Very few specimens of this organism have been found, only 26 of the Burgess shale species, A. sagittiformis, and one or two specimens of the Maotianshan species, A. sinica — which may be a reflection of its genuine rarity, but is more likely to be due to taphonomic or behavioural factors. The fossils reach in length. The head is rounded, tipped with two tentacles, and appears to contain a four-ganglion brain; the body flattens out and broadens in the trunk, which appears to have been fairly muscular. Where the trunk meets the head there is a small tubular opening, which can be interpreted as the mouth; the gut terminates where the trunk narrows and meets the tail, which is broad and paddle shaped. The body morphology suggests a free energetic swimmer, which may be consistent with the dearth of fossils.
History of research
Amiskwia was originally categorized by paleontologistCharles Walcott. Walcott thought he saw three buccal spines in the fossils, and therefore categorized Amiskwia as a chaetognath worm. However, Amiskwia appears to lack the characteristic grasping spines and teeth of other Burgess fossilarrow worms. Later scientists suggested an affinity with the nemerteans, but the evidence for this was somewhat inadequate. Conway Morris, on re-examining of the Burgess Shale fauna in the 1970s, described it as being the single known species in an otherwise unknown phylum, given that it has two tentacles near its mouth, rather than the characteristic single tentacle of true nemerteans.. Butterfield implies from the appearance of the fossils that the organisms may have lacked a cuticle: while this is also true of the nemerteans, these organisms lack a coelom and are thus unlikely to fossilise. He goes on to argue that the absence of cuticle is characteristic of the Chaetognaths; whilst teeth would be expected, a similar fossil, Wiwaxia, shows such structures in only 10% of the expected instances, and Anomalocaridids are often found detached from their mouthparts, so the absence may be taphonomic rather than genuine. The absence of spines could simply mean that the fossils represent young organisms — or that later chaetognath evolution involved paedomorphosis.
Affinity
The most recent interpretation, based on all available fossil material, is that the organism was a total group gnathiferan; its precise affinity within this group is difficult to resolve, but if it falls in the stem lineage of any extant phylum then it would be a gnathostomulid.
Etymology
The scientific nameAmiskwia sagittiformis derives from the nearby Amiskwi River, and its shape. "Sinica," of A. sinica, refers to that species' origin from China.