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Dive into the research topics where Aodhán D. Butler is active.

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Featured researches published by Aodhán D. Butler.


Scientific Reports | 2013

A sclerite-bearing stem group entoproct from the early Cambrian and its implications

Zhifei Zhang; Lars E. Holmer; Christian B. Skovsted; Glenn A. Brock; Graham E. Budd; Dongjing Fu; Xingliang Zhang; Degan Shu; Jian Han; Jianni Liu; Haizhou Wang; Aodhán D. Butler; Guoxiang Li

The Lophotrochozoa includes disparate tentacle-bearing sessile protostome animals, which apparently appeared in the Cambrian explosion, but lack an uncontested fossil record. Here we describe abundant well preserved material of Cotyledion tylodes Luo et Hu, 1999, from the Cambrian (Series 2) Chengjiang deposits, reinterpreted here as a stem-group entoproct. The entoproct affinity is supported by the sessile body plan and interior soft anatomy. The body consists of an upper calyx and a lower elongate stalk with a distal holdfast. The soft anatomy includes a U-shaped gut with a mouth and aboral anus ringed by retractable marginal tentacles. Cotyledion differs from extant entoprocts in being larger, and having the calyx and the stalk covered by numerous loosely-spaced external sclerites. The description of entoprocts from the Chengjiang biota traces the ancestry of yet another lophotrochozoan phylum back to the Cambrian radiation, and has important implications for the earliest evolution of lophotrochozoans.


Scientific Reports | 2015

An early Cambrian agglutinated tubular lophophorate with brachiopod characters

Zhifei Zhang; Guoxiang Li; Lars E. Holmer; Glenn A. Brock; Uwe Balthasar; Christian B. Skovsted; Dongjing Fu; Xingliang Zhang; Haizhou Wang; Aodhán D. Butler; Zhiliang Zhang; Changqun Cao; Jian Han; Jianni Liu; Degan Shu

The morphological disparity of lophotrochozoan phyla makes it difficult to predict the morphology of the last common ancestor. Only fossils of stem groups can help discover the morphological transitions that occurred along the roots of these phyla. Here, we describe a tubular fossil Yuganotheca elegans gen. et sp. nov. from the Cambrian (Stage 3) Chengjiang Lagerstätte (Yunnan, China) that exhibits an unusual combination of phoronid, brachiopod and tommotiid (Cambrian problematica) characters, notably a pair of agglutinated valves, enclosing a horseshoe-shaped lophophore, supported by a lower bipartite tubular attachment structure with a long pedicle with coelomic space. The terminal bulb of the pedicle provided anchorage in soft sediment. The discovery has important implications for the early evolution of lophotrochozoans, suggesting rooting of brachiopods into the sessile lophotrochozoans and the origination of their bivalved bauplan preceding the biomineralization of shell valves in crown brachiopods.


Journal of Paleontology | 2015

Exceptionally preserved Mickwitzia from the Indian Springs Lagerstätte (Cambrian Stage 3), Nevada

Aodhán D. Butler; Michael Streng; Lars E. Holmer; Loren E. Babcock

Abstract. Exceptionally preserved specimens of the Cambrian stem-group brachiopod Mickwitzia occidens Walcott, 1908 are described in detail from the Indian Springs Lagerstätte in Nevada, USA. Shell structure and preserved mantle setae from these specimens reveal a variable diagenetic (taphonomic) history and provide insight into the phylogenetic position of mickwitziids. Morphologic and morphometric comparison to M. monilifera (Linnarsson, 1869) from Sweden and M. muralensis Walcott, 1913 from British Columbia, Canada reveals clear species-level distinctions. Scanning electron microscopic analysis allows revision of the generic diagnosis. The Mickwitzia shell is characterized by the presence of inwardly pointing phosphatic cones and tangential setae-bearing tubes. The inwardly pointing cone structures are not consistent with setal bearing structures as previously thought, but rather represent endopunctae-like structures. Acrotretid-like shell structures and shell-penetrating setae in M. occidens strengthen the previously proposed close relationship between stem-group brachiopods and tommotiids, a group of small shelly fossils.


Palaeontology | 2015

The oldest notostracan (Upper Devonian Strud locality, Belgium)

Linda Lagebro; Pierre Gueriau; Thomas A. Hegna; Nicolas Rabet; Aodhán D. Butler; Graham E. Budd


Palaeontology | 2016

A new family of Cambrian rhynchonelliformean brachiopods (Order Naukatida) with an aberrant coral‐like morphology

Michael Streng; Aodhán D. Butler; John S. Peel; Russell J. Garwood; Jean-Bernard Caron


Archive | 2014

An early Cambrian agglutinated tubular lophophorate with brachiopod

Lars E. Holmer; Glenn A. Brock; Uwe Balthasar; Christian B. Skovsted; Aodhán D. Butler; Jian Han


GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016 | 2016

EXCEPTIONALLY PRESERVED MICKWITZIA FROM THE INDIAN SPRINGS LAGERSTÄTTE (CAMBRIAN STAGE 3), NEVADA AND IMPLICATIONS FOR EARLY CAMBRIAN BRACHIOPOD EVOLUTION

Aodhán D. Butler; Michael Streng; Lars E. Holmer; Loren E. Babcock


Scientific Reports | 2015

ERRATUM: An early Cambrian agglutinated tubular lophophorate with brachiopod characters

Zhifei Zhang; Guoxiang Li; Lars E. Holmer; Glenn A. Brock; Uwe Balthasar; Christian B. Skovsted; Dongjing Fu; Xingliang Zhang; Haizhou Wang; Aodhán D. Butler; Zhiliang Zhang; Changqun Cao; Jian Han; Jianni Liu; Degan Shu


Archive | 2015

X-ray microtomography of the tommotiid Micrina reveals cellular and ultrastructural preservation, confirming a tommotiid stem-linguliform affinity

Aodhán D. Butler; Russell J. Garwood; Michael Streng; Tristan Lowe; Lars E. Holmer


Archive | 2014

Exceptionally-preserved Mickwitzia from the Indian Springs Lagerstätte.

Aodhán D. Butler; Michael Streng; Lars E. Holmer; Loren E. Babcock

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Christian B. Skovsted

Swedish Museum of Natural History

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Dongjing Fu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guoxiang Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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