonella but concluded that it was impossible to bring them together without more information on the affinities of Watsonella 3 Because the name Heraultia had already been used for a genus of fly in 1976 John Pojeta and Bruce Runnegar proposed the name Heraultipegma as a replacement Pojeta and Runnegar reinterpreted Heraultipegma and Watsonella as the earliest known rostroconchs 4 In 1988 Martin Kerber hesitantly synonymized Heraultipegma and Watsonella and Ed Landing affirmed their synonymy in 1989 5 In 2001 P Yu Parkhaev included Watsonella in Stenothecidae and proposed the subfamily Watsonellinae to include it 6 Only one species of Watsonella is recognized as valid the type species W crosbyi The species Heraultia varensalensis Heraultia sibirica and Heraultipegma yunnanensis are all considered synonyms of W crosbyi 7 Another species Heraultipegma charaulachica has been reassigned to the genus Xianfengella 6 Description editWatsonella was a small laterally compressed animal generally less than 5 millimetres 0 20 in long 5 It had a single pseudobivalved shell 5 It is not known with certainty which end of the shell is the front 8 The external surface of the shell was ornamented with comarginal growth lines and ribs 8 Unlike rostroconchs Watsonella lacked a pegma although the curvature of the shell may have served a functionally similar role 9 Although Pojeta and Runnegar 4 and Landing 5 interpreted a pegma as present several studies have rejected this interpretation 9 Li and colleagues interpreted the putative pegma as an artifact of the curvature of the shell 7 The shell of Watsonella was probably originally aragonitic in composition 5 It was composed of two layers with distinct microstructure The outer layer was composed of regular tightly packed prismatic units that were oriented perpendicular to the shell wall The inner layer was composed of flattened units called lamellae that produced a stepwise texture 10 Unlike many modern mollusks the shell was not nacreous 11 Paleobiology editWatsonella was probably a burrowing animal Because of the limited flexibility of its hingeless shell its burrowing ability would have been less efficient than modern burrowing clams 5 Evolutionary relationships editAnabarella was probably the ancestor of Watsonella 11 Morphological intermediates linking Anabarella and Watsonella are known 12 The shell microstructure is very similar between Anabarella Watsonella and the early bivalves Fordilla and Pojetaia 11 A phylogenetic analysis conducted in 2000 by a team of researchers led by J G Carter recovered Watsonella as more closely related to bivalves than rostroconchs 13 In 2023 a team of researchers led by Hao Song argued that Watsonella was too early to be a stem group bivalve based on molecular clock results that suggested that bivalves and scaphopods diverged from each other approximately 520 million years ago They suggested that Watsonella should be reinterpreted as stem group members of Diasoma the clade uniting bivalves and scaphopods 14 Biostratigraphic significance editWatsonella has been proposed as an index fossil of the Cambrian defining a W crosbyi zone Notwithstanding the weakness of a first appearance datum as a definition for the base of a period 15 the species has been proposed as a marker for the base of the presently unratified second stage of the Terreneuvian i e Cambrian Stage 2 However the species has now been found late in the Fortunian drawing back its first occurrence 16 But that said its occurrence in Australia seems to begin rather near the base of Stage 2 17 References edit a b Grabau Amadeus William 1900 Palaeontology of the Cambrian Terranes of the Boston Basin Occasional Papers of the Boston Society of Natural History 4 3 Watson Thomas A 1926 Exploring life the autobiography of Thomas A Watson Cobbold E S 1935 Lower Cambrian faunas from Herault France Annals and Magazine of Natural History 16 91 25 48 doi 10 1080 00222933508655023 ISSN 0374 5481 a b Pojeta John Runnegar Bruce 1976 The paleontology of rostroconch mollusks and the early history of the phylum Mollusca Geological Survey Professional Paper 968 a b c d e f Landing Ed 1989 Paleoecology and distribution of the Early Cambrian rostroconch Watsonella crosbyi Grabau Journal of Paleontology 63 5 566 573 doi 10 1017 S0022336000041196 eISSN 1937 2337 ISSN 0022 3360 a b Parkhaev P Yu 2001 Molluscs and siphonoconchs The Cambrian biostratigraphy of the Stansbury Basin South Australia pp 133 210 ISBN 5 7846 0095 8 a b Li Guoxiang Zhao Xin Gubanov Alexander Zhu Maoyan Na Lin 2011 04 24 Early Cambrian mollusc Watsonella crosbyi A potential GSSP Index Fossil for the base of the Cambrian Stage 2 Acta Geologica Sinica English Edition 85 2 309 319 doi 10 1111 j 1755 6724 2011 00400 x eISSN 1755 6724 ISSN 1000 9515 a b Guo Jun Feng Li Guo Xiang Qiang Ya Qin Song Zu Chen Zhang Zhi Fei Han Jian Wang Wen Zhe 2021 Watsonella crosbyi from the lower Cambrian Terreneuvian Stage 2 Yanjiahe Formation in Three Gorges Area South China Palaeoworld 30 1 1 19 doi 10 1016 j palwor 2020 04 006 ISSN 1871 174X a b Peel J S 2021 04 11 Pseudomyona from the Cambrian of North Greenland Laurentia and the early evolution of bivalved molluscs Bulletin of Geosciences 195 215 doi 10 3140 bull geosci 1827 eISSN 1802 8225 ISSN 1214 1119 Kouchinsky Artem V 1999 Shell microstructures of the Early Cambrian Anabarella and Watsonella as new evidence on the origin of the Rostroconchia Lethaia 32 2 173 180 doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1999 tb00537 x eISSN 1502 3931 ISSN 0024 1164 a b c Vendrasco Michael J Checa Antonio G Kouchinsky Artem V 2011 Shell microstructure of the early bivalve Pojetaia and the independent origin of nacre within the mollusca Palaeontology 54 4 825 850 doi 10 1111 j 1475 4983 2011 01056 x eISSN 1475 4983 ISSN 0031 0239 Gubanov Alexander P Kouchinsky Artem V Peel John S 1999 The first evolutionary adaptive lineage within fossil molluscs Lethaia 32 2 155 157 doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1999 tb00534 x eISSN 1502 3931 ISSN 0024 1164 Carter J G Campbell D C Campbell M R 2000 Cladistic perspectives on early bivalve evolution Geological Society London Special Publications 177 1 47 79 doi 10 1144 GSL SP 2000 177 01 04 eISSN 2041 4927 ISSN 0305 8719 Song Hao Wang Yunan Shao Haojing Li Zhuoqing Hu Pinli Yap Chiongco Meghan K Shi Pu Zhang Tao Li Cui Wang Yiguan Ma Peizhen Vinther Jakob Wang Haiyan Kocot Kevin M 2023 10 03 Scaphopoda is the sister taxon to Bivalvia Evidence of ancient incomplete lineage sorting Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 120 40 2302361120 doi 10 1073 pnas 2302361120 eISSN 1091 6490 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 10556646 1 Landing E Geyer G Brasier M D and Bowring S A 2013 Cambrian evolutionary radiation context correlation and chronostratigraphy overcoming deficiencies of the first appearance datum FAD concept Earth Science Rev 123 133 172 Landing E and Kouchinsky A V 2016 Correlation of the Cambrian Evolutionary Radiation geochronology evolutionary stasis of earliest Cambrian Terreneuvian small shelly fossil SSF taxa and chronostratigraphic significance Geol Mag 153 750 756 Jacquet Sarah M Brougham Thomas Skovsted Christian B Jago James B Laurie John R Betts Marissa J Topper Timothy P Brock Glenn A 2017 Watsonella crosbyi from the lower Cambrian Terreneuvian Stage 2 Normanville Group in South Australia Geological Magazine 154 5 1088 1104 doi 10 1017 S0016756816000704 eISSN 1469 5081 ISSN 0016 7568 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Watsonella amp oldid 1215450089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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