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Letters to Nature
Nature 402, 518-522 (2 December 1999) | doi:10.1038/990080; Received 10 June 1999; Accepted 24 September 1999
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An early Cambrian craniate-like chordate
Jun-Yuan Chen1, Di-Ying Huang1 & Chia-Wei Li2
- Nanjing Institute of Palaeontology and Geology, Nanjing 210008, China
- Department of Life Science, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan, China
Correspondence to: Jun-Yuan Chen1 Correspondence and requests for material should be addressed to C.J.Y. (e-mail: Email: chenjy@jlonline.com). All the fossil material has been deposited at the Early Life Research Center, Jinning.
Abstract
Since the identification of the Lower Cambrian Yunnanozoon as a chordate in 1995 (ref. 1), large numbers of complete specimens of soft-bodied chordates from the Lower Cambrian Maotianshan Shale in central Yunnan (southern China) have been recovered. Here we describe a recently discovered craniate-like chordate, Haikouella lanceolata, from 305 fossil specimens in Haikou near Kunming. This 530 million-year-old (Myr) fish-like animal resembles the contemporaneous Yunnanozoon from the Chengjiang fauna (about 35 km southeast of Haikou) in several anatomic features. But Haikouella also has several additional anatomic features: a heart, ventral and dorsal aorta, an anterior branchial arterial, gill filaments, a caudal projection, a neural cord with a relatively large brain, a head with possible lateral eyes, and a ventrally situated buccal cavity with short tentacles. These findings indicate that Haikouella probably represents a very early craniate-like chordate that lived near the beginning of the Cambrian period during the main burst of the Cambrian explosion. These findings will add to the debate on the evolutionary transition from invertebrate to vertebrate2.
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