Scientists
discover unusual 500
million year old tulip creature in
Canadian Rockies


TMTVNEWS.COM --- A bizarre creature that lived in the ocean
more than 500
million years ago
has emerged from the
famous Middle
Cambrian Burgess
Shale in the
Canadian Rockies.
Officially named Siphusauctum gregarium, fossils
reveal a
tulip-shaped
creature that is
about the length of
a paperback
novel (20 cm) and
with a unique feeder
system.
Siphusauctum
has a long stem,
with a calyx – a
bulbous cup-like
structure – near the
top which encloses
an unusual filter
feeding system and a
gut. The animal is
thought to have fed
by filtering
particles from water
actively pumped into
its calyx through
small holes. The
stem ends with a
small disc which
anchored the animal
to the seafloor.
Siphusauctum
lived in large
clusters, as
indicated by slabs
containing over 65
individual
specimens.
Lorna O’Brien, a PhD candidate in the Department of Ecology
and Evolutionary
Biology at the
University of
Toronto and her
supervisor
Jean-Bernard Caron,
curator of
invertebrate
palaeontology at the
Royal Ontario
Museum, report on
the discovery on
January 18 in the
online science
journal PLoS ONE.
“Most interesting is that its feeding system appears to be
unique among
animals. Recent
advances have linked
many bizarre Burgess
Shale animals as
primitive members of
many animal groups
that are found today
but Siphusauctum
defies this trend.
We do not know where
it fits in relation
to other organisms,”
said O’Brien.
“Our description is based on more than 1,100 fossil
specimens from a new
Burgess Shale
locality. The area
has been nicknamed
the Tulip Beds,”
said lead author
O’Brien. Located in
Yoho National Park,
British Columbia,
the Tulip Beds were
first discovered in
1983 by the Royal
Ontario Museum. They
are located high on
Mount Stephen,
overlooking the town
of Field. Like the
rest of the Burgess
Shale, the Beds
represent rock
layers with
exceptional
preservation of
mostly soft-bodied
organisms. The
Burgess Shale,
protected under the
larger Rocky
Mountain Parks
UNESCO World
Heritage site and
managed by Parks
Canada, preserves
fossil evidence of
some of the earliest
complex animals that
lived in the oceans
of our planet nearly
505 million years
ago. The discovery
of Siphusauctum
expands the range of
animal diversity
that existed during
this time period.
The research was partially funded by U of T fellowships to
O’Brien and a
Natural Sciences and
Engineering Research
Council of Canada
Discovery Grant
awarded to Caron.