Welcome to protocols.io

Discover free, up-to-date science protocols and related content in your field of interest

Articles on protocols.io?

You can create a library of articles and start getting recommendations on newly published research. We are also working on connecting PubMed articles to their related protocols.
Create free account
Jul 03, 2015
Nature

Hallucigenia's head and the pharyngeal armature of early ecdysozoans.


Abstract: The molecularly defined clade Ecdysozoa comprises the panarthropods (Euarthropoda, Onychophora and Tardigrada) and the cycloneuralian worms (Nematoda, Nematomorpha, Priapulida, Loricifera and Kinorhyncha). These disparate phyla are united by their means of moulting, but otherwise share few morphological characters--none of which has a meaningful fossilization potential. As such, the early evolutionary history of the group as a whole is largely uncharted. Here we redescribe the 508-million-year-old stem-group onychophoran Hallucigenia sparsa from the mid-Cambrian Burgess Shale. We document an elongate head with a pair of simple eyes, a terminal buccal chamber containing a radial array of sclerotized elements, and a differentiated foregut that is lined with acicular teeth. The radial elements and pharyngeal teeth resemble the sclerotized circumoral elements and pharyngeal teeth expressed in tardigrades, stem-group euarthropods and cycloneuralian worms. Phylogenetic results indicate that equivalent structures characterized the ancestral panarthropod and, seemingly, the ancestral ecdysozoan, demonstrating the deep homology of panarthropod and cycloneuralian mouthparts, and providing an anatomical synapomorphy for the ecdysozoan supergroup.

Build your library and get recommendations of recently-published articles.

Welcome to protocols.io

Discover free, up-to-date science protocols and related content in your field of interest

Articles on protocols.io?

You can create a library of articles and start getting recommendations on newly published research. We are also working on connecting PubMed articles to their related protocols.
Create free account

What researchers are saying

Kelsey Wood
« I’ve been really impressed: nearly every article it has recommended has been relevant to my research. »
Kelsey Wood Student, UC Davis. 457 articles in library
Jonathan Eisen
« The recommendations are spot on. » Read more
Jonathan Eisen Professor, UC Davis. 6,381 articles in library
Wendy Ingram
« I'm loving the protocols.io recommendations! With a diverse set of research interests (protein evolution, behavioral neuroscience, infectious disease) it's a pain to have multiple searches going through Pubmed and often returning more than 50% irrelevant hits. I'm not sure how protocols.io does it but almost all of their recommendations are pertinent to my unusual array of research topics. »
Wendy Ingram Postdoc, Geisinger Health System. 626 articles in library
Fred Winston
« I am getting relevant recommendations. In fact I'm getting some that I'm not getting through either my Pubmed or Pubcrawler recommendations. »
Fred Winston Professor, UC Davis. 947 articles in library
Recommendations are generated by PubChase engine

Articles on protocols.io?

You can create a library of articles and start getting recommendations on newly published research. We are also working on connecting PubMed articles to their related protocols.
Create free account