Decades of ROM discoveries and research has culminated in the naming of a new fossil species that belongs in a mysterious group of predatory marine invertebrates that are still alive today, called arrow worms. Capinatator praetermissus, which literally means, “a swimming and grasping animal which remained overlooked for a long time,” comes from the famous 508 million year old Burgess Shale site in British Columbia.
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| Illustration of Capinatator praetermissus [Credit: Marianne Collins, © Royal Ontario Museum] |
The arrow worms are a rather enigmatic phylum of marine invertebrates. Formally known as chaetognaths, which means “bristle jaws,” because of the conspicuous claws around their mouths, these arrow-shaped animals have translucent bodies that make them difficult to spot even under the best of circumstances. Their sharp claws are almost as long as their heads, and can splay apart astoundingly fast, projecting forward and closing in on anything unlucky enough to be within striking distance. It is very fortunate for us that chaetognaths are so tiny. These animals grow to only a few millimeters in length, so they cannot do us, or other larger animals, any harm.
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| Capinatator praetermissus fossil. Specimen from the Walcott Quarry, Burgess Shale (Yoho National Park, BC) [Credit: JB Caron, © Royal Ontario Museum] |
There are around 120 species of chaetognaths known today, but the evolutionary relationships among them, and especially in relation to other animals, remain poorly understood. Unfortunately, the fossil record of chaetognaths is also very poor because their bodies are mostly composed of water, so, most of the time, only their hooks, if anything, are preserved. This low level of preservation makes it even more remarkable that a collection of about 50 arrow worms dating back to the Cambrian period have been fossilized in good enough condition to be described scientifically.
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| Illustration of Capinatator showing body morphology along different angles [Credit: Marianne Collins, © Royal Ontario Museum] |
These newly described fossils tell us that Cambrian chaetognaths were very large and probably lived close to the ocean floor because their bodies were occasionally trapped into mudflow deposits with other benthic organisms. The miniaturization and planktonic lifestyle we see in most chaetognaths today may have evolved later.
Although the first ROM chaetognaths were collected in 1983, only now are we able to describe this animal formally. It is not a straightforward process to go from flattened fossils like these chaetognaths from the Burgess Shale to 3D representations of what the animals might have looked like in life: we needed to compare many specimens buried at different angles to give us an idea of the animal’s entire anatomy. With every new specimen discovered, our understanding grew. Photographic and analytical techniques also improved in recent years, which made interpreting the fossils much easier.
My colleague, Derek Briggs from Yale University, had started working on the first specimens in 1983—specimens discovered by my predecessor, Dr. Desmond Collins. A few years ago, Dr. Briggs and I decided that the time was ripe to finally publish the important ROM findings that we had been building on for years. The name we gave to the Burgess Shale fossil chaetognath species, Capinatator praetermissus, partially acknowledges the time that it took to finally publish our description of the animal.
The genus name, Capinatator, means grasping and swimming, and the species name, praetermissus, means overlooked. The origin of modern biodiversity can be traced to the Cambrian period, so adding a description of a new animal representing an entire phylum—the Chaetognatha—is particularly significant for our understanding of evolutionary biology.
Author: Jean-Bernard Caron | Source: Royal Ontario Museum [August 03, 2017]








