古代の腕足類、「ソーシャルディスタンス」を保つために微細な毛を利用(Ancient Brachiopods Used Tiny Bristles to Maintain “Social Distancing,” Study Reveals)

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2025-07-22 中国科学院(CAS)

古代の腕足類、「ソーシャルディスタンス」を保つために微細な毛を利用(Ancient Brachiopods Used Tiny Bristles to Maintain “Social Distancing,” Study Reveals)
The brachiopod Nucleospira calypta and its setae preserved as iron oxides: interior mold of the ventral valve and close-ups of setae (A–D), together with SEM images and EDS spectra (E–H). (Image by Prof. HUANG Bing)

中国科学院南京地質古生物研究所の黄兵・栄家玉教授らの研究チームは、約4億3600万年前の古生代シルル紀に生息した腕足動物「Nucleospira calypta」が、微細な剛毛(setae)を使って隣接個体との距離を調整し、市松模様状に整列していたことを発見した。貴州省の地層から得られた化石には、直径20μm以下の剛毛が例外的に良好に保存されていた。保存は無酸素環境下での黄鉄鉱化とその後の方解石被覆による二重の保護作用によって可能となった。空間解析により、個体間の距離は剛毛の1.5〜2倍であることが確認され、弱い水流や体の微細な動きで位置を調整していたと推定される。本研究は、生物が自らの構造を用いて生態的な間隔を保ち、群集構造に影響を与えていた初の直接証拠を示した。

<関連情報>

古代の海底チェッカーボード: シルル紀腕足類の空間分布はどのようにして形成されたか? Ancient seabed checkerboard: How setae shaped spatial distributions of Silurian brachiopods

Bing Huang and Jiayu Rong
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:July 21, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2509354122

Significance

Small anatomical details can significantly influence how marine animals organize themselves, yet such interactions are rarely visible in fossils. We report exceptionally preserved soft, bristle-like structures (“setae”) on 436-My-old brachiopods, enabling analysis of ancient behavior. Using advanced imaging and statistical analysis, we identified a regular, checkerboard-like spacing pattern among these organisms, closely corresponding to their setae length. This demonstrates that these delicate structures played an important role in maintaining spacing between individuals, thereby influencing population organization on the ancient seabed. Our findings point to a previously unrecognized mechanism shaping ecosystem structure in deep time, demonstrating how subtle anatomical features could exert notable ecological impacts in their ancient environments.

Abstract

Understanding the drivers of spatial patterns in fossil communities is fundamental to paleoecology, yet direct evidence for biological mechanisms regulating interindividual spacing remains elusive. Brachiopod setae, hypothesized to function in feeding or defense, are exceedingly rare in the fossil record, especially among post-Cambrian taxa. Here, we present the report of exquisitely preserved setae from an exceptional in situ fossil assemblage of the early Silurian rhynchonelliform brachiopod Nucleospira calypta. Multiproxy analyses (scanning electron microscopy, X-ray fluorescence, and microcomputed tomography) revealed intricate ultrastructural details and diverse taphonomic pathways, leading to a reinterpretation of apparent calcitic preservation as primarily iron oxides with subsequent coating. Critically, the undisturbed nature of this aggregation allowed rigorous spatial point pattern analysis (Nearest-Neighbor Analysis, Thiessen polygons). This revealed a statistically significant, nonrandom, checkerboard-like distribution among individuals within the studied fossil deposit, indicative of active spacing regulation. Strikingly, the measured average interindividual spacing quantitatively relates to the length of the preserved setae. This provides the direct paleontological evidence demonstrating that these subtle morphological structures could have actively mediated spatial organization within a dense benthic community. Our findings illustrate a biological mechanism capable of shaping community structure, operating beyond passive environmental constraints or initial larval settlement preferences, and highlight the potential for subtle anatomical features to exert significant ecological influence in deep time.

生物工学一般
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