The Ediacaran biota exhibited a vast range of
morphological characteristics. Size ranged from millimetres to metres; complexity from "blob-like" to intricate; rigidity from sturdy and resistant to jelly-soft. Almost all forms of
symmetry were present. These organisms differed from earlier, mainly microbial, fossils in having an organised, differentiated multicellular construction and centimetre-plus sizes. generated intense media excitement though some have claimed they are instead inorganic structures formed by the precipitation of minerals on the inside of a hole. a view that, while it had enjoyed a notable gain of supporters as of 2007, has since suffered following further research comparing the potential Doushantuo embryos' morphologies with those of
Thiomargarita specimens, both living and in various stages of decay. A recent discovery of comparable Ediacaran fossil embryos from the Portfjeld Formation in Greenland has significantly expanded the paleogeographical occurrence of Doushantuo-type fossil "embryos" with similar biotic forms now reported from differing paleolatitudes. : Microfossils dating from – just 3 million years after the end of the Cryogenian glaciations – may represent embryonic 'resting stages' in the life cycle of the earliest known animals. An alternative proposal is that these structures represent adult stages of the multicellular organisms of this period. Microfossils of
Caveasphaera are thought to foreshadow the evolutionary origin of animal-like embryology. ; Discs : Circular fossils, such as
Ediacaria,
Cyclomedusa, and
Rugoconites led to the initial identification of Ediacaran fossils as
cnidaria, which include jellyfish and corals. and yet others may represent scratch marks formed as stalked organisms spun around their holdfasts. ; Bags : Fossils such as
Pteridinium preserved within sediment layers resemble "mud-filled bags". The scientific community is a long way from reaching a consensus on their interpretation. ; Toroids : The fossil
Vendoglossa tuberculata from the Nama Group, Namibia, has been interpreted as a dorso-ventrally compressed stem-group metazoan, with a large gut cavity and a transversely ridged
ectoderm. The organism is in the shape of a flattened torus, with the long axis of its toroidal body running through the approximate center of the presumed gut cavity. ; Quilted organisms : The organisms considered in Seilacher's revised definition of the Vendobionta share a "quilted" appearance and resembled an inflatable
mattress. Sometimes these quilts would be torn or ruptured prior to preservation: Such damaged specimens provide valuable clues in the reconstruction process. For example, the three (or more) petaloid fronds of
Swartpuntia germsi could only be recognised in a posthumously damaged specimen – usually multiple fronds were hidden as burial squashed the organisms flat. These organisms appear to form two groups: the
fractal rangeomorphs and the simpler
erniettomorphs. Including such fossils as the iconic
Charnia and
Swartpuntia, the group is both the most iconic of the Ediacaran biota and the most difficult to place within the existing
tree of life. Lacking any mouth, gut, reproductive organs, or indeed any evidence of internal anatomy, their lifestyle was somewhat peculiar by modern standards; the most widely accepted hypothesis holds that they sucked nutrients out of the surrounding seawater by osmotrophy or
osmosis. However, others argue against this. ; Non-Vendobionts : Possible
early forms of
living phyla, excluding them from some definitions of the Ediacaran biota. The earliest such fossil is the reputed bilaterian
Vernanimalcula claimed by some, however, to represent the infilling of an egg-sac or
acritarch. In 2020,
Ikaria wariootia was claimed to represent one of the oldest organisms with anterior and posterior differentiation. Later examples are almost universally accepted as bilaterians and include the mollusc-like
Kimberella,
Spriggina (pictured) and the shield-shaped
Parvancorina, whose affinities are currently debated. A suite of fossils known as the
small shelly fossils are represented in the Ediacaran, most famously by
Cloudina, a shelly tube-like fossil that often shows evidence of predatory boring, suggesting that, while predation may not have been common in the Ediacaran Period, it was at least present. Organic microfossils known as
small carbonaceous fossils are found in Ediacaran sediments, including the spiral-shaped
Cochleatina which spans the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary.
Ediacaria also survived well into the Cambrian. Representatives of modern taxa existed in the Ediacaran, some of which are recognisable today.
Sponges, red and green
algæ,
protists and
bacteria are all easily recognisable with some pre-dating the Ediacaran by nearly three billion years. Possible arthropods have also been described. Surface trails left by
Treptichnus bear similarities to modern
priapulids. Fossils of the hard-shelled
foraminifera Platysolenites are known from the latest Ediacaran of western
Siberia, coexisting with
Cloudina and
Namacalathus. ; Filaments : Filament-shaped structures in Precambrian fossils have been observed on many occasions.
Frondose fossils in Newfoundland have been observed to have developed filamentous bedding planes, inferred to be
stolonic outgrowths. A study of Brazilian Ediacaran fossils found filamentous microfossils, suggested to be eukaryotes or large
sulfur-oxidizing-bacteria (SOBs). Fungus-like filaments found in the Doushantuo Formation have been interpreted as eukaryotes and possibly fungi, providing possible evidence for the evolution and terrestrialization of fungi ~635 Ma. ;
Trace fossils : With the exception of some very simple
vertical burrows the only Ediacaran burrows are horizontal, lying on or just below the surface of the seafloor. Such burrows have been taken to imply the presence of motile organisms with heads, which would probably have had a bilateral symmetry. This could place them in the
bilateral clade of
animals but they could also have been made by simpler organisms feeding as they slowly rolled along the sea floor. Putative "burrows" dating as far back as may have been made by animals that fed on the undersides of microbial mats, which would have shielded them from a chemically unpleasant ocean; however their uneven width and tapering ends make a biological origin so difficult to defend that even the original proponent no longer believes they are authentic. : The burrows observed imply simple behaviour, and the complex efficient feeding traces common from the start of the Cambrian are absent. Some Ediacaran fossils, especially discs, have been interpreted tentatively as trace fossils but this hypothesis has not gained widespread acceptance. As well as burrows, some trace fossils have been found directly associated with an Ediacaran fossil.
Yorgia and
Dickinsonia are often found at the end of
long pathways of trace fossils matching their shape; these fossils are thought to be associated with
ciliary feeding but the precise method of formation of these disconnected and overlapping fossils largely remains a mystery. The potential
mollusc Kimberella is associated with scratch marks, perhaps formed by a
radula. ==Classification and interpretation==