Introduction
Euthycarcinoids have suffered the indignity of many poorly known fossil groups—they have been shuffled from group to group as more taxa, and hence more characters, have been discovered. This is due to their extremely limited diversity (only 18 taxa distributed from Cambrian to Triassic deposits), low fossilization potential within their preferred habitats, their unusual morphology, seemingly dichotomous possession of either mandibles or a labrum (Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1982; Edgecombe and Morgan, Reference Edgecombe and Morgan1999; Racheboeuf et al., Reference Racheboeuf, Vannier, Schram, Chabard and Sotty2008), specialized or generalized limbs (Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1982; Vaccari et al., Reference Vaccari, Edgecombe and Escudero2004; Collette and Hagadorn, Reference Collette and Hagadorn2010), and possession by some taxa of sternal pores—structures possibly analogous to coxal vesicles in myriapods (Edgecombe and Morgan, Reference Edgecombe and Morgan1999). Euthycarcinoids are of particular interest from an evolutionary perspective because they are morphologically similar to many enigmatic stem-group arthropods such as Pisinnocaris subconigera from the lower Cambrian Chengjiang Biota and, particularly, ?Pisinnocaris from the Hongjingshao Formation of Kunming, Yunnan Province, China (Hou and Bergström, Reference Hou and Bergström1998); because they transitioned from nearshore marine to freshwater environments (Racheboeuf et al., Reference Racheboeuf, Vannier, Schram, Chabard and Sotty2008); and because they may have been the first animals to make forays onto dry land in the Cambrian (MacNaughton et al., Reference MacNaughton, Cole, Dalrymple, Braddy, Briggs and Lukie2002; Collette and Hagadorn, Reference Collette and Hagadorn2010; Collette et al., Reference Collette, Hagadorn and Lacelle2010; Hagadorn et al., Reference Hagadorn, Collette and Belt2011). Recent hypotheses regarding euthycarcinoid relationships range from a close affinity with the Uniramia (=Myriapoda+Hexapoda [Edgecombe and Morgan, Reference Edgecombe and Morgan1999]), the Myriapoda (McNamara and Trewin, Reference McNamara and Trewin1993), the Branchiopoda (Wilson and Almond, Reference Wilson and Almond2001), or with the Hexapoda (Legg et al., Reference Legg, Sutton and Edgecombe2013). While the genus- and species-level characters that define euthycarcinoid taxa vary substantially, grossly exaggerated or highly modified exoskeletal features have not thus far been reported, with the possible exception of Arthrogyrinus platyurus, a probable euthycarcinoid from the Permian that possesses a paddle-like, highly modified telson (Wilson and Almond, Reference Wilson and Almond2001). Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. is thus strikingly different from all other euthycarcinoid taxa in that it possesses a pair of large wing-like processes that project laterally from the preabdominal dorsal exoskeleton (see Fig. 1). Trace fossils from the overlying Mackellar Formation attributable to A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. indicate that this taxon may have been nektonic, and that its stratigraphic range may include the entirety of the Pagoda and Mackellar formations. Discovery of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. is significant because it places euthycarcinoids among conchostracans and ostracodes as one of the earliest freshwater, lake-dwelling macroscopic animals known from high southern latitudes, and because it has interesting paleoecologic, paleoenvironmental, and taphonomic implications.
Locality and stratigraphy
Described specimens were collected during 1995 and 1997 from the lower Pagoda Formation along an arête extending east-northeast from the Mt. Butters massif, Shackleton Glacier area, central Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica. In the central Transantarctic Mountains, the Pagoda Formation consists predominantly of massive diamictite beds (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001). In the lower Pagoda Formation at Mt. Butters, weakly stratified diamictite beds, clast-supported breccia beds, siltstone and sandstone beds, and lonestone-bearing fine-grained units are also present. Stratified diamictites and breccias are of inferred settling from suspension, ice-rafted debris and mass-flow origin (Miller, Reference Miller1989; Miller and Collinson, Reference Miller and Collinson1994; Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001). Siltstone and sandstone beds contain cross-laminations, symmetrical and interference ripples, and are interpreted to have been deposited in a shallow-water lacustrine environment (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001), while ice-crystal casts indicate syndepositional freeze-thaw cycles in the Pagoda Formation (Miller, Reference Miller1989). Collectively, lithofacies evidence suggests that deposition of the lower part of the Pagoda Formation at Mt. Butters occurred in a glacially fed or ice-contact lake that developed approximately coevally with the late Paleozoic initial advance of the Gonwanide glaciers over the present day Shackleton Glacier area (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001).
The age of the Pagoda Formation at Mt. Butters is poorly constrained; the lower part of the formation could be latest Carboniferous (Gzelian) to earliest Permian (Asselian) (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Isbell, Miller and Hasiotis2002). Palynologic samples, including plant spores and pollen, recovered from a diamictite in the upper Pagoda Formation in the Nimrod Glacier area, Antarctica, indicate an early Permian age (Asselian–Tastubian) (Askin, Reference Askin1998). The glacigenic Pagoda Formation is conformably overlain by late Permian interbedded shales and fine-grained sandstones of the post-glacial lacustrine Mackellar Formation (Miller and Collinson, Reference Miller and Collinson1994).
Pagoda Formation lacustrine biota
The euthycarcinoid described herein is a rare component of a low-diversity conchostracan-dominated lacustrine biota that occurs within the Pagoda Formation (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Isbell, Miller and Hasiotis2002). Euthycarcinoid remains co-occur with the conchostracan Cyzicus (Lioestheria) shackletonensis (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Isbell, Miller and Hasiotis2002, figs. 3, 4) in siltstone beds that comprise a series of coarsening-upward (siltstone to sandstone) sequences that are 0.75–2 m thick. Other fossils from this interval include small ostracodes and coalified wood fragments (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Isbell, Miller and Hasiotis2002). Trace fossils, predominantly shallow surface burrows and bilobed traces, typically extend subparallel to bedding (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001). Traces in the Pagoda Formation have a patchy lateral distribution, and include both small, bilobed traces with scratch marks (Miller and Smail, Reference Miller and Smail1996) consistent with disruption of the sediment by conchostracans (Tasch, Reference Tasch1964), and slightly larger, Palaeophycus-like traces consistent with construction by vermiform animals (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001).
Materials and methods
Euthycarcinoid body fossil specimens described herein were immersed in ethanol and photographed through a Nikon SMZ800 stereomicroscope. Image acquisition was done with a Nikon D3100 digital SLR camera mounted to a Nikon P-IBSS2 camera mount. A circular polarizer was attached to the bottom of the objective lens. Illumination was provided by a studio strobe and fiber-optic illuminator that was equipped with a polarizing filter. Camera lucida drawings were done using a Nikon drawing tube attachment. Camera lucida drawings were scanned and traced in Adobe Illustrator. Orbiculichnus traces figured herein were supplied by Derek Briggs.
Repositories and institutional abbreviations
Specimens described and illustrated here are housed in collections of the Paleontological Research Institution (PRI), Ithaca, New York; and the Burke Museum of the University of Washington (UWBM).
Systematic paleontology
Class Euthycarcinoidea Gall and Grauvogel, Reference Gall and Grauvogel1964
Genus Antarcticarcinus new genus
Type species
Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. by monotypy.
Diagnosis
Euthycarcinidea with a pair of dorsally located, long, laterally directed extensions of the anteriormost dorsal tergite.
Etymology
Antarctica, referring to the discovery location; carcinus, from karkinos (Gr.), meaning crab.
Antarcticarcinus pagoda new species
Holotype
PRI 68571.
Diagnosis
As for genus.
Etymology
pagoda, referring to the Pagoda Formation, from which these specimens were recovered.
Occurrence
Gray siltstone beds in the lower part of the Pagoda Formation (upper Carboniferous?–lower Permian) 4–4.5 m above the base of the Pagoda Formation (section F of Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001), exposed adjacent to Mt. Butters, Shackleton Glacier area, central Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica (84°51.7’S, 177°19.1’W).
Description
Holotype 43.7 mm long, including head and preserved part of preabdomen, maximum width 45.2 mm. Head 10.8 mm long, 25.0 mm wide. Outline of head semicircular to subtrapezoidal; an inflection of head outline and possible sclerite posterior margin on holotype specimen indicate head may be composed of two sclerites. Posterolateral margins of presumed posterior cephalic tergite (PCT) acutely rounded. A pair of semi-circular eyes present near inferred junction of anterior cephalic tergite (ACT) and PCT. An axially oriented structure extends from anterior margin of ACT posteriorly, terminating in a bifurcation. A pair of mandibles (M in Fig. 2.2) appears to be present, defined by very low ridges of darker sediment. These structures are approximately square in outline, are distinctly separated along the ventral midline of the animal, and narrow slightly posterolaterally.
Number of dorsal tergites unknown; at least 3–4 preserved. Anteriormost dorsal tergite (T1) with large, prominent lateral processes (LP). Lateral processes long (axially) where they extend from T1, narrowing distally and posteriorly; anterolateral margins gently rounded, becoming nearly straight medially. Fragmentary specimens of LP indicate distal end slightly curved inward toward body, termination acuminate. Surface of LP covered with parallel, linear, closely spaced ornamentation. Posterolateral margin of T1 near 90°; extends anteriorly and adaxially in arcuate outline forming LP of T1.
At least five ventral sternites preserved in holotype specimen. Sternite 1 (S1) substantially longer (axially) than posterior sternites; sternites decrease in width posteriorly. Posterolateral sternal margins acutely rounded. Sternal pores not apparent.
Two or three partial limbs are preserved (LMB in Fig. 2.2). Limbs composed of 4–5 similarly sized box-like to irregularly shaped podomeres. Limbs appear uniramous, and appear to insert close to the ventral midline of trunk (Fig. 2.2). A possible disarticulated limb or antenna (ANT? in Fig. 2.2) is located adjacent to the posterior cephalic tergite; this appendage is composed of smaller, more gracile, boxlike elements. A possible antenna extends forward from the anterior cephalic tergite. No limb setae have been observed.
Raised, elliptical structure present immediately posterior to PCT; widest part of structure coincides with S1, narrows posteriorly; infill coarser than surrounding matrix. Postabdomen not preserved; holotype preserved in ventral aspect.
Remarks
Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. is assignable to the Euthycarcinoidea by possession of a greater number of ventral sternites than dorsal tergites, uniramous appendages, possession of anterior and posterior cephalic tergites with a pair of spherical eyes located near the juncture of these plates, and a pair of mandibles. However, a direct comparison with other euthycarcinoid taxa is extremely difficult owing to the incomplete nature of the holotype of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. Overall, A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. bears the greatest gross similarity with members of the family Euthycarcinidae Handlirsch, Reference Handlirsch1914 (i.e., genera Euthycarcinus, Kottixerxes, Schramixerxes, Smithixerxes, and Synaustrus). Problems with this placement include preservation of apparently only four dorsal tergites (T1–T4 in Fig. 2.2), although this is likely due to the incomplete nature of the holotype. Apparent limb podomeres beneath the preabdomen (LMB in Fig. 2.2) appear to be flattened; whether this flattening is due to taphonomy or to original morphology cannot be determined. Additionally, no limb setae have been observed. Within the family Euthycarcinidae, all members of the genera Euthycarcinus, Kottixerxes, and Synaustrus have slender, non-flattened, antennaeform appendages with setae (Gall and Grovagel, Reference Gall and Grauvogel1964; Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1982; Schneider, Reference Schneider1983; Schultka, Reference Schultka1991; Edgecombe and Morgan, Reference Edgecombe and Morgan1999). Of the remaining genera currently within Euthycarcinidae, Schramixerxes possess no setae on the limbs (Racheboeuf et al., Reference Racheboeuf, Vannier, Schram, Chabard and Sotty2008) and no information on limbs exists for Smithixerxes (Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1982). Without any postabdominal information, and considering the incomplete nature of the holotype, we prefer to retain Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. in open nomenclature within the class Euthycarcinoidea.
Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. was originally described and interpreted as a freshwater decapod crustacean (crayfish) by Babcock et al. (Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998). This attribution was based largely upon the texture of the single specimen that was known at that time (a single lateral processes as interpreted herein, PRI 68572, Fig. 3.1, 3.2) that was interpreted as a crayfish propodus or fixed finger (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998). Those authors further based their attribution upon burrows that were interpreted as having been constructed by crayfish that occur in the lower Triassic Fremouw Formation, which occurs several formational units above the Pagoda Formation (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998, fig. 2). Moreover, Fremouw traces occur in a completely different depositional setting—crevasse splay deposits laterally adjacent to floodplain deposits (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998).
Babcock et al. (Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998) dissected crayfish and interpreted the rod-like, or closely spaced linear texture of the fossil lateral processes (Fig. 3.1, 3.2) as being similar to the cuticle of the modern crayfish genus Procambarus, but they did not indicate if further dissections were done with other groups of claw-bearing arthropods. Also, there was no indication in PRI 68572 of the ‘teeth’ mentioned in Babcock et al. (Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998) when examined under a stereomicroscope, but the margin of the preserved portion of the cuticle does appear to have an irregularly fractured edge. Because of the articulated state of the anterior portion of the holotype of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. (PRI 68571), including the lateral processes, the decapod crustacean interpretation of the single isolated specimen (Babcock et al., Reference Babcock, Miller, Isbell, Collinson and Hasiotis1998, fig. 3A) is no longer supported, and that specimen is transferred to A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. herein.
Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. appears to have been well adapted for a lacustrine environment, with gross morphology consistent with a nektobenthic lifestyle. The large wing-like processes extending laterally from the trunk dorsal surface may have aided in stabilizing the animal on soft muds at the sediment-water interface, or in swimming for steering or lift rather than propulsion. Although many other euthycarcinoid taxa possessed spine-like extensions of the dorsal segments (McNamara and Trewin, Reference McNamara and Trewin1993; Wilson and Almond, Reference Wilson and Almond2001; Racheboeuf et al., Reference Racheboeuf, Vannier, Schram, Chabard and Sotty2008), no other taxon has advancement of these features forward of the posterolateral corner of tergite, or the greatly exaggerated size of the lateral processes in A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. A probable three-dimensional gut trace in the holotype is partially filled with sediment coarser than the surrounding matrix, indicating a possible deposit-feeding lifestyle.
Other material examined
PRI 68572–68576: fragmentary remains including isolated lateral processes and unidentified sclerites. All specimens reposited at the Paleontological Research Institute, Ithaca, New York.
Paleoecology
Trace fossils from the Pagoda Formation are low diversity and relatively uncommon, but can be abundant on some bedding surfaces (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001). Arthropod-produced traces are represented by a single ichnogenus—Isopodichnus, which is a feeding trace generally attributed to concostracan crustaceans (Pollard, Reference Pollard1985). No arthropod-produced walking trails have been reported from the Pagoda Formation. However, Diplichnites and arthropod-produced resting traces attributed to cf. Orbiculichnus have been reported from the overlying Mackellar Formation at nearby Mt. Weeks (Briggs et al., Reference Briggs, Miller, Isbell and Sidor2010). The lower Permian Mackellar Formation is interpreted as representing a large post-glacial lake or lake complex, deposited in a basin that gradually filled as early Permian continental glaciers retreated (Lindsay, Reference Lindsay1970; Miller and Collinson, Reference Miller and Collinson1994). Mackellar resting traces (Fig. 4) bear a distinct morphological resemblance to A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. The anterior of cf. Orbiculichnus traces are rounded, corresponding with the head of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. (Fig. 4). The other traces are approximately T-shaped, with long, straight or slightly curved longitudinal axes.
Orbiculichnus traces were originally interpreted as having been produced by an insect jumping off of wet sediment surfaces (Briggs et al., Reference Briggs, Miller, Isbell and Sidor2010). Euthycarcinoids were considered as plausible tracemakers for Mackellar resting traces, but discounted because no euthycarcinoid was then known with morphology capable of producing the transverse structures of the resting traces (Briggs et al., Reference Briggs, Miller, Isbell and Sidor2010). Although no euthycarcinoid remains are currently known from the Mackellar Formation, the very strong morphological similarities between trace and inferred tracemaker are striking. We thus reinterpret these impressions as having been produced by the long lateral T1 processes of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp., while the long, posterior longitudinal groove would have been produced by the legless postabdomen and telson of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. (compare Figs. 1, 3 with the reconstruction of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. in Fig. 1). Additionally, the Protichnites and Diplichnites trackways on the surface figured in Briggs et al. (Reference Briggs, Miller, Isbell and Sidor2010, fig. 3a) may have been produced by Antarcticarcinus n. gen. walking on the sediment surface because these ichnogenera have been associated with eutycarcinoids (MacNaughton et al., Reference MacNaughton, Cole, Dalrymple, Braddy, Briggs and Lukie2002; Collette et al., Reference Collette, Gass and Hagadorn2012).
All euthycarcinoid taxa except for the Middle Triassic Synaustrus brookvalensis occur from approximately 30°N to 30°S. Both S. brookvalensis and A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. occur at approximately 85°S, but S. brookvalensis occurred during greenhouse Middle Triassic time, while A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. inhabited an ice-dominated lake. As inhabitants of a polar lake supplied by seasonally introduced glacial meltwater, A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. must have been capable of withstanding extremely cold temperatures. Abundant evidence shows that continental glaciation in southern Gondwana was extensive during the latest Paleozoic (Crowell, 1978, Reference Crowell1999, p. 28–39; Coates, Reference Coates1986; Collinson and Elliot, Reference Collinson and Elliot1986; Miller, Reference Miller1989). Based on the inferred temperature tolerances of coexisting conchostracans (Tasch, Reference Tasch1964), water temperatures in the Pagoda lake may have reached approximately 10°C for several weeks each year. Trace fossils, whose margins are commonly indistinct, were probably constructed in soft, unfrozen muds (Miller and Smail, Reference Miller and Smail1996). Wood fragments present in the Pagoda Formation at Mt. Butters imply the proximity of terrestrial vegetation requiring an environment that received enough sunlight and warmth seasonally to promote growth (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001). The occurrence of euthycarcinoids in low-diversity freshwater settings dominated by conchostracans is not unique to the Pagoda lake—Euthycarcinus martensi from Germany also co-occurs with conchostracans and few other animals (Schneider, Reference Schneider1983). Euthycarcinoids from the upper Carboniferous Mazon Creek (Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1982) and Montceau-les-Mines (Rolfe et al., Reference Rolfe, Schram, Pacaud, Sotty and Secretan1982; Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1982; Schram and Rolfe, Reference Schram and Rolfe1994) deposits co-occur with conchostracans, ostracodes, and numerous other taxa. Taken together, paleobiological and sedimentological evidence suggest periodic warming in high southern latitudes during the Permian (Isbell et al., Reference Isbell, Miller, Babcock and Hasiotis2001).
The extreme rarity of non-mineralized arthropod body fossils such as A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. in these lacustrine deposits imply that: (1) difficult ecological conditions may have been limiting to many taxa, or (2) scavenging and/or microbial degradation proceeded rapidly due to limited resources. Remains of predaceous or scavenging animals are unknown from the Pagoda Formation, but trace-fossil evidence from the Mackellar Formation suggests that A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. may not have been a rare animal because many cf. Orbiculichnus traces attributable to this taxon occur on a single small slab from Mt. Weeks (Briggs et al., Reference Briggs, Miller, Isbell and Sidor2010).
The occurrence of Antarcticarcinus pagoda n. gen. n. sp. in a polar lacustrine setting indicates that euthycarcinoids may have been more successful and geographically widespread than previously thought. All known euthycarcinoids occur in shallow, emergent, nearshore, or lacustrine environments (Racheboeuf et al., Reference Racheboeuf, Vannier, Schram, Chabard and Sotty2008), and with the exceptions of A. pagoda n. gen. n. sp. and Arthrogyrinus platyurus (Wilson and Almond, Reference Wilson and Almond2001) from the Carboniferous of the UK, most do not have adaptations specific to an aquatic lifestyle. Together with their dispersed paleobiogeographic distribution, and very limited number of occurrences, this begs the question of whether euthycarcinoids were truly aquatic organisms, or whether perhaps they may have been amphibious. A pair of ventral exoskeletal sternal pores per preabdominal sternite is closely associated with internal tube-like structures in many euthycarcinoid taxa (Schram, Reference Schram1971; Edgecombe and Morgan, Reference Edgecombe and Morgan1999; Anderson and Trewin, Reference Anderson and Trewin2003, p. 482, text-fig. 12; Vaccari et al., Reference Vaccari, Edgecombe and Escudero2004). Such an arrangement of external openings and internal tubes is strikingly similar to the respiratory system in millipedes where a pair of respiratory spiracles per segment opens internally to a branched tracheal tree for distribution of gasses to tissues (Clarke, Reference Clarke1973, p. 101). Others have posited that the sternal pores could be coxal vesicles associated with eversible sacs of the type present in myriapods (Edgecombe and Morgan, Reference Edgecombe and Morgan1999), where these structures are associated with moisture uptake (Clarke, Reference Clarke1973, p. 56). Either of these interpretations for euthycarcinoid sternal pores argues for an amphibious or subaerial lifestyle. Considering these interpretations, together with abundant trace-fossil evidence indicating subaerial euthycarcinoid activity (McNamara and Trewin, Reference McNamara and Trewin1993; MacNaughton et al., Reference MacNaughton, Cole, Dalrymple, Braddy, Briggs and Lukie2002; Vaccari et al., Reference Vaccari, Edgecombe and Escudero2004; Collette and Hagadorn, Reference Collette and Hagadorn2010; Collette et al., Reference Collette, Gass and Hagadorn2012), the absence of euthycarcinoid remains in offshore deposits, it is possible that euthycarcinoids had developed the ability to breathe air by Cambrian time, and that they adopted an amphibious lifestyle thereafter.
Acknowledgments
J. Collette thanks L. Babcock for sending the material described in this paper for study and D. Briggs for providing the photograph of cf. Orbiculichnus. An earlier version of this manuscript was improved by the helpful suggestions from the following reviewers: G. Edgecombe, J. Hannibal, and J. Vannier. This work was supported by NSF grants OPP-9419962 and OPP-9615045 to J.I., and grants OPP-9417978 and OPP-9614709 to M.M.