Beorn is an extinct genus of tardigrade and the first known fossil tardigrade, discovered and described in 1964 from Late Cretaceous amber from Manitoba, Canada. The genus contains a single species, B. leggi. It was originally classified as the only member of its family, the Beornidae, but was later reclassified as belonging to the Hypsibiidae.[1] [2] [3] It is one of three fossil tardigrades known from the Cretaceous, the others being Milnesium swolenskyi from the Turonian New Jersey amber and Aerobius from the same amber piece as Beorn.[4] The only other confidently known fossil tardigrade is the Miocene Paradoryphoribius from the Dominican Republic.[5]
In addition to some other finds from the Cretaceous and the Cambrian period, Beorn is an example of the early existence of tardigrades in earth's history, and its largely modern appearance suggests that tardigrades must have diversified considerably before this time.
The species was first described in 1964 by Kenneth W. Cooper. The type specimen is now in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University. The generic name Beorn was chosen by Cooper in reference to a character of the same name from the children's book The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien, which can occur both in the shape of a man and that of a bear. The specific name leggi refers to Cooper's student William M. Legg who collected the amber in the summer of 1940 in which the holotype was found. He died in 1953 before finishing his thesis at Princeton University. Cooper, Legg's friend and scientific mentor, named Beorn leggi after him.[1]
The holotype is enclosed in honey-colored amber. The animal itself is 0.3 millimeters long and 0.08 millimeters wide. As is the case with modern tardigrades, the cylindrical body is flattened on the ventral side.[1]
The cuticle is smooth, and slightly thickened on the backside, but does not harden to platelets (sclerites), making Beorn is one of the "naked" tardigrades. A total of four furrows extend transversely to the longitudinal axis of the body around the whole body, which divide these superficially into five regions:
The length ratio of the segments 2 to 5 is indicated as 1: 1.3: 1.3: 2.
The legs are presumably telescopically retracted and each carry four unequally long claws arranged asymmetrically with respect to the middle of the leg. Other features, such as the structure of the stiletto apparatus or the mucous musculature, can not be recognized; Also the position of the sex opening (gonopore) with respect to the anus, which could have given further indications of the class belonging to the species, can not be ascertained.
The origin of the present amber specimen is unknown. It was part of secondary sediment deposits on the lake shore of Cedar Lake, not far from the Saskatchewan River outlet in the Canadian province of Manitoba. Observations suggest that the habitat of Beorn may have been a swamp-like wetland biotope.
Another tardigrade specimen was identified in the same amber piece as Beorn. It is much smaller than Beorn, and is curled and notably shriveled. However, Cooper refrained from describing this individual in 1964 due to his inability to reliably determine its anatomical details. New imaging techniques developed since then allowed for later researchers to describe the smaller specimen in detail. It was named in 2024 as the new genus Aerobius.[4]
The affiliation of Beorn with the tardigrades is certain. Moreover, the species can even be assigned to one of the three modern classes - the absence of head structures such as cirri and clavae and back armoring suggests a placement within the Eutardigrada. Within this class, Beorn leggi was originally placed in a separate family Beornidae. However, later studies based on more detailed imageing reinterpreted it as belonging to the Hypsibiidae.[6] [4]
To determine the relationships of Aerobius and Beorn, Mapalo, Wolfe & Ortega-Hernández (2024) phylogenetically analyzed a combination of morphological features and rRNA sequences. They recovered these taxa as closely related members of the tardigrade family Hypsibioidea. These results are displayed in the cladogram below, with extinct species designated with a dagger :[4]