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Article: Origins and early evolution of arthropods

Publication: Palaeontology
Volume: 57
Part: 3
Publication Date: May 2014
Page(s): 457 468
Author(s): <p>Gregory D. Edgecombe and David A. Legg</p>
Addition Information

How to Cite

EDGECOMBE, G. D. and LEGG, D. A. 2014, Origins and early evolution of arthropods. Palaeontology, 57, 3, 457–468. doi: 10.1111/pala.12105

Author Information

  • Gregory D. Edgecombe - Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London, UK (email: g.edgecombe@nhm.ac.uk)
  • David A. Legg - Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford, UK (email: david.legg@oum.ox.ac.uk)

Publication History

  • Issue published online: 7 MAY 2014
  • Article first published online: 18 MAR 2014
  • Manuscript Accepted: 4 FEB 2014
  • Manuscript Received: 13 JAN 2014

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Wiley Online Library (Free Access)
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Abstract

Phylogenomics reconstructs an arthropod tree in which a monophyletic Arthropoda splits into Pycnogonida + Euchelicerata and Myriapoda + Pancrustacea. The same chelicerate–mandibulate groups are retrieved with morphological data sets, including those encompassing most taxa known from Palaeozoic Konservat-Lagerstätten. With respect to the interrelationships of the three extant clades of Panarthropoda, a sister group relationship between Onychophora and Arthropoda is endorsed by transcriptomics and microRNAs, although this hypothesis forces homoplasy in characters of the segmental ganglia that are shared by tardigrades and arthropods. Cambrian lobopodians, dinocaridids, bivalved arthropods and fuxianhuiids document the successive appearance of characteristic arthropod features in the stem lineage of Euarthropoda (crown-group arthropods). Molecular dating suggests that arthropods had their origin and initial diversification in the Ediacaran, but no convincing palaeontological evidence for Panarthropoda is available until the earliest Cambrian.

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