2023
DOI: 10.1017/s0016756822001261
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Malformed individuals of the trilobiteEstaingia bilobatafrom the Cambrian Emu Bay Shale and their palaeobiological implications

Abstract: Malformed trilobite specimens present important insight into understanding how this extinct arthropod group recovered from developmental or moulting malfunctions, pathologies, and injuries. Previously documented examples of malformed trilobite specimens are often considered in isolation, with few studies reporting on multiple malformations in the same species. Here we report malformed specimens of the ellipsocephaloid trilobite Estaingia bilobata from the Emu Bay Shale Konservat-Lagerstätte (Cambrian Series 2,… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…A similar scenario has been suggested for arthropod molt remains from the Burgess Shale ( 83 ). The arthropod W. barbarahardyae may have visited the benthos to feed on E. bilobata —as shown by cololites ( 84 , 85 )—and swimming individuals of the vetulicolian N. aldridgei appear to have been occasionally swept up by sediment gravity flows that buried them in silt and fine sand ( 14 , 86 ). This suggests that both W. barbarahardyae and N. aldridgei may have spent time near the seafloor, either on the delta front or on the prodelta during times when oxygen levels were favorable.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar scenario has been suggested for arthropod molt remains from the Burgess Shale ( 83 ). The arthropod W. barbarahardyae may have visited the benthos to feed on E. bilobata —as shown by cololites ( 84 , 85 )—and swimming individuals of the vetulicolian N. aldridgei appear to have been occasionally swept up by sediment gravity flows that buried them in silt and fine sand ( 14 , 86 ). This suggests that both W. barbarahardyae and N. aldridgei may have spent time near the seafloor, either on the delta front or on the prodelta during times when oxygen levels were favorable.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Documentation of injured specimens housed in other collections will expand this preliminary sample and permit the left–right behavioural asymmetry hypothesis to be re-addressed ( Babcock & Robison, 1989 ; Babcock, 1993 ). Recent examination of injury patterns in Cambrian trilobites have demonstrated little evidence for injury asymmetry ( Pates & Bicknell, 2019 ; Bicknell et al, 2022a ; Bicknell et al, 2023a ). However, with 80% of Ogygo.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…klotzi unilateral injuries being right sided, this injury distribution may indeed reflect a population-level pattern ( Table 2 ). Illustrating this condition with a statistical dataset of one species (following Pates et al, 2017 ; Bicknell, Paterson & Hopkins, 2019 ; Bicknell et al, 2022a ; Bicknell et al, 2023a ; Pates & Bicknell, 2019 ) will uncover interesting injury patterns and represents a clear direction for exploring this topic further.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Interestingly, teratological expression of segment articulation, where trunk segments remained partially fused to each other and were thus unable to flex during enrolment, was found only in adult morphotypes of A. koninckii , and was strikingly common at approximately 10% of specimens. This is of particular interest, because such thoracic articulation teratologies are generally rare in trilobites [ 13 ], probably due to their inherent interference with movement and protective behaviours like enrolment, leading to the premature death of affected individuals. It seems that the different enrolment style in A. koninckii individuals with more trunk segments may have been resistant to this articulation teratology, or indeed the (large) adults themselves were less likely to be predated, reducing the need for perfect enrolment and causing this teratology to be less strongly selected against.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%