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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() LethaiaVolume 40 Issue 2, Pages 161 - 173 Published Online: 8 Apr 2007 Journal compilation © 2010 The Lethaia Foundation
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 824K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The nature and significance of the appendages of Opabinia from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale Copyright © 2007 The Authors, Journal compilation © 2007 The Lethaia Foundation KEYWORDS Arthropod • biramous limb • elemental mapping • lobopod • midgut gland Zhang, X.-L. & Briggs, D.E.G. 2007: The nature and significance of the appendages of Opabinia from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale. Lethaia, Vol. 40, pp. 161–173. ABSTRACTOpabinia regalis has long been regarded as a curious animal, with its five eyes, its long flexible anterior process, and gill lamellae carried on the outside of overlapping lateral lobes. More recently, Opabinia has been reconstructed with lobopod limbs lying adaxial but separate from the lateral lobes. This version of Opabinia represented a lobopod–arthropod transition and prompted a hypothesis for the origin of the biramous limb that involved uniting the lobopod limb with a lateral lobe. New evidence of elemental maps is consistent with previous interpretations of the triangular structures in Opabinia as lateral extensions of the gut; there is no convincing evidence for the presence of lobopod limbs. Re-examination of critical specimens reveals that the gill lamellae are not on the outside of the lateral lobes. The limbs of Opabinia resemble the phyllopodous exopod of arthropods; the posterior margin is fringed with blades. Opabinia remains on the stem of euarthropods but not as a part of a paraphyletic Lobopodia. The Lobopodia is a clade of Cambrian armoured lobopods and onychophorans. A new hypothesis for the origin of the arthropod biramous limb from an exopod like that in Opabinia is presented, which involves an endite-bearing phyllopodous limb as an intermediate stage. Received 4th September 2006, revised 6th December 2006. |