Zhongxiniscus

Zhongxiniscus is a genus of primitive chordate from eastern Yunnan that lived during the Early Cambrian. Known from a single specimen, it had a small, broad and short, fish-like body that was roughly ten millimeters in length. It possessed S-shaped myomeres, numbering roughly seven per one millimeter of length. Two triangular fins are evident on the dorsal margin.

Zhongxiniscus
Temporal range: Cambrian Series 2
Artist's reconstruction of Zhongxiniscus.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Genus:
Zhongxiniscus
Species:
Z. intermedius
Binomial name
Zhongxiniscus intermedius
Luo, Hu, 2001.

Evolutionary relationships

When compared to other Cambrian chordates like the possible cephalochordate Cathaymyrus and the two known vertebrates Haikouicthys and Myllokunmingia, Zhongxiniscus resembles Cathaymyrus in having S-shaped myomeres, but is different in having a dorsal fin and a shorter body. Zhongxiniscus approaches in form to Haikouicthys and Myllokunmingia in its myomeres and its dorsal fin, but differs from the latter two having zigzag myomeres and fin rays, which Zhongxiniscus evidently lacks.

For these reasons, Zhongxiniscus is tentatively considered to be an intermediate form between Cathaymyrus and the two vertebrates Haikouichthys and Myllokunmingia.

References

  • Luo, Huilin; Hu, Sinxue; Chen, Liangzhong (Dec 2001). "New Early Cambrian Chordates from Haikou, Kunming". Acta Geologica Sinica. 75 (4): 345โ€“348. doi:10.1111/j.1755-6724.2001.tb00051.x.
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