Trilobites’ growth may have resembled that of modern marine crustaceans

Trilobites’ growth may have resembled that of modern marine crustaceans

Trilobites’ growth may have resembled that of modern marine crustaceans

A Triarthrus eatoni trilobite, 11 mm long, found in the Frankfort Shale, New York, USA. Photo by Dwergenpaartje, Wikimedia Commons.

Trilobites- extinct marine arthropods that roamed the world’s oceans from about 520 million years ago until they went extinct 250 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period – may have grown in a similar fashion and reached ages that match those of extant crustaceans, a new study has found.

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Sea sponges need oxygen, as fish and people do

Sea sponges need oxygen, as fish and people do

Sea sponges need oxygen, as fish and people do

Wool sponge. Photo by Mark Butler.

The inconspicuous sea sponges are Earth’s oldest multicellular animals and have filtered the oceans for nearly 900 million years, long before the first plants appeared on land. New research appearing in the journal Fisheries Bulletin, published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, indicates that their growth depends on their oxygen supply in a manner similar to more complex animals such as fish.

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