Jurassic fossil sheds light on evolutionary origins of thorny-headed worms

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A research team from the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has identified a fossil acanthocephalan, Juracanthocephalus, from the 160-million-year-old Daohugou Biota in Inner Mongolia, China. This finding was published in Nature.

Acanthocephalans, commonly known as thorny-headed or spiny-headed worms, are a group of endoparasitic worms found in both marine and terrestrial ecosystems. These medically significant parasites infect a wide range of hosts, including humans, pigs, dogs, cats, and fish.

Acanthocephalans are characterized by their worm-like body shape and a retractable proboscis armed with rows of recurved (i.e., backward-facing) hooks for anchoring to the digestive tracts of their hosts. Historically classified as a distinct animal phylum, their highly specialized body plan has led to ongoing debates regarding their phylogenetic position.

Morphological studies have proposed various hypotheses linking acanthocephalans to Platyhelminthes (flatworms), Priapulida (penis worms), or Rotifera (wheel animals). However, molecular phylogenetic analyses strongly suggest that acanthocephalans are a highly specialized subgroup within Rotifera. Despite this, the morphological disparity between endoparasitic acanthocephalans and free-living rotifers remains striking.

Jurassic fossil sheds light on evolutionary origins of thorny-headed worms
The backscatter scanning electron (BSE) image (a), overlay image of several elements concentrations (b) and elemental maps of carbon from energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (c) of Juracanthocephalus. Scale bar, 2.0 mm. Credit: NIGPAS

Furthermore, the fossil record of acanthocephalans is exceptionally sparse due to their soft bodies—which were less likely to fossilize than harder ones—and concealed habitats.

Until now, the only known fossil evidence consisted of four putative acanthocephalan eggs discovered in the coprolites of a Late Cretaceous crocodyliform. Due to the lack of body fossils, the origin and early evolution of acanthocephalans thus remain poorly understood.

Using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), the research team conducted a detailed anatomical analysis of Juracanthocephalus and updated the morphological matrix of worm-like animals to support a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis.

The results indicate that Juracanthocephalus represents a transitional form between free-living, jawed rotifers and jawless, endoparasitic acanthocephalans, bridging an evolutionary gap. This finding provides the first direct fossil evidence to help resolve the long-standing mystery of acanthocephalan origins.

Jurassic fossil sheds light on evolutionary origins of thorny-headed worms
Simplified cladogram of Gnathifera showing Juracanthocephalus in red color. Credit: NIGPAS

Juracanthocephalus has a fusiform body divided into a proboscis, neck, and trunk. The proboscis is equipped with strongly sclerotized, slightly curved hooks, while the ventral surface of the trunk features 38 lines of transverse, setaceous combs—a trait comparable to modern acanthocephalans.

A possible alimentary tract is preserved in the proboscis, though no clear gut is visible in the trunk. The terminal end of the fossil displays a structure resembling the bursa of male acanthocephalans.

Notably, Juracanthocephalus has a jaw apparatus composed of clustered, tooth-like units arranged in converging paired rows, with the jaws increasing in size posteriorly. This structure closely resembles that found in Gnathifera, a group that includes Gnathostomulida, Micrognathozoa, and Syndermata (which encompasses Rotifera and Acanthocephala).

To determine the phylogenetic position of Juracanthocephalus, the research team compiled an updated morphological matrix incorporating both extant and extinct worm-like animals.

The analysis identifies Juracanthocephalus as a stem-group acanthocephalan, sister to all extant acanthocephalans. This finding aligns with molecular phylogenetic analyses, which place acanthocephalans within Rotifera (including Monogononta, Bdelloidea, and Seisonidea).

Jurassic fossil sheds light on evolutionary origins of thorny-headed worms
Phylogenetic tree from 50% majority rule bootstrap consensus tree of parsimony analysis. When Juracanthocephalus is included in the matrix, the results recover Seisonidea as the sister group to Juracanthocephalus + all extant acanthocephalans (a); when Juracanthocephalus is excluded from the morphological matrix, the results support the Seisonidea as the sister group of all other Rotifera (b). Credit: NIGPAS

However, the precise placement of acanthocephalans within Rotifera remains contentious, with six competing hypotheses arising from molecular and morphological studies. When Juracanthocephalus is excluded from the morphological matrix, the results support Seisonidea as the sister group to all other Rotifera, consistent with previous morphological analyses but conflicting with molecular data.

Conversely, incorporating Juracanthocephalus into the matrix positions Seisonidea as the sister group to Juracanthocephalus and all extant acanthocephalans, reconciling morphological and molecular phylogenetic analyses.

The discovery of Juracanthocephalus provides a crucial reference for understanding the evolutionary innovations and body plan of acanthocephalans. Its hooked proboscis and large body size suggest that it was an endoparasite during the Jurassic period. Furthermore, this fossil implies that acanthocephalans may have originated in terrestrial environments and diverged from Rotifera no later than the Middle Jurassic.

This study underscores the importance of transitional fossils in elucidating radical morphological changes in animal body plans. While molecular phylogenetics has revolutionized our understanding of evolutionary relationships, Juracanthocephalus highlights the indispensable role of fossil evidence in reconstructing the history of life.

More information: Bo Wang, A Jurassic acanthocephalan illuminates the origin of thorny-headed worms, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08830-5www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08830-5

Journal information: Nature 

Provided by Chinese Academy of Sciences 

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