Scientists have unveiled groundbreaking evidence that pushes back the known fossil record of annelids—commonly known as ringed worms—to approximately 535 million years ago, within the earliest Cambrian period. This remarkable find emerges from the meticulous study of microfossils extracted from Orsten-type deposits in the Fortunian Kuanchuanpu Formation of China. The fossils represent the earliest unequivocal body fossils of annelids, radically expanding our understanding of the early evolutionary history and ecological diversification of this pivotal phylum.
Annelids, characterized by their segmented bodies and paired appendages, are an extraordinarily diverse and ecologically significant group comprising polychaetes (bristle worms), oligochaetes (earthworms and relatives), and hirudineans (leeches). Modern phylogenetic evidence challenges traditional tripartite classification by revealing polychaetes as a paraphyletic group from which the clade Clitellata (encompassing oligochaetes and hirudineans) arises. Intriguingly, various taxa once considered independent phyla—such as Echiura, Sipuncula, and Vestimentifera—are now nested within the annelid radiation, underscoring the group’s complex evolutionary tapestry.
The discovery derives from seven minute, phosphatized fossils preserved as endocasts—internal molds capturing the morphology of the segments—in Konservat-Lagerstätten from the early Cambrian. These fossils present segmented trunks bearing paired lateral or ventrolateral appendages, whose lengths vary relative to their body segments. Detailed morphological examinations led to the taxonomic establishment of two novel genera and species, Kuanchuanpivermis brevicruris and Zhangjiagoivermis longicruris, distinguished primarily by the variation in appendage length and structure.
The appendages culminate in a bifurcation into two lobes displaying consistent but variable morphology and size. This structural configuration closely mirrors the biramous parapodia—a hallmark appendage type observed in extant polychaete annelids—particularly resembling those of tomopterid worms present in modern pelagic ecosystems. The two lobes, inferred as notopodium and neuropodium, are instrumental for locomotion and respiration, indicating these Cambrian fossils likely possessed similar functional adaptations.
Through exhaustive comparative analyses, alternative taxonomic identities were systematically excluded. Potential affiliations to algae, digestive tract remains, lobopodians, tardigrades, onychophorans, or arthropods were discounted based on absent or incongruent morphological traits. The integrative evidence strongly supports classification of these organisms as polychaete annelids, thus providing the earliest direct fossil testimony of this lineage.
These findings imply that characteristic annelid features such as trunk segmentation and biramous parapodia had already evolved before the last common ancestor of existing annelid species. This offers compelling support for the hypothesis that polychaete-like morphologies represent primitive states in annelid evolution, contrasting with the derived forms seen in clitellates and other subgroups.
Ecologically, the study reveals an early diversification in habitat strategies among annelids. The relatively short appendages of Kuanchuanpivermis brevicruris suggest an adaptation to benthic lifestyles akin to contemporary nereid polychaetes, which inhabit sedimentary or substrate-rich environments. Meanwhile, the elongated appendages of Zhangjiagoivermis longicruris indicate a pelagic mode of life, making it the earliest known example of free-swimming annelids dwelling within open water columns during the Cambrian.
Despite their modest size and environmental constraints, these pioneering annelids likely possessed locomotor capabilities, albeit more limited than those of modern forms. Their small size and limited speed could have impacted ecological interactions and evolutionary trajectories within Cambrian ecosystems, hinting at complex dynamics in early marine food webs.
This research not only extends the fossil record of pelagic annelids back to the earliest Cambrian but also lends robust support to molecular phylogenies that cast polychaetes as a paraphyletic grade. Moreover, it posits that the total-group annelids—including stem lineages predating the crown group—had already appeared before the Cambrian explosion, pushing annelid origins even further into the Precambrian.
Fundamentally, these insights reshape our understanding of early animal evolution, emphasizing that significant morphological and ecological innovations emerged rapidly in the Fortunian stage. The synthesis of exceptional preservational fidelity afforded by Orsten-type deposits with cutting-edge paleontological techniques highlights how microfossils can fill critical gaps left by macrofossil assemblages such as those from Burgess Shale-type deposits.
Ultimately, this pioneering study orchestrated by the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology alongside collaborators at Virginia Tech, LMU Munich, and Chinese oceanographic institutes uncovers a hidden chapter in Earth’s deep-time biological heritage, emphasizing the evolutionary complexity and early ecological niches of annelids. Such revelations underscore the importance of integrating micro- and macrofossil evidence to unravel the nuanced history of ancient life.
The research was generously supported by the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Strategic Priority Research Program, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the United States National Science Foundation, exemplifying global scientific collaboration that bridges disciplines to illuminate the origins of animal life on Earth.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
News Publication Date: 20-Apr-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2538071123
Image Credits: ZHANG Huaqiao
Keywords: Fossil records, Paleontology, Macrofossils, Microfossils, Invertebrates

