Peer review process
Not revised: This Reviewed Preprint includes the authors’ original preprint (without revision), an eLife assessment, public reviews, and a provisional response from the authors.
Read more about eLife’s peer review process.Editors
- Reviewing EditorAriel ChipmanThe Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
- Senior EditorGeorge PerryPennsylvania State University, University Park, United States of America
Reviewer #1 (Public review):
Summary:
The manuscript by Zhang et al. analyzed 17 specimens of Cindarella eucalla with 3D technology and discussed the anatomical findings, the relationship to other artiopods, and the ecology of the animal. The results are excellent and the findings are very interesting. However, the discussion needs to be extended, as the point the authors are trying to make is not always clear. I also recommend some restructuring of the discussion. Overall this is an important manuscript, and I'm looking forward to reading the edited version.
Strengths:
The analyses, the 3D data is excellent and provides new information.
Weaknesses:
The discussion - the authors provide information for the findings, but do not discuss them in detail. More information is needed.
Reviewer #2 (Public review):
Summary:
Zhang et al. present very well-illustrated specimens of the artiopodan Cinderella eucalla from the Chengjiang Biota. Multiple specimens are shown with preserved appendages, which is rare for artiopodans and will greatly help our understanding of this taxon. The authors use CT scanning to reveal the ventral organization of this taxon. The description of the taxon needs some modification, specifically expansion of the gut and limb morphology. The conclusion that Cinderella was a fast-moving animal is very weak, comparisons with extant fast animals and possibly FEA analyses are necessary to support such a claim. Although the potential insights provided by such well-preserved fossils could be valuable, the claims made are tenuous and based on the available evidence presented herein.
Strengths:
The images produced through CT scanning specimens reveal the very fine detail of the appendages and are well illustrated. Specimens preserve guts and limbs, which are informative both for the phylogenetic position and ecology of this taxon. The limbs are very well preserved, with protopodite, exopodite, and endopodites visible. Addressing the weaknesses below will make the most of this compelling data that demonstrates the morphology of the limbs well.
Weaknesses:
Although this paper includes very well-illustrated fossils, including new information on the eyes, guts, and limbs of Cinderella, the data are not fully explained, and the conclusions are weakly supported.
The authors suggest the preservation of complex ramifying diverticular, but it should be better illustrated and the discussion of the gut diverticulae should be longer, especially as gut morphology can provide insights into the feeding strategy.
The conclusion that Cinderella eucalla was fast, sediment feeding in a muddy environment, is not well supported. These claims seem to be tenuously made without any evidence to support them. The authors should add a new section in the discussion focused on feeding ecology where they explicitly compare the morphology to suspension-feeding artiopodans to justify whether it fed that way or not. To further explore feeding, the protopodite morphology needs to be more carefully described and compared to other known taxa. The function of endites on the endopodite to stir up sediment for particle feeding in a muddy environment would also need to be more thoroughly discussed and compared with modern analogs. The impact of their findings is not highlighted in the discussion, which is currently more of a review of what has been previously said and should focus more on what insights are provided by the great fossils illustrated by the authors.
The authors argue that their data supports fast escaping capabilities, but it is not clear how they reached that conclusion based on the data available. Is there a way this can be further evaluated? The data is impressive, so including comparisons with extant taxa that display fast escaping strategies would help the authors make their case more compelling. The authors also claim that the limbs of Cinderella are strong, again this conclusion is unclear. Comparison with the limbs of other taxa to show their robustness would be useful. To actually test how these limbs deal with the force and strain applied to them by a sudden burst of movement, the authors could conduct Finite Element Analyses.
Reviewer #3 (Public review):
This paper provides an interesting description of the ventral parts of the Cambrian xandarellid Cindarella eucalla, derived from exceptionally preserved specimens of the Chengjiang Biota. These morphological data are useful for our broad understanding and future research on Xandarellida, and are generally well-represented in the description and accompanying figures. The strengths of this work rest in this morphological description of exceptional fossil material, and this is generally well supported. In addition, the authors put this description in the context of the morphology of other xandarellids and Cambrian arthropod groups, with most of these parallels being useful and reasonably supported, though in several places homology is assumed and this currently lacks evidence. The manuscript goes on to use these morphological data and comparisons to other groups (particularly trilobites) to make suggestions for the ecology of Cindarella eucalla and other xandarellids. The majority of my comments on this work relate to this latter aim - the ecological conclusions drawn are generally derived through morphological comparisons, where a specific morphology has been suggested as an adaption to a particular ecological function in another extinct arthropod group. However, the original suggestions for ecological function are untested, and so remain hypotheses. Despite this, they are frequently presented as truisms to enable ecological conclusions to be drawn for Cindarella eucalla. I have listed my comments and queries on the study below for the authors to address or respond to, and I hope they are useful to the authors.
Comments:
There are a number of ecological and functional morphology conclusions stated that seem put too strongly to be considered sufficiently supported by the evidence given. These relate to both the description of C. eucalla, and comparisons to other extinct arthropod taxa (notably trilobites). Many of these latter statements are assumptions of functional morphology, and should not be repeated as truisms, rather than they represent suggested functions and ecologies based on the known morphological descriptions. This aspect occurs throughout the article, and, for me, is the primary concern.