“…Term acritarchs, which was applied to such organisms in referring to their uncertain origins, is now somewhat misleading because many of these microfossils have been progressively allocated to specific groupings, mainly eukaryotic phytoplankton (Tappan, 1980;Moczydłowska, 1991Moczydłowska, , 2011Colbath and Grenfell, 1995;Arouri et al, 1999Arouri et al, , 2000Talyzina and Moczydłowska, 2000;Wicander, 2002;Grey, 2005;Traverse, 2007;Molyneux, 2009;Kaźmierczak and Kremer, 2009;Moczydłowska et al, 2011). There are exceptions, such as microfossil Tianzhushania identified as a metazoan embryo (Xiao et al, 1998;Yin et al, 2004Yin et al, , 2007 or a holozoan protist (Huldtgren et al, 2011;Bengtson et al, 2012), and "Tappania" from the Wynniatt Formation as a fungus (Butterfield, 2005(Butterfield, , 2009Javaux 2007). Some unidentified Ediacaran taxa, together with Alicesphaeridium and Gyalosphaeridium, were claimed to be potential diapause egg cysts (Cohen et al, 2009), based on morphology but lacking the evidence of cell division (Moczydłowska et al, 2011).…”