Hallidaya
The Ediacaran fossil Hallidaya, a close relative of Skinnera lived in Belomorian of the Late Ediacaran period prior to the Cambrian explosion and thrived in the marine strata on the ocean floor of what is now considered Australia. These fossils were disk-shaped organisms that were slightly dome shaped with tri-radial symmetry. These Ediacaran organisms thrived by living in low-energy inner shelf, in the wave- and current-agitated shoreface, and in the high-energy distributary systems.
Description
The Hallidaya is a species of trilobozoan which has the shape of small circular-shaped fossils preserved as a mold. They are soft-bodied creatures approximately in diameter with an average of with a height of shaped like a dome. They have three central depressions that are connected to smaller pouch-shaped depressions around the perimeter of the disk by canals. The center depressions are speculated to be their stomach.Environmental conditions
During the Belomorian of the Late Ediacaran other organisms who lived on the ocean floor diversified their appearances through frondomorphs, tribrachiomorphs, and bilateralomorphs. Also vendobionts began migrating from the inner shelf into higher energy environments. Hallidaya became extinct in the Kotlinian of the Late Ediacaran after there was an increase of migration to high-energy areas by burrowing animals. These Ediacaran organisms were progressively outcompeted by bilaterians who anchored into the microbial mat of the ocean floor with their basal bulbs and possibly evolved a symbiosis with photoautotrophic or chemoautophrophic microorganisms.There were also Ediacara fan-shaped sets of paired scratches found from the Eidacara Member of the Rawnsley Quartzite in South Australia, Kimberichnus teruzzii. This fossil showed signs of a Kimerella quadrata's trace maker whose death occurs at the same time as the mat excavation traces in South Australia and Russia. Their co-occurrence and systematic feeding traces in the Ediacara biota record supports the theory that bilaterians existed globally before the Cambrian explosion.