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» » » » Arthropods formed orderly queues 480 million years ago


Researchers studied fossilized Moroccan Ampyx trilobites, which lived 480 million years ago and showed that the trilobites had probably been buried in their positions -- all oriented in the same direction. Scientists deduced that these Ampyx processions may illustrate a kind of collective behavior adopted in response to cyclic environmental disturbances.

Arthropods formed orderly queues 480 million years ago
Ampyx priscus in linear formation (Moroccan Lower Ordovician Fezouata Shale) [Credit: Jean Vannier,
 Laboratoire de Geologie de Lyon: Terre, Planetes, Environnement (CNRS / ENS de Lyon /
Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1)]
Though our understanding of the anatomy of the earliest animals is growing ever more precise, we know next to nothing about their behaviour. Did group behaviour arise recently or is it primeval? To answer this question, researchers from the CNRS, the University of Poitiers, UBO, Claude Bernard Lyon 1 University, Cadi Ayyad University (Marrakech, Morocco), and the University of Lausanne (Switzerland) studied fossilized Moroccan Ampyx trilobites, which lived 480 million years ago. They showed that the trilobites had probably been buried in their positions -- all oriented in the same direction, in orderly lines, maintaining close contact with each other through their long spines -- during storms.


By comparing this observation with the behaviour of living animals such as North American spiny lobsters, the scientists deduced that these Ampyx processions may illustrate a similar kind of collective behaviour -- adopted in response to cyclic environmental disturbances like storms or to chemical signals associated with reproduction.

Arthropods formed orderly queues 480 million years ago
Ampyx priscus in linear formation (Moroccan Lower Ordovician Fezouata Shale) [Credit: Jean Vannier,
 Laboratoire de Geologie de Lyon: Terre, Planetes, Environnement (CNRS / ENS de Lyon /
Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1)]
This example would seem to suggest that group behaviour is of ancient origin and, from an early date, likely conferred an evolutionary advantage on the first animals, allowing them to survive environmental stress and improve their reproductive chances.

The findings are published in Scientific Reports.

Source: CNRS [October 17, 2019]

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