1. Introduction
In 1897 Mark Twain wrote a now famous letter noting that reports of his death had been greatly exaggerated. While he eventually died in 1910, it is obvious that this inevitable event did not validate its earlier reports: if survival beyond a reported date can be demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt, contrary preconceptions must be updated. With regard to the fossil record, this matters, not least, because the relative timing of extinctions and originations is a foundation for the reconstruction of evolutionary causality, for which correlation represents necessary primary evidence.
Recently, a range of Ediacaran to Cambrian workers have suggested that the evolutionary transition between these periods is more complex and less sharp than once thought (Martin et al. Reference Martin, Grazhdankin, Bowring, Evans, Fedonkin and Kirschvink2000; Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019; Wood et al. Reference Wood, Liu, Bowyer, Wilby, Dunn, Kenchington, Hoyal Cuthill, Mitchell and Penny2019). Two key lines of evidence can be identified among recent studies, which argue for a shift in perspective on prior views of early animal evolution. The first is that new fossil finds have pushed back into the Ediacaran the origin of taxonomic groups, traits and behaviours known previously from the Cambrian (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019; Wood et al. Reference Wood, Liu, Bowyer, Wilby, Dunn, Kenchington, Hoyal Cuthill, Mitchell and Penny2019). Individual fossil blocks which preserve both classic Ediacaran morphologies and bilaterian-style trace fossils strikingly demonstrate that these were contemporaneous (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998; Wood et al. Reference Wood, Liu, Bowyer, Wilby, Dunn, Kenchington, Hoyal Cuthill, Mitchell and Penny2019). Further reports of early trace fossils range from simple, backfilled and vertical burrows described from the White Sea of Russia and radiometrically dated to 555.3 ± 0.3 Ma (Martin et al. Reference Martin, Grazhdankin, Bowring, Evans, Fedonkin and Kirschvink2000), to surface scratch traces associated with the proposed bilaterian Kimberella (Gehling et al. Reference Gehling, Runnegar and Droser2014) reported to 555.3 ± 0.3 Ma (Martin et al. Reference Martin, Grazhdankin, Bowring, Evans, Fedonkin and Kirschvink2000), comparatively large and complex, segmented traces, including approximate-spiral traces dated to 539.4 ± 1 Ma (Jensen & Runnegar, Reference Jensen and Runnegar2005) and Treptichnus-type traces from close to the Cambrian boundary (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Saylor, Gehling and Germs2000), with the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary dated in the 2020 Geological Timescale to c. 539 Ma (538.8 ± 0.6 Ma) (Peng et al. Reference Peng, Babcock, Ahlberg, Gradstein, Ogg, Schmitz and Ogg2020) based on U–Pb radiometric dating from the Spitskop Member in southern Namibia (Linnemann et al. Reference Linnemann, Ovtcharova, Schaltegger, Gärtner, Hautmann, Geyer, Vickers-Rich, Rich, Plessen and Hofmann2019). Such finds suggest that while bilaterians may have been rarer before the Cambrian, they were present in the Ediacaran (Jensen & Runnegar, Reference Jensen and Runnegar2005; Gehling et al. Reference Gehling, Runnegar and Droser2014; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019). The second line of evidence, on which this paper will focus, concerns Ediacaran ‘survivors’ or ‘holdovers’ in the Cambrian, to-date including records from at least four countries (Australia, the USA, China and Canada) and extending from the Cambrian boundary (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998) to at least the middle Cambrian (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993) at c. 508 Ma (Aria & Caron, Reference Aria and Caron2017) to 505 Ma (Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020) Ma.
Despite these straws in the wind, however, many, if not most, recent papers still describe an effective extinction of the Ediacaran soft-bodied macro-biota by, or at, the beginning of the Cambrian. For example, Narbonne (Reference Narbonne2005) stated, ‘a handful of possible “Ediacaran survivors” have been described from Cambrian strata …, but all diverse occurrences of the Ediacara biota … predate the base of the Cambrian’. Similarly, Cribb et al. (Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019) stated, ‘the overwhelming majority of soft-bodied Ediacaran groups … decline in the latest Ediacaran Nama interval and disappear entirely at the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary’. While acknowledging evidence for at least some Ediacaran survivors in the Cambrian, Muscente et al. (Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018) stated, ‘for all intents and purposes, however, the fossil record of Ediacara biota broadly terminates at the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary’.
Furthermore, a number of papers (my own included (Hoyal Cuthill & Conway Morris, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Conway Morris2014)) have discussed potential causal connections between extinctions of, or within, the Ediacaran biota and evolutionary and environmental events around the Cambrian boundary, including the diversification of bilaterians (Seilacher, Reference Seilacher1992; Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005), consequent increases in bioturbation, reductions in microbial mat-grounds and possible changes in sediment and ocean chemistry (Hoyal Cuthill & Conway Morris, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Conway Morris2014; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019).
There is now extensive evidence for morphological, phylogenetic and taxonomic links between the Ediacaran and Cambrian frondose biotas (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993; Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998; Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000; Hagadorn & Waggoner, Reference Hagadorn and Waggoner2000; Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006; Hoyal Cuthill, Reference Hoyal Cuthill2022), notably including locally abundant Stromatoveris of the lower Cambrian Chengjiang biota (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a, b) and middle Cambrian Thaumaptilon from the Burgess Shale (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993; Hoyal Cuthill, Reference Hoyal Cuthill2022). This paper will explore three consequent questions, should such linking evidence be accepted. First, what are the objections that have previously been raised to proposed Ediacaran survivors and do these hold up in the light of recent evidence? Second, if we go on to accept the prolonged existence of at least some Ediacaran survivors, which of the things once thought about the Ediacaran to Cambrian transition must we actually do away with? Third, which new conclusions and questions does this prompt?
2. Ediacaran survivors in the Cambrian
Since Ediacaran soft-bodied macro-fossils were definitively identified as such, at least 19 genera have been described that can broadly be described as frondose (with frondose here broadly referring to any taxon with a proposed frond or ‘petaloid’ (Pflug, Reference Pflug1972) regardless of its inferred inclination to the sediment, e.g. upright or reclining). This count (which is considered minimal rather than exhaustive) includes ‘rangeomorphs’ such as Rangea (with Liu et al. (Reference Liu, Kenchington and Mitchell2015) listing 12 Avalonian genera), arboreomorphs such as Arborea/Charniodiscus (Laflamme et al. Reference Laflamme, Gehling and Droser2018), another proposed frondose taxon from Avalonia, Parviscopa (Liu et al. Reference Liu, Kenchington and Mitchell2015), Ernietta, Pteridinium and Swartpuntia (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018a). Albeit more controversially, due to frequently suggested bilaterian affinities (Gold et al. Reference Gold, Runnegar, Gehling and Jacobs2015), dickinsoniomorphs (exemplified by Dickinsonia) should also be considered alongside the frondose, or petalonamid (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a), soft-bodied Ediacaran biota. In particular, at least some authors have previously grouped dickinsoniomorphs with other Ediacaran biota, based on argued morphological similarities such as a serially subdivided body unit, alternate branching observed in at least some specimens and axial and apical branch growth (Seilacher, Reference Seilacher1992; Brasier & Antcliffe, Reference Brasier and Antcliffe2008; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a).
While many of these Ediacaran genera have not been recorded from younger rocks, at least one has (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998; Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000) and there are several additional reported occurrences of morphologically similar, frondose genera from the lower to middle Cambrian (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993; Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000; Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a). These records notably include fossils described as Swartpuntia, or Swartpuntia-like, from the lower Cambrian (e.g. Fig. 1; Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998; Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000), locally abundant Stromatoveris from the Chengjiang biota (Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a) of the lower Cambrian (Series 2, Stage 3, >~514 Ma (Walker et al. Reference Walker, Geissman, Bowring and Babcock2018; Landing et al. Reference Landing, Geyer, Schmitz, Wotte and Kouchinsky2020; Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020)) and Thaumaptilon from the Burgess Shale (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993) of the middle Cambrian (Miaolingian Series, Wuliuan Stage, ∼508–505 Ma (Aria & Caron, Reference Aria and Caron2017; Landing et al. Reference Landing, Geyer, Schmitz, Wotte and Kouchinsky2020; Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020)). Here, I suggest, in particular, that previous objections which have been used to dismiss individual Ediacaran holdover taxa are simultaneously met by Stromatoveris and are therefore inadequate to negate the collective evidence the holdovers represent.
3. Denials
3.1 Objection 1. Mistaken identity from fragmentary glimpses?
Some of the first-alleged Ediacaran survivors are represented by only small numbers of sometimes fragmentary fossils, which has contributed to expressed uncertainty regarding their identification and affinities. For example, specimens from the Ediacaran–Cambrian (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Nelson, Tweedt, Zeng and Workman2017; Hall et al. Reference Hall, Smith, Tamura, Fakra and Bosak2020) Wood Canyon Formation and lower Cambrian (Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018) Poleta Formation (Fig. 1b) were originally described by Hagadorn and colleagues in 2000 (Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000) as cf. Swartpuntia (with cf., Latin conferre, meaning comparable or similar to a referenced taxon but not attributable to it with complete certainty (Lucas, Reference Lucas1986)). Another Wood Canyon specimen was reported as Swartpuntia c.f. germsi (Hagadorn & Waggoner, Reference Hagadorn and Waggoner2000). A later review (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005) cited Cambrian Swartpuntia-type fossils from the USA as well as Australia (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998), alongside Thaumaptilon from the Burgess Shale (discussed further below), as ‘possible Ediacaran survivors’ (emphasis added). Smith et al. (Reference Smith, Nelson, Tweedt, Zeng and Workman2017) stated, ‘fragments of sandstone with parallel structural elements were identified as Swartpuntia, but this is a problematic classification with no complete specimens or specimens preserving a basal stalk’. It is notable in this context, therefore, that the stalk originally described in Swartpuntia (Narbonne et al. Reference Narbonne, Saylor and Grotzinger1997) is not clearly visible even in the classic Namibian material (Fig. 1a). Furthermore, while the Wood Canyon Swartpuntia fossils are rare and somewhat fragmentary, this is also the case for the classic Namibian material (Narbonne et al. Reference Narbonne, Saylor and Grotzinger1997). The descriptions of cf. Swartpuntia from the Wood Canyon Formation figure two specimens (Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000), and Hagadorn & Waggoner (Reference Hagadorn and Waggoner2000) figure one more. The classic Namibian material (which includes the holotype) is represented by two specimens available in the type and figured collection of the National Earth Science Museum of Namibia (nos. F238-H, F245-p), neither of which shows the entire organism, due to breakage (although they are nonetheless exceptionally large and well-preserved Ediacaran fossil specimens). Most importantly, however, the Cambrian specimens do show several features consistent with taxonomic placement within genus Swartpuntia (Fig. 1), including large size, broad aspect ratio and parallel angled units, as generally seen in the sub-branched fronds or ‘petaloids’ of Ediacaran frondose taxa.
Further to this, the prior representation of Ediacaran survivors by small numbers of somewhat fragmentary specimens has been changed by the case of lower Cambrian Stromatoveris psygmoglena. Over 200 organically preserved specimens of S. psygmoglena have been found (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a) since initial description of the species (Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006). Collectively, these specimens preserve multiple views of the organism’s morphology, facilitating detailed comparisons with Ediacaran taxa, including those that are similarly represented by multiple specimens (which together give a comprehensive picture of external morphology). The correspondences such comparisons show thereby cover the macro-structural arrangement of multiple petaloids, petaloid substructure and presence and structure of the basal holdfast region (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a). The abundance of morphological information that these new specimens provide (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a, b) therefore means that Ediacaran holdovers can no longer be collectively dismissed on grounds of potential mistaken identity from a fragmentary view.
3.2 Objection 2. Doppelgängers?
Another related objection to potential Ediacaran holdovers has been the possibility of evolutionary convergence on a broadly analogous morphology, particularly an anchored frondose body-plan. For example, with subsequent reference to Stromatoveris, the objection had been made (Antcliffe & Brasier, Reference Antcliffe and Brasier2007) that ‘if affinities between … groups are to be put forward and sustained, then we recommend that developmental homologies between them be demonstrated’. Similarly, with reference to Cambrian, Uratanna Formation Swartpuntia-type fronds (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998) and Chengjiang Stromatoveris (Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006), Muscente et al. (Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018) opined that these fossils ‘do not closely resemble classic Ediacaran genera’, although they also noted that, ‘in cases of compression-type frond-like fossils, this apparent difference may be a result of differential taphonomy’.
Objections to broad similarity as a basis for taxonomic affinity are certainly noteworthy, not least because some kind of anchored structure which is itself elaborated (e.g. in an approximately fractal manner) is found across macro-organisms such as plants, fungi and animals (e.g. octocorals). There are likely strong functional reasons for this extensive convergence. Fractal structures represent space-filling forms which can be generated by repetition of very simple rules of growth (Hoyal Cuthill & Conway Morris, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Conway Morris2014). They are therefore encountered across diverse space-filling structures, both biotic and abiotic (e.g. river systems or mineral growths). Biologically, fractals are common to many interface systems, for example for exposure to light (e.g. leaves), the uptake of gases (whether dissolved in water (e.g. gills) or aerial (e.g. lungs)) or dissolved organic nutrients (e.g. projections of animal gut walls), for filter feeding on larger organic particles (e.g. in crinoids) or the dispersal of propagules (e.g. fungal spores). For entirely or partially sessile organisms that possess some kind of frond-like structure, some kind of anchor is a likely necessity (e.g. crinoids, octocorals, fungi, algae, plants etc.).
While convergence, therefore, remains a general possibility, especially when only limited anatomical information is available, the likelihood of convergence as opposed to homology resulting from close relation declines as more morphological characters are shared. In Stromatoveris, the extensive anatomical information available from the large number of exceptionally preserved specimens has facilitated formal phylogenetic testing of hypotheses of convergence across a wide range of outgroups. This analysis strongly supported a direct phylogenetic and taxonomic affinity between Stromatoveris and Ediacaran frondose genera (grouped within an extension of proposed animal phylum Petalonamae, Pflug) (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a).
Of the three described specimens of Thaumaptilon walcotti from the Burgess Shale (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993), all show the highly compressed carbon-film preservation typical of Burgess Shale-type Lagerstätten and two of the specimens are comparatively small. Therefore, these collectively present less morphological evidence than the >200 specimens of Stromatoveris, for example. However, the holotype of Thaumaptilon (Fig. 2) is a large and exceptionally well-preserved specimen. This specimen shows, first, the overall sub-branched frondose morphology with basal holdfast typical of Ediacaran genera (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993) that have been placed phylogenetically within Petalonamae (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a). It also shows a number of additional, detailed morphological similarities to Ediacaran petalonamid specimens compatible with placement within this clade. These include the presence of a demarked central region, interpretable as an inter-axial band (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a), within which primary branching can be seen to occur but which is demarked from the outer lateral regions of the specimen by strong overprinted vertical lines (Fig. 2c). The holotype of Thaumaptilon also shows continuation of the surface texture similar to that of the upper frond within the basal, inferred holdfast, region (which in the case of Thaumaptilon combines small-scale striations with a pustular appearance, as can sometimes also be observed in Stromatoveris). Phylogenetic character coding for Thaumaptilon in a new photo-referenced character matrix (MophoBank Project 3868 (Hoyal Cuthill, Reference Hoyal Cuthill2022)) extended from that of Hoyal Cuthill & Han (Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a) enables phylogenetic analysis alongside previously proposed Ediacaran to Cambrian petalonamids and a wide range of outgroups. This supports phylogenetic placement of middle Cambrian Burgess Shale Thaumaptilon within Petalonamae (Fig. 2d).
3.3 Objection 3. A last gasp
Ediacaran-style, frondose impression fossils found alongside dense and complex trace-fossils were described from the lower Cambrian Uratanna Formation of Australia in 1998 (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998). Their morphology shows similarities to Namibian Swartpuntia specimens (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998) as well as other Ediacaran genera known from the Ediacaran of Australia. The fact that these specimens are found relatively close to the Cambrian boundary left open possibilities that they represented closure of a taphonomic window for mouldic preservation, particularly in sandstone (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998) (though see also Tarhan et al. Reference Tarhan, Droser, Cole and Gehling2018), or a last gasp of an Ediacaran biota and ecology recently overrun by bilaterian invaders in a ‘biotic replacement’ (Laflamme et al. Reference Laflamme, Darroch, Tweedt, Peterson and Erwin2013; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018). For example, given Palaeozoic examples of siliceous preservation, Tarhan et al. (Reference Tarhan, Droser, Cole and Gehling2018) suggested, ‘that the preservational window for Ediacara-style fossilization clearly did not close at the end of the Ediacaran, but in fact remained open for over a hundred million additional years suggests that the disappearance of Ediacara Biota fossils cannot be attributed to taphonomic bias’. A key point is therefore that organically preserved Cambrian fronds including Stromatoveris and Thaumaptilon can be phylogenetically placed as surviving representatives of a classically Ediacaran biota (Fig. 2d; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a, b; Hoyal Cuthill, Reference Hoyal Cuthill2022). Consequently, they demonstrate that the classically Ediacaran biota did not disappear from the fossil record at the end of the Ediacaran Period, but instead increasingly appeared in a different preservational mode, typical of the changing time. General replacement of a mouldic preservational mode (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998) by organic preservation (as seen in Chengjiang Stromatoveris (Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a) and also some earlier Ediacaran fossils, e.g. White Sea Dickinsonia (Bobrovskiy et al. Reference Bobrovskiy, Hope, Ivantsov, Nettersheim, Hallmann and Brocks2018)) is precisely the pattern which would be predicted by a progressive shift away from the dominant (though not exclusive (Bobrovskiy et al. Reference Bobrovskiy, Hope, Ivantsov, Nettersheim, Hallmann and Brocks2018)) mouldic mode of Ediacaran fossilization, towards increasing carbonaceous Lagerstätten preservation in the Cambrian (Sperling et al. Reference Sperling, Balthasar and Skovsted2018), combined with survival of at least some of the classically Ediacaran soft-bodied biota throughout this interval. The place to look for Ediacaran survivors or close relatives higher up in the Australian succession might then be carbonaceous Lagerstätten such as the Emu Bay Shale, with enigmatic soft-bodied fauna such as ‘petalloid’ problematica (Paterson et al. Reference Paterson, García-Bellido, Jago, Gehling, Lee and Edgecombe2016) providing contenders for further comparative analysis. Globally, an organically preserved record of classically Ediacaran frondose morphologies continues through the lower Cambrian Stromatoveris from the Chengjiang biota up to the middle Cambrian Thaumaptilon from the Burgess Shale.
3.4 Objection 4. A dead clade walking
Prior to the discovery of a large number of specimens of Stromatoveris, the recorded Ediacaran survivors were all represented by small numbers of specimens per taxon and locality. The total number of Cambrian occurrences of Ediacaran survivors has also been considered comparatively low (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005). Some have apparently interpreted this literally, as an indication that Ediacaran survivors represented a dead clade walking (in the sense of Jablonski, Reference Jablonski2001): a minority component being edged out of the new Cambrian ecology. For example, Narbonne (Reference Narbonne2005) stated, ‘changing taphonomic conditions … [do] not fully account for the extreme scarcity of Ediacara-type fossils in Lower Cambrian Lagerstätten, such as at Sirius Passet and Chengjiang’.
Despite extensive work on Burgess Shale-type Lagerstätten, no further specimens of Thaumaptilon have been described to supplement the three originally known (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993). This picture of uniformly low local abundance was changed in the case of Stromatoveris psygmoglena, however, by the discovery (within the hyper-productive Chengjiang Lagerstätte) of at least 200 specimens. This demonstrates that this species, with its typically Ediacaran frondose morphology, was at least locally abundant within an advanced Cambrian ecology, which included recent phyla and life habits such as active filter feeding (Hou et al. Reference Hou, Siveter, Siveter, Aldridge, Pei-Yun, Gabbott, Xiao-Ya, Purnell and Williams2017; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a).
Overall, therefore, recorded occurrences indicate: First, that Ediacaran survivors are represented across the major Cambrian Lagerstätten types from the early to mid-Cambrian, covering mouldic style-preservation (Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000) (previously common in the Ediacaran (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005)); Burgess Shale carbon films (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993); and Chengjiang, moderately three-dimensional, carbonaceous compressions (Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a). Second, Ediacaran holdovers retain a global occurrence record into the Cambrian (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017). Third, despite a low overall preservation potential implied by infrequent, Lagerstätte-restricted occurrences (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017), Stromatoveris provides evidence of at least local abundance up to the middle Cambrian. Fourth, Thaumaptilon from the Burgess Shale marks survival (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017) at least four stages into the Cambrian period (Walker et al. Reference Walker, Geissman, Bowring and Babcock2018) and 30 million years after their previously suggested effective extinction at the end-Ediacaran (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005; Hoyal Cuthill & Conway Morris, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Conway Morris2014; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019). Thus, while Cambrian frondose survivors do not appear to have recovered to their Ediacaran diversity, their Cambrian range exceeds the short extinction survival range (e.g. at the single geological stage scale (Jablonski, Reference Jablonski2001)) previously suggested for typical ‘dead clades walking’, and the numerous specimens of Stromatoveris demonstrate continued local abundance in Cambrian ecosystems.
4. Implications
Arguably, previous objections to proposed Ediacaran survivors which portrayed them as mistaken glimpses, doppelgängers, a last gasp or dead clades walking have formed a basis for continued focus on the Cambrian transition in discussions of potential extinction causes. In other words, prior dismissals of Ediacaran survivors in the Cambrian as fragmentary and taxonomically uncertain (mistaken identities), potential convergences (doppelgängers), transitional (a last gasp) or short-lived and ecologically unimportant (dead clades walking) have facilitated presentations of an effective extinction of this biota at the Cambrian boundary (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019). Some of these prior arguments were, however, formulated when the recorded tally of Ediacaran holdovers was limited to small numbers of specimens, some of which were fragmentary and/or found close to the Cambrian boundary. This situation has been changed by the discovery of hundreds of specimens of Stromatoveris (linked to frondose Ediacaran ‘petalonamids’ by morphological phylogenetic analysis (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a)). These locally abundant fossils from the Cambrian Chengjiang biota provide direct evidence against mistaken glimpse, doppelgänger, last gasp, or dead clade walking scenarios (as outlined above).
If the, now extensive, morphological evidence for Ediacaran survivors (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993; Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998; Hagadorn & Waggoner, Reference Hagadorn and Waggoner2000; Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000; Shu et al. Reference Shu, Conway Morris, Han, Li, Zhang, Hua, Zhang, Liu, Guo, Yao and Yasui2006; Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a, b; Hoyal Cuthill, Reference Hoyal Cuthill2022) to at least the middle Cambrian (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993) at c. 508 Ma (Aria & Caron, Reference Aria and Caron2017) to 505 Ma (Landing et al. Reference Landing, Geyer, Schmitz, Wotte and Kouchinsky2020; Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020) is given the recognition it deserves (as also advocated by Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017), what are the consequent implications for the pattern and causes of their eventual extinction?
4.1 Bilaterian diversification supplemented rather than replaced the Ediacaran biota
Without positing a major, unevidenced change in life habits between the Ediacaran and Cambrian frondose taxa, the implication is, first, that a classically Ediacaran morphology and its associated life habits (including feeding mode, predator defences and sediment anchoring mechanisms etc.) was capable of withstanding a time overlap with bilaterians of at least 47 million years (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017), from the appearance of trace fossils attributed to bilaterians by 555 Ma (e.g. Martin et al. Reference Martin, Grazhdankin, Bowring, Evans, Fedonkin and Kirschvink2000) to the occurrence of Thaumaptilon (Conway Morris, Reference Conway Morris1993) at ∼508–505 Ma (Aria & Caron, Reference Aria and Caron2017; Landing et al. Reference Landing, Geyer, Schmitz, Wotte and Kouchinsky2020; Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020). This time overlap is therefore of greater duration than their known Ediacaran time range of 35 Ma, from 574.17 ± 0.66 Ma (Matthews et al. Reference Matthews, Liu, Yang, McIlroy, Levell and Condon2021) to 539 Ma (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017). Second, the classically Ediacaran frondose morphology retained locally abundance (Hoyal Cuthill & Han, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Han2018 a) within the comparatively advanced Cambrian ecology evident among the Chengjiang biota (Hou et al. Reference Hou, Siveter, Siveter, Aldridge, Pei-Yun, Gabbott, Xiao-Ya, Purnell and Williams2017). This demonstrates that, in the case of the frondose soft-bodied biota, diversification of taxa and associated ecologies at the start of the Cambrian did not replace, but instead supplemented, those of the Ediacaran.
4.2 The onset of the Cambrian explosion did not cause the elimination of the Ediacaran biota
The recorded occurrences of the Ediacaran to Cambrian frondose soft-bodied biota indicate no correlation between the start of the Cambrian explosion and the extinction of this classically Ediacaran clade, morphology or ecology as a whole (Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017). Consequently, the Ediacaran survivors in the Cambrian tell us something important about the potential causes of their ultimate demise. The Cambrian boundary does not represent an extinction that was total or effectively total, with dead clade walking or last gasp scenarios ruled out by local abundance of Stromatoveris among the Changjiang biota. At a minimum, therefore, previous reports of an end-Ediacaran total (Seilacher, Reference Seilacher1992), or effective (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005; Hoyal Cuthill & Conway Morris, Reference Hoyal Cuthill and Conway Morris2014; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018; Cribb et al. Reference Cribb, Kenchington, Koester, Gibson, Boag, Racicot, Mocke, Laflamme and Darroch2019), extinction of the classically Ediacaran soft-bodied biota are arguably greatly exaggerated.
To explain the extinction of the Ediacaran biota, there have been a number of previously proposed variations on models of ‘biotic replacement’, which link the extinction of classically Ediacaran groups to changes associated with the Cambrian explosion of bilaterian diversity (Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018), including direct competition or indirect environmental or geochemical disturbance (Seilacher, Reference Seilacher1992; Laflamme et al. Reference Laflamme, Darroch, Tweedt, Peterson and Erwin2013; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018). However, no such proposal accounts adequately for Ediacaran holdovers in the Cambrian with a survival range as long as their known Ediacaran duration and continued local abundance. Rather, this provides evidence directly contradicting a biotic replacement extinction model for the Ediacaran biota, at least in its strongest form of total or effective elimination of classic Ediacaran taxa as a causal consequence of bilaterian diversification at the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition (Seilacher, Reference Seilacher1992; Laflamme et al. Reference Laflamme, Darroch, Tweedt, Peterson and Erwin2013; Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Boag, Bykova and Schiffbauer2018, Reference Muscente, Bykova, Boag, Buatois, Mángano, Eleish, Prabhu, Pan, Meyer, Schiffbauer, Fox, Hazen and Knoll2019).
4.3 Occurrences of Ediacaran–Cambrian biotas show a significant but partial diversity loss at this boundary
Partial extinction and consequent loss of diversity around the Cambrian boundary is supported by recorded occurrences, however, based on both qualitative and quantitative considerations. For instance, small to medium-sized, moderately elongate frondose taxa are represented in both the Ediacaran (e.g. Rangea, Charnia, Arborea) and the Cambrian (e.g. c.f. Swartpuntia, Stromatoveris and Thaumaptilon, the largest at up to 21 cm (Caron, Reference Caron2011)). However, there remain highly distinctive Ediacaran taxa and associated morphologies (that should therefore stand a high chance of recognition even in very different preservational styles), which have no similar known representatives in the Cambrian. These include, for example, metre-scale specimens of Dickinsonia rex and large specimens of the rangeomorph Bradgatia which are fractally subdivided visibly (at the cm-to-mm scale) to at least four branching orders. The total number of Ediacaran survivors recorded from the Cambrian also remains comparatively low (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005), with the number of reported finds indicating a maximum possible number of frondose species in the unit order. The three Cambrian frondose genera considered here (c.f. Swartpuntia, Stromatoveris, Thaumaptilon) comprise 16 % of the nineteen frondose genera counted for the Ediacaran, and only one of these Ediacaran genera (Swartpuntia) is also represented in the Cambrian, literally indicating an inter-period genus diversity loss of 95 %, with recovery to 16 % of prior diversity. Changes in the dominant mode of fossilization at the Cambrian boundary remain a likely contributing factor (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998). However, as it stands, the fossil record of frondose soft-bodied taxa across the Ediacaran to Cambrian transition indicates a substantial, though partial, extinction event in the latest Ediacaran, close to the Cambrian boundary (Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005).
In this respect, the diversity dynamics of the Ediacaran biota are similar to those of some later clades (Budd & Mann, Reference Budd and Mann2020 b; Barnes et al. Reference Barnes, Sclafani and Zaffos2021) showing a long period of relative abundance, a partial extinction event and then another long period of survival at lower diversity before eventual extinction, apparently without descendants. Thus, potential causes of their total extinction should be sought, not solely in events around the Cambrian boundary, but in their overall diversity dynamics (taking into account their long Cambrian range) and their last occurrence record, which would be ∼508–505 Ma (Aria & Caron, Reference Aria and Caron2017; Landing et al. Reference Landing, Geyer, Schmitz, Wotte and Kouchinsky2020; Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020) based on Thaumaptilon from the Burgess Shale (though see Retallack (Reference Retallack2018) for suggestions of a Devonian occurrence).
These diversity dynamics are potentially compatible with participation in a succession of at least (Muscente et al. Reference Muscente, Bykova, Boag, Buatois, Mángano, Eleish, Prabhu, Pan, Meyer, Schiffbauer, Fox, Hazen and Knoll2019) two mass extinction events, one marked but partial extinction in the latest, or end, Ediacaran (often previously treated as the last appearance of the frondose Ediacaran macro-biota, as discussed above) and final extinction in, or after, the middle Cambrian. After 505 Ma, the next major extinction event apparent from Paleobiology Database (PBDB) occurrence records (specifically a top 30 event of species (Hoyal Cuthill et al. Reference Hoyal Cuthill, Guttenberg and Budd2020) or genus (Fig. 3) extinction or radiation) is the extinction of Cambrian species recorded at the Ordovician boundary at 485 Ma (with ≥42 % species extinction recorded within a 1 Ma time window of the boundary). With regard to the true last occurrences of the Ediacaran soft-bodied biota, it is interesting, though unfortunate, that Ordovician discoveries in the Fezouata Shale, including arthropod taxa previously restricted to the Cambrian, have not, thus far (Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020), extended to any entirely soft-bodied taxa, leading to suggestions of a comparative loss of the exceptional soft-tissue preservation seen in Cambrian (Saleh et al. Reference Saleh, Antcliffe, Lefebvre, Pittet, Laibl, Perez Peris, Lustri, Gueriau and Daley2020), as well as Ediacaran, Lagerstätten.
Ultimate extinction within a wider, mass extinction event is, however, not the only possibility. It is notable that the diversity dynamics of the frondose soft-bodied biota are also similar to those of stem groups modelled mathematically by a birth–death process (Budd & Mann, Reference Budd and Mann2020 b) that experience only stochastic, background diversity declines. Within this model, solely stochastic versus externally driven stem-group extinctions are distinguished primarily by different probability distributions of durations (Budd & Mann, Reference Budd and Mann2020 b), meaning that the extinction of any given stem group might fit within either distribution (albeit with a higher or lower probability). Consequently, in the real fossil record, distinguishing potential causes of specific extinctions is likely to rely on wider tests: for example, for extinction correlation across different taxonomic groups or with independent evidence of environmental perturbation.
In the context of overall diversity as currently recorded in the PBDB (one of the most comprehensive compilations of comparative species ranges publicly available), the perception of extinction severity at the end-Ediacaran depends on the precise measurement context. The end-Ediacaran does not fall among the most significant mass extinctions in the sense of events dominated by extinction rather than radiation (Hoyal Cuthill et al. Reference Hoyal Cuthill, Guttenberg and Budd2020), based on species extinction as a proportion of total diversity present at that time (with 12 % species extinction (Hoyal Cuthill et al. Reference Hoyal Cuthill, Guttenberg and Budd2020) and 10 % at the genus level (Figure 3; Supplementary Computer Code in Supplementary Material available online at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756821001333). This measure is designed to assess the balance of extinction and origination (Hoyal Cuthill et al. Reference Hoyal Cuthill, Guttenberg and Budd2020) and calculates recorded species extinctions as a proportion of total diversity within a 1 Ma time window, where total diversity comprises all species either originating, going extinct or ranging through. Instead, here the dominant picture from overall diversity change (Fig. 3) is of the swamping of end-Ediacaran survivors, and extinctions, by diversification in the Cambrian explosion (86 % genus origination) (Hoyal Cuthill et al. Reference Hoyal Cuthill, Guttenberg and Budd2020), a pattern potentially compatible with the early stages of rapid, non-linear diversification (e.g. see modelling of Budd & Mann, Reference Budd and Mann2020 a).
However, from a different measurement perspective, which sets aside originating species to consider extinction relative to survival (Fig. 4; Supplementary Computer Code in Supplementary Material available online at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756821001333), the beginning of the Cambrian period at 539 Ma shows the lowest proportion of recorded species survivals, relative to extinctions, for the Phanerozoic, at 7 %, compared with an overall mean of 92 %, and a mean of 28 % for these 15 events with lowest survivorship. This measure calculates (within each 1 Ma time window) the proportion of survivors, as range throughs/(range throughs + extinctions without originations), where range-through taxa have their minimum Ma and maximum Ma bracketing a time window, and taxa with extinctions without originations have minimum Ma but not maximum Ma within a time window. This is therefore similar to previously proposed per capita extinction measures (e.g. one measure of per capita extinction = -ln[range throughs/(range throughs + extinctions without originations)] ÷ interval length (Foote, Reference Foote2000)). Based on extinction versus survival among PBDB occurrence records, the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition would therefore qualify as a mass extinction. Indeed among the data used in this analysis, it is the most severe recorded Phanerozoic mass extinction event. The time with the next-lowest proportion of species survivors relative to the number of extinctions is the end-Permian mass extinction at 9 % (Fig. 4a). Analysis at the genus level is required to capture, among the PBDB occurrence records, the Cambrian survival of Swartpuntia (Jensen et al. Reference Jensen, Gehling and Droser1998; Hagadorn et al. Reference Hagadorn, Fedo and Waggoner2000; Hagadorn & Waggoner, Reference Hagadorn and Waggoner2000), in particular, as well as other notable genera bridging the Ediacaran and Cambrian such as Cloudina and Anabarites (Yang et al. Reference Yang, Steiner, Zhu, Li, Liu and Liu2016). Considering PBDB occurrences recorded at the genus level, the lowest survivorship is also observed at the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition (which shows 26 % genus survival; Fig. 4b).
Based on comparative analysis across databased fossil occurrences, the end of the Ediacaran period is therefore notable for two reasons. First, this does show an extreme shortage of recorded survivors relative to extinctions. Second, however, the overall diversity dynamics around the boundary are dominated by the exceptional proportion of species and genus originations recorded at the onset of the Cambrian (Hoyal Cuthill et al. Reference Hoyal Cuthill, Guttenberg and Budd2020); Figs 3–4). The frondose Ediacaran biota crossing the Cambrian boundary therefore experienced the most extreme influx of species evident in the databased fossil record and survived this, albeit at what appears to be markedly reduced diversity.
Coordinated extinctions across databased taxa are compatible with an environmentally forced mass extinction event at the Cambrian boundary (e.g. Narbonne, Reference Narbonne2005; Smith et al. Reference Smith, Nelson, Tweedt, Zeng and Workman2017). However, the PBDB data show signs of comparatively coarse stratigraphic coding for Ediacaran taxa (Figs 3–4), for example occurrences coded at period scale. Coarse coding of occurrences can be expected to exaggerate any correlation of extinction between taxa (e.g. by extending real time ranges to period boundaries). This therefore suggests the need for continued, finer-scale recording and analysis of taxon stratigraphic ranges over this crucial time interval (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Nelson, Tweedt, Zeng and Workman2017; Wood et al. Reference Wood, Liu, Bowyer, Wilby, Dunn, Kenchington, Hoyal Cuthill, Mitchell and Penny2019).
5. Conclusion
Importantly, the Cambrian boundary is not correlated with a total, or effective, extinction of the classic frondose Ediacaran biota (the Petalonamae), and the causes of their ultimate demise should be sought at least 30 million years later, from the middle Cambrian. Ediacaran to middle Cambrian coexistence with bilaterians appears to rule out displacement by newly evolved competitors as a cause of the ultimate extinction of the frondose biota contrary to previous suggestions (Laflamme et al. Reference Laflamme, Darroch, Tweedt, Peterson and Erwin2013, though see also Budd & Jensen, Reference Budd and Jensen2017; Wood et al. Reference Wood, Liu, Bowyer, Wilby, Dunn, Kenchington, Hoyal Cuthill, Mitchell and Penny2019). Their recorded diversity dynamics are compatible with at least two widely separated extinction events (around the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary then from the middle Cambrian). One or both of these may have been wider mass extinctions including other taxa, with exceptionally low genus and species survival at the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary supported by PBDB occurrence records. However, it also remains possible that a role in the Cambrian explosion primarily as bystanders rather than participants in diversification was both a result of the background diversity dynamics of this clade (e.g. see Budd & Mann, Reference Budd and Mann2020 b; Barnes et al. Reference Barnes, Sclafani and Zaffos2021) and a cause of their eventual extinction.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756821001333
Acknowledgements
Thanks, for provision of photographs, to Dave Strauss and Erica Clites at the University of California Museum of Paleontology and Simon Conway Morris. Thanks to N. Guttenberg for use of jointly authored computer code in advance of its publication. This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Declaration of interest
The author declares none.