Publication | Closed Access
Predatorial Borings in Late Precambrian Mineralized Exoskeletons
287
Citations
9
References
1992
Year
BiologyMyriapodaMorphological EvidenceLiving FossilSelection PressuresAnimal SkeletonsNatural SciencesBiomineralizationEvolutionary BiologyTaphonomyGeochronologyPredatorial BoringsShell-boring Organisms
The late Precambrian tube-forming Cloudina, the earliest known animal to produce a mineralized exoskeleton, shows evidence of having been attacked by shell-boring organisms. Of more than 500 tubes from Shaanxi Province, China, 2.7% have rounded holes 40 to 400 micrometers in diameter. The relation between the size of the holes and the width of the bored tubes suggests that the attacking organism was a predator, selecting its prey for size. If true, this would be the oldest case of predation in the fossil record and would support the hypothesis that selection pressures from predation was a significant factor in the evolution of animal skeletons around the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1