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Extant aplacophorans, a group of shell-less vermiform molluscs, respire
through appendages within or projecting from a posterior cavity.
Respiratory structures differ between the subclasses Caudofoveata
(ctenidia within the cavity) and Solenogastres (folds of the mantle
itself). Acaenoplax hayae, a Silurian vermiform mollusc from the
Herefordshire Lagerstätte, England, exhibits characteristics of both these
groups. While recent work places it within the crown group Aplacophora,
near the caudofoveates, initial observations suggested that its
respiratory structures were closer to those of the solenogastres. Here, we
present new reconstructions of the posterior of Acaenoplax prepared with
the aim of resolving features obscured when prior studies were undertaken.
These reconstructions detail a novel posterior architecture, not closely
comparable to that of either extant aplacophoran group, in which
respiratory projections arise from a membrane that partly encloses a
central posterior cavity. The posterior membrane is flanked by small
spherical projections; both membrane and spherical projections are
apparently unique within the Aplacophora. The existence of this previously
undocumented respiratory system underlines the diversity of the
aplacophoran clade during the Palaeozoic.
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