A long-headed Cambrian soft-bodied vertebrate from the American Great Basin region.
Rudy Lerosey-AubrilJavier Ortega HernándezPublished in: Royal Society open science (2024)
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 Myllokunmingia and Yunnanozoon from the Stage 3 of South China, and Emmonsaspis and Metaspriggina 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. Found in the Drumian Marjum Formation of Utah, Nuucichthys rhynchocephalus gen. et sp. nov. is characterized by a finless torpedo-shaped body that includes a snout-like anterior head bearing anterolateral eyes, approximately 25 thick myomeres, a large branchial chamber with a keel and approximately seven putative dorsal bars and a spiniform caudal process. Using Bayesian inference, our analysis recovers Nuucichthys within the vertebrate stem, closer to the crown than Pikaia , Yunnanozoon and Myllokunmingia , where it forms a polytomy with its Laurentian relatives, Emmonsaspis and Metaspriggina , and a scion consisting of conodonts and crown-group vertebrates. Based on the eye orientation and absence of fins , we tentatively reconstruct Nuucichthys as a pelagic organism with limited swimming abilities (planktonektic).