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04.06.2026 09:31

The Origin of Modern Animals: Fossils Provide New Insights into the Evolution of Life

Department Media and Public Relations, Abteilung 2
Universität Hamburg

    An international research team, including scientists from the University of Hamburg, has identified fossils of bryozoans from the Early Cambrian period for the first time. The exceptionally well-preserved specimens demonstrate that this group of animals existed as early as 520 million years ago—and that the formation of colonies by many individuals began on Earth earlier than previously thought. The research findings were published in the journal “Nature”.

    Many animal groups trace their origins to the so-called “Cambrian”—the geological period about 500 million years ago when the diversity of life in the oceans began to expand rapidly. At that time, numerous innovations in the animal kingdom emerged relatively suddenly, such as hard body parts that have survived as fossils. These shells and skeletons now provide researchers with insights into the evolution of life on Earth.

    A team from China, Sweden, Australia, and Germany has now been able to study exceptionally well-preserved fossils of so-called bryozoans. These invertebrates still exist today, although not exactly in their original form. A defining characteristic is their colonial lifestyle: many individual microscopic organisms form a shared, complex structure, often composed of calcium carbonate.

    The fossils studied come from the Xiannüdong Formation, a rock layer formed during the Cambrian period in China’s Shaanxi Province. Within this formation, the research team discovered new specimens of the previously known bryozoan species Protomelission gatehousei and identified a previously unknown species, Dayingomelission hexaclitia. Both organisms lived around 520 million years ago. Until now, there had been no evidence of these animals from that period.

    “The results of our work show that bryozoans appeared earlier and were more widespread in the Cambrian period than previously thought,” says Dr. Andrej Ernst, a co-author of the study from the Department of Earth System Sciences at the University of Hamburg. In addition, the research provides new insights into a key evolutionary innovation: the coexistence of individuals in complex colonies with a distinct division of labor among members.

    In addition to skeletal structures, the fossils even contained parts of the internal soft tissue, as this had been mineralized by phosphate. Modern imaging techniques made it possible to identify fine anatomical details, including membrane-like structures, characteristic spines, and individual muscle fibers. At the same time, the fossils reveal the modular skeletons typical of bryozoans.

    “The results of our work show that bryozoans underwent a significant evolution during the Cambrian period that had remained undiscovered until recently,” says Dr. Ernst. “Further discoveries from this period will shed even more light on the evolution of life on Earth in the future.”


    Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

    Dr. Andrej Ernst
    Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Natural Sciences
    Department of Earth System Sciences
    Phone: +49 40 2395-25018
    Email: andrej.ernst@uni-hamburg.de


    Originalpublikation:

    Song, B., Strotz, L.C., Topper, T. P., Ernst, A., Ma, J., Zhang, Z., Luo, M., Holmer, L.E., Liang, Y., Hu, Y., Zhang, C., Chen, Y., Glenn A. Brock, G. A., Zhang, Z.,
    High-fidelity modular skeletons authenticate a Cambrian origin for Bryozoa,
    Nature (2026), DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10590-9.


    Weitere Informationen:

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10590-9 Publication


    Bilder

    Living bryozoan Electra pilosa, Baltic Sea
    Living bryozoan Electra pilosa, Baltic Sea
    Quelle: UHH/Ernst
    Copyright: UHH/Ernst


    Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
    Journalisten
    Biologie, Geowissenschaften, Geschichte / Archäologie
    überregional
    Forschungsergebnisse, Forschungsprojekte
    Englisch


     

    Living bryozoan Electra pilosa, Baltic Sea


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