Bryozoa

(Redirected from Bryzoa)

Bryozoa (also known as the Polyzoa, Ectoprocta or commonly as moss animals)[6] are a phylum of simple, aquatic invertebrate animals, nearly all living in sedentary colonies. Typically about 0.5 millimetres (164 in) long, they have a special feeding structure called a lophophore, a "crown" of tentacles used for filter feeding. Most marine bryozoans live in tropical waters, but a few are found in oceanic trenches and polar waters. The bryozoans are classified as the marine bryozoans (Stenolaemata), freshwater bryozoans (Phylactolaemata), and mostly-marine bryozoans (Gymnolaemata), a few members of which prefer brackish water. 5,869 living species are known.[7] Originally all of the crown group Bryozoa were colonial, but as an adaptation to a mesopsammal (interstitial spaces in marine sand) life or to deep-sea habitats, secondarily solitary forms have since evolved. Solitary species has been described in four genera; Aethozooides, Aethozoon, Franzenella and Monobryozoon). The latter having a statocyst-like organ with a supposed excretory function.[8][9]

Bryozoa
Temporal range: Ordovician– Recent[1][2] Contested Cambrian records (Pywackia, Protomelission[3])
"Bryozoa", from Ernst Haeckel's Kunstformen der Natur, 1904
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Clade: Lophophorata
Phylum: Bryozoa
Ehrenberg, 1831[4]
Classes

See text.

Synonyms[5]

Ectoprocta (Nitsche, 1869) (formerly subphylum of Bryozoa)

The terms Polyzoa and Bryozoa were introduced in 1830 and 1831, respectively.[10][11] Soon after it was named, another group of animals was discovered whose filtering mechanism looked similar, so it was included in Bryozoa until 1869, when the two groups were noted to be very different internally. The new group was given the name "Entoprocta", while the original Bryozoa were called "Ectoprocta". Disagreements about terminology persisted well into the 20th century, but "Bryozoa" is now the generally accepted term.[12][13]

Colonies take a variety of forms, including fans, bushes and sheets. Single animals, called zooids, live throughout the colony and are not fully independent. These individuals can have unique and diverse functions. All colonies have "autozooids", which are responsible for feeding, excretion, and supplying nutrients to the colony through diverse channels. Some classes have specialist zooids like hatcheries for fertilized eggs, colonial defence structures, and root-like attachment structures. Cheilostomata is the most diverse order of bryozoan, possibly because its members have the widest range of specialist zooids. They have mineralized exoskeletons and form single-layered sheets which encrust over surfaces, and some colonies can creep very slowly by using spiny defensive zooids as legs.

Each zooid consists of a "cystid", which provides the body wall and produces the exoskeleton, and a "polypide", which holds the organs. Zooids have no special excretory organs, and autozooids' polypides are scrapped when they become overloaded with waste products; usually the body wall then grows a replacement polypide. Their gut is U-shaped, with the mouth inside the crown of tentacles and the anus outside it. Zooids of all the freshwater species are simultaneous hermaphrodites. Although those of many marine species function first as males and then as females, their colonies always contain a combination of zooids that are in their male and female stages. All species emit sperm into the water. Some also release ova into the water, while others capture sperm via their tentacles to fertilize their ova internally. In some species the larvae have large yolks, go to feed, and quickly settle on a surface. Others produce larvae that have little yolk but swim and feed for a few days before settling. After settling, all larvae undergo a radical metamorphosis that destroys and rebuilds almost all the internal tissues. Freshwater species also produce statoblasts that lie dormant until conditions are favorable, which enables a colony's lineage to survive even if severe conditions kill the mother colony.

Predators of marine bryozoans include sea slugs (nudibranchs), fish, sea urchins, pycnogonids, crustaceans, mites and starfish. Freshwater bryozoans are preyed on by snails, insects, and fish. In Thailand, many populations of one freshwater species have been wiped out by an introduced species of snail.[14] Membranipora membranacea, a fast-growing invasive bryozoan off the northeast and northwest coasts of the US, has reduced kelp forests so much that it has affected local fish and invertebrate populations.[15] Bryozoans have spread diseases to fish farms and fishermen. Chemicals extracted from a marine bryozoan species have been investigated for treatment of cancer and Alzheimer's disease, but analyses have not been encouraging.[16]

Mineralized skeletons of bryozoans first appear in rocks from the Early Ordovician period,[1] making it the last major phylum to appear in the fossil record. This has led researchers to suspect that bryozoans arose earlier but were initially unmineralized, and may have differed significantly from fossilized and modern forms. In 2021, some research suggested Protomelission, a genus known from the Cambrian period, could be an example of an early bryozoan,[17] but later research suggested that this taxon may instead represent a dasyclad alga.[3] Early fossils are mainly of erect forms, but encrusting forms gradually became dominant. It is uncertain whether the phylum is monophyletic. Bryozoans' evolutionary relationships to other phyla are also unclear, partly because scientists' view of the family tree of animals is mainly influenced by better-known phyla. Both morphological and molecular phylogeny analyses disagree over bryozoans' relationships with entoprocts, about whether bryozoans should be grouped with brachiopods and phoronids in Lophophorata, and whether bryozoans should be considered protostomes or deuterostomes.

Description

edit

Distinguishing features

edit

Bryozoans, phoronids and brachiopods strain food out of the water by means of a lophophore, a "crown" of hollow tentacles. Bryozoans form colonies consisting of clones called zooids that are typically about 0.5 mm (164 in) long.[18] Phoronids resemble bryozoan zooids but are 2 to 20 cm (1 to 8 in) long and, although they often grow in clumps, do not form colonies consisting of clones.[19] Brachiopods, generally thought to be closely related to bryozoans and phoronids, are distinguished by having shells rather like those of bivalves.[20] All three of these phyla have a coelom, an internal cavity lined by mesothelium.[18][19][20] Some encrusting bryozoan colonies with mineralized exoskeletons look very like small corals. However, bryozoan colonies are founded by an ancestrula, which is round rather than shaped like a normal zooid of that species. On the other hand, the founding polyp of a coral has a shape like that of its daughter polyps, and coral zooids have no coelom or lophophore.[21]

Entoprocts, another phylum of filter-feeders, look rather like bryozoans but their lophophore-like feeding structure has solid tentacles, their anus lies inside rather than outside the base of the "crown" and they have no coelom.[22]

Summary of distinguishing features
  Bryozoa[18]
(Ectoprocta)
Other lophophorates[23] Other Lophotrochozoa Similar-looking phyla
Phoronida[19] Brachiopoda[20] Annelida, Mollusca Entoprocta[22] Corals (class in phylum Cnidaria)[21]
Coelom Three-part, if the cavity of the epistome is included Three-part One per segment in basic form; merged in some taxa none
Formation of coelom Uncertain because metamorphosis of larvae into adults makes this impossible to trace Enterocoely Schizocoely not applicable
Lophophore With hollow tentacles none Similar-looking feeding structure, but with solid tentacles none
Feeding current From tips to bases of tentacles not applicable From bases to tips of tentacles not applicable
Multiciliated cells in epithelium Yes[24] no[24] Yes[24] not applicable
Position of anus Outside base of lophophore Varies, none in some species Rear end, but none in Siboglinidae Inside base of lophophore-like organ none
Colonial Colonies of clones in most; one solitary genus Sessile species often form clumps, but with no active co-operation Colonies of clones in some species; some solitary species Colonies of clones
Shape of founder zooid Round, unlike normal zooids[21] not applicable Same as other zooids
Mineralized exoskeletons Some taxa no Bivalve-like shells Some sessile annelids build mineralized tubes;[25] most molluscs have shells, but most modern cephalopods have internal shells or none.[26] no Some taxa

Types of zooid

edit

All bryozoans are colonial except for one genus, Monobryozoon.[27][28] Individual members of a bryozoan colony are about 0.5 mm (164 in) long and are known as zooids,[18] since they are not fully independent animals.[29] All colonies contain feeding zooids, known as autozooids. Those of some groups also contain non-feeding heterozooids, also known as polymorphic zooids, which serve a variety of functions other than feeding;[28] colony members are genetically identical and co-operate, rather like the organs of larger animals.[18] What type of zooid grows where in a colony is determined by chemical signals from the colony as a whole or sometimes in response to the scent of predators or rival colonies.[28]

The bodies of all types have two main parts. The cystid consists of the body wall and whatever type of exoskeleton is secreted by the epidermis. The exoskeleton may be organic (chitin, polysaccharide or protein) or made of the mineral calcium carbonate. The latter is always absent in freshwater species.[30] The body wall consists of the epidermis, basal lamina (a mat of non-cellular material), connective tissue, muscles, and the mesothelium which lines the coelom (main body cavity)[18] – except that in one class, the mesothelium is split into two separate layers, the inner one forming a membranous sac that floats freely and contains the coelom, and the outer one attached to the body wall and enclosing the membranous sac in a pseudocoelom.[31] The other main part of the bryozoan body, known as the polypide and situated almost entirely within the cystid, contains the nervous system, digestive system, some specialized muscles and the feeding apparatus or other specialized organs that take the place of the feeding apparatus.[18]

Feeding zooids

edit
Invert
Retractor muscle
Protective covering
Lophophore's tentacles
Coelom (body cavity)
Stomach
Funiculus
  = Digestive tract
  = Gonads
  = Retractor muscle
  = Outer covering
A generalized autozooid[18]

The most common type of zooid is the feeding autozooid, in which the polypide bears a "crown" of hollow tentacles called a lophophore, which captures food particles from the water.[28] In all colonies a large percentage of zooids are autozooids, and some consist entirely of autozooids, some of which also engage in reproduction.[32]

The basic shape of the "crown" is a full circle. Among the freshwater bryozoans (Phylactolaemata) the crown appears U-shaped, but this impression is created by a deep dent in the rim of the crown, which has no gap in the fringe of tentacles.[18] The sides of the tentacles bear fine hairs called cilia, whose beating drives a water current from the tips of the tentacles to their bases, where it exits. Food particles that collide with the tentacles are trapped by mucus, and further cilia on the inner surfaces of the tentacles move the particles towards the mouth in the center.[23] The method used by ectoprocts is called "upstream collecting", as food particles are captured before they pass through the field of cilia that creates the feeding current. This method is also used by phoronids, brachiopods and pterobranchs.[33]

The lophophore and mouth are mounted on a flexible tube called the "invert", which can be turned inside-out and withdrawn into the polypide,[18] rather like the finger of a rubber glove; in this position the lophophore lies inside the invert and is folded like the spokes of an umbrella. The invert is withdrawn, sometimes within 60 milliseconds, by a pair of retractor muscles that are anchored at the far end of the cystid. Sensors at the tips of the tentacles may check for signs of danger before the invert and lophophore are fully extended. Extension is driven by an increase in internal fluid pressure, which species with flexible exoskeletons produce by contracting circular muscles that lie just inside the body wall,[18] while species with a membranous sac use circular muscles to squeeze this.[31] Some species with rigid exoskeletons have a flexible membrane that replaces part of the exoskeleton, and transverse muscles anchored on the far side of the exoskeleton increase the fluid pressure by pulling the membrane inwards.[18] In others there is no gap in the protective skeleton, and the transverse muscles pull on a flexible sac which is connected to the water outside by a small pore; the expansion of the sac increases the pressure inside the body and pushes the invert and lophophore out.[18] In some species the retracted invert and lophophore are protected by an operculum ("lid"), which is closed by muscles and opened by fluid pressure. In one class, a hollow lobe called the "epistome" overhangs the mouth.[18]

The gut is U-shaped, running from the mouth, in the center of the lophophore, down into the animal's interior and then back to the anus, which is located on the invert, outside and usually below the lophophore.[18] A network of strands of mesothelium called "funiculi" ("little ropes")[34] connects the mesothelium covering the gut with that lining the body wall. The wall of each strand is made of mesothelium, and surrounds a space filled with fluid, thought to be blood.[18] A colony's zooids are connected, enabling autozooids to share food with each other and with any non-feeding heterozooids.[18] The method of connection varies between the different classes of bryozoans, ranging from quite large gaps in the body walls to small pores through which nutrients are passed by funiculi.[18][31]

There is a nerve ring round the pharynx (throat) and a ganglion that serves as a brain to one side of this. Nerves run from the ring and ganglion to the tentacles and to the rest of the body.[18] Bryozoans have no specialized sense organs, but cilia on the tentacles act as sensors. Members of the genus Bugula grow towards the sun, and therefore must be able to detect light.[18] In colonies of some species, signals are transmitted between zooids through nerves that pass through pores in the body walls, and coordinate activities such as feeding and the retraction of lophophores.[18]

The solitary individuals of Monobryozoon are autozooids with pear-shaped bodies. The wider ends have up to 15 short, muscular projections by which the animals anchor themselves to sand or gravel[35] and pull themselves through the sediments.[36]

Avicularia and vibracula

edit

Some authorities use the term avicularia (plural of avicularium) to refer to any type of zooid in which the lophophore is replaced by an extension that serves some protective function,[32] while others restrict the term to those that defend the colony by snapping at invaders and small predators, killing some and biting the appendages of others.[18] In some species the snapping zooids are mounted on a peduncle (stalk), their bird-like appearance responsible for the term – Charles Darwin described these as like "the head and beak of a vulture in miniature, seated on a neck and capable of movement".[18][32] Stalked avicularia are placed upside-down on their stalks.[28] The "lower jaws" are modified versions of the opercula that protect the retracted lophophores in autozooids of some species, and are snapped shut "like a mousetrap" by similar muscles,[18] while the beak-shaped upper jaw is the inverted body wall.[28] In other species the avicularia are stationary box-like zooids laid the normal way up, so that the modified operculum snaps down against the body wall.[28] In both types the modified operculum is opened by other muscles that attach to it,[32] or by internal muscles that raise the fluid pressure by pulling on a flexible membrane.[18] The actions of these snapping zooids are controlled by small, highly modified polypides that are located inside the "mouth" and bear tufts of short sensory cilia.[18][28] These zooids appear in various positions: some take the place of autozooids, some fit into small gaps between autozooids, and small avicularia may occur on the surfaces of other zooids.[32]

In vibracula, regarded by some as a type of avicularia, the operculum is modified to form a long bristle that has a wide range of motion. They may function as defenses against predators and invaders, or as cleaners. In some species that form mobile colonies, vibracula around the edges are used as legs for burrowing and walking.[18][32]

Structural polymorphs

edit

Kenozooids (from the Greek kenós 'empty')[37] consist only of the body wall and funicular strands crossing the interior,[18] and no polypide.[28] The functions of these zooids include forming the stems of branching structures, acting as spacers that enable colonies to grow quickly in a new direction,[28][32] strengthening the colony's branches, and elevating the colony slightly above its substrate for competitive advantages against other organisms. Some kenozooids are hypothesized to be capable of storing nutrients for the colony. [38] Because kenozooids' function is generally structural, they are called "structural polymorphs."

Some heterozooids found in extinct trepostome bryozoans, called mesozooids, are thought to have functioned to space the feeding autozooids an appropriate distance apart. In thin sections of trepostome fossils, mesozooids can be seen in between the tubes that held autozooids; they are smaller tubes that are divided along their length by diaphragms, making them look like rows of box-like chambers sandwiched between autozooidal tubes. [39]

Reproductive polymorphs

edit

Gonozooids act as brood chambers for fertilized eggs.[28] Almost all modern cyclostome bryozoans have them, but they can be hard to locate on a colony because there are so few gonozooids in one colony. The aperture in gonozooids, which is called an ooeciopore, acts as a point for larvae to exit. Some gonozooids have very complex shapes with autozooidal tubes passing through chambers within them. All larvae released from a gonozooid are clones created by division of a single egg; this is called monozygotic polyembryony, and is a reproductive strategy also used by armadillos.[40]

Cheilostome bryozoans also brood their embryos; one of the common methods is through ovicells, capsules attached to autozooids. The autozooids possessing ovicells are normally still able to feed, however, so these are not considered heterozooids. [41]

"Female" polymorphs are more common than "male" polymorphs, but specialized zooids that produce sperm are also known. These are called androzooids, and some are found in colonies of Odontoporella bishopi, a species that is symbiotic with hermit crabs and lives on their shells. These zooids are smaller than the others and have four short tentacles and four long tentacles, unlike the autozooids which have 15–16 tentacles. Androzooids are also found in species with mobile colonies that can crawl around. It is possible that androzooids are used to exchange sperm between colonies when two mobile colonies or bryozoan-encrusted hermit crabs happen to encounter one another. [42]

Other polymorphs

edit

Spinozooids are hollow, movable spines, like very slender, small tubes, present on the surface of colonies, which probably are for defense.[43] Some species have miniature nanozooids with small single-tentacled polypides, and these may grow on other zooids or within the body walls of autozooids that have degenerated.[32]

Colony forms and composition

edit
 
A colony of the modern marine bryozoan Flustra foliacea.
 
Cheilostome bryozoan with serpulid tubes

Although zooids are microscopic, colonies range in size from 1 cm (12 in) to over 1 m (3 ft 3 in).[18] However, the majority are under 10 cm (4 in) across.[21] The shapes of colonies vary widely, depend on the pattern of budding by which they grow, the variety of zooids present and the type and amount of skeletal material they secrete.[18]

Some marine species are bush-like or fan-like, supported by "trunks" and "branches" formed by kenozooids, with feeding autozooids growing from these. Colonies of these types are generally unmineralized but may have exoskeletons made of chitin.[18] Others look like small corals, producing heavy lime skeletons.[44] Many species form colonies which consist of sheets of autozooids. These sheets may form leaves, tufts or, in the genus Thalamoporella, structures that resemble an open head of lettuce.[18]

The most common marine form, however, is encrusting, in which a one-layer sheet of zooids spreads over a hard surface or over seaweed. Some encrusting colonies may grow to over 50 cm (1 ft 8 in) and contain about 2,000,000 zooids.[18] These species generally have exoskeletons reinforced with calcium carbonate, and the openings through which the lophophores protrude are on the top or outer surface.[18] The moss-like appearance of encrusting colonies is responsible for the phylum's name (Ancient Greek words βρύον brúon meaning 'moss' and ζῷον zôion meaning 'animal').[45] Large colonies of encrusting species often have "chimneys", gaps in the canopy of lophophores, through which they swiftly expel water that has been sieved, and thus avoid re-filtering water that is already exhausted.[46] They are formed by patches of non-feeding heterozooids.[47] New chimneys appear near the edges of expanding colonies, at points where the speed of the outflow is already high, and do not change position if the water flow changes.[48]

Some freshwater species secrete a mass of gelatinous material, up to 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in diameter, to which the zooids stick. Other freshwater species have plant-like shapes with "trunks" and "branches", which may stand erect or spread over the surface. A few species can creep at about 2 cm (34 in) per day.[18]

Each colony grows by asexual budding from a single zooid known as the ancestrula,[18] which is round rather than shaped like a normal zooid.[21] This occurs at the tips of "trunks" or "branches" in forms that have this structure. Encrusting colonies grow round their edges. In species with calcareous exoskeletons, these do not mineralize until the zooids are fully grown. Colony lifespans range from one to about 12 years, and the short-lived species pass through several generations in one season.[18]

Species that produce defensive zooids do so only when threats have already appeared, and may do so within 48 hours.[28] The theory of "induced defenses" suggests that production of defenses is expensive and that colonies which defend themselves too early or too heavily will have reduced growth rates and lifespans. This "last minute" approach to defense is feasible because the loss of zooids to a single attack is unlikely to be significant.[28] Colonies of some encrusting species also produce special heterozooids to limit the expansion of other encrusting organisms, especially other bryozoans. In some cases this response is more belligerent if the opposition is smaller, which suggests that zooids on the edge of a colony can somehow sense the size of the opponent. Some species consistently prevail against certain others, but most turf wars are indecisive and the combatants soon turn to growing in uncontested areas.[28] Bryozoans competing for territory do not use the sophisticated techniques employed by sponges or corals, possibly because the shortness of bryozoan lifespans makes heavy investment in turf wars unprofitable.[28]

Bryozoans have contributed to carbonate sedimentation in marine life since the Ordovician period. Bryozoans take responsibility for many of the colony forms, which have evolved in different taxonomic groups and vary in sediment producing ability. The nine basic bryozoan colony-forms include: encrusting, dome-shaped, palmate, foliose, fenestrate, robust branching, delicate branching, articulated and free-living. Most of these sediments come from two distinct groups of colonies: domal, delicate branching, robust branching and palmate; and fenestrate. Fenestrate colonies generate rough particles both as sediment and components of stromatoporoids coral reefs. The delicate colonies however, create both coarse sediment and form the cores of deep-water, subphotic biogenic mounds. Nearly all post- bryozoan sediments are made up of growth forms, with the addition to free-living colonies which include significant numbers of various colonies. "In contrast to the Palaeozoic, post-Palaeozoic bryozoans generated sediment varying more widely with the size of their grains; they grow as they moved from mud, to sand, to gravel."[49]

Taxonomy

edit
 
Peronopora, a trepostome bryozoan from the Whitewater Formation (Upper Ordovician) of eastern Indiana, United States
 
Evactinopora bryozoan found in Jefferson County, Missouri, United States

The phylum was originally called "Polyzoa", but this name was eventually replaced by Ehrenberg's term "Bryozoa".[13][50][51] The name "Bryozoa" was originally applied only to the animals also known as Ectoprocta (lit.'outside-anus'),[52] in which the anus lies outside the "crown" of tentacles. After the discovery of the Entoprocta (lit.'inside-anus'),[53] in which the anus lies within a "crown" of tentacles, the name "Bryozoa" was promoted to phylum level to include the two classes Ectoprocta and Entoprocta.[54] However, in 1869 Hinrich Nitsche regarded the two groups as quite distinct for a variety of reasons, and coined the name "Ectoprocta" for Ehrenberg's "Bryozoa".[5][55] Despite their apparently similar methods of feeding, they differed markedly anatomically; in addition to the different positions of the anus, ectoprocts have hollow tentacles and a coelom, while entoprocts have solid tentacles and no coelom. Hence the two groups are now widely regarded as separate phyla, and the name "Bryozoa" is now synonymous with "Ectoprocta".[54] This has remained the majority view ever since, although most publications have preferred the name "Bryozoa" rather than "Ectoprocta".[51] Nevertheless, some notable scientists have continued to regard the "Ectoprocta" and Entoprocta as close relatives and group them under "Bryozoa".[55]

The ambiguity about the scope of the name "Bryozoa" led to proposals in the 1960s and 1970s that it should be avoided and the unambiguous term "Ectoprocta" should be used.[56] However, the change would have made it harder to find older works in which the phylum was called "Bryozoa", and the desire to avoid ambiguity, if applied consistently to all classifications, would have necessitated renaming of several other phyla and many lower-level groups.[50] In practice, zoological naming of split or merged groups of animals is complex and not completely consistent.[57] Works since 2000 have used various names to resolve the ambiguity, including: "Bryozoa",[18][21] "Ectoprocta",[24][28] "Bryozoa (Ectoprocta)",[31] and "Ectoprocta (Bryozoa)".[58] Some have used more than one approach in the same work.[59]

The common name "moss animals" is the literal meaning of "Bryozoa", from Greek βρυόν ('moss') and ζῷα ('animals'), based on the mossy appearance of encrusting species.[60]

Until 2008 there were "inadequately known and misunderstood type species belonging to the Cyclostome Bryozoan family Oncousoeciidae."[61] Modern research and experiments have been done using low-vacuum scanning electron microscopy of uncoated type material to critically examine and perhaps revise the taxonomy of three genera belonging to this family, including Oncousoecia, Microeciella, and Eurystrotos. This method permits data to be obtained that would be difficult to recognize with an optical microscope. The valid type species of Oncousoecia was found to be Oncousoecia lobulata. This interpretation stabilizes Oncousoecia by establishing a type species that corresponds to the general usage of the genus. Fellow Oncousoeciid Eurystrotos is now believed to be not conspecific with O. lobulata, as previously suggested, but shows enough similarities to be considered a junior synonym of Oncousoecia. Microeciella suborbicularus has also been recently distinguished from O. lobulata and O. dilatans, using this modern method of low vacuum scanning, with which it has been inaccurately synonymized with in the past. A new genus has also been recently discovered called Junerossia in the family Stomachetosellidae, along with 10 relatively new species of bryozoa such as Alderina flaventa, Corbulella extenuata, Puellina septemcryptica, Junerossia copiosa, Calyptotheca kapaaensis, Bryopesanser serratus, Cribellopora souleorum, Metacleidochasma verrucosa, Disporella compta, and Favosipora adunca.[62]

Classification and diversity

edit

Counts of formally described species range between 4,000 and 4,500.[63] The Gymnolaemata and especially Cheilostomata have the greatest numbers of species, possibly because of their wide range of specialist zooids.[28] Under the Linnaean system of classification, which is still used as a convenient way to label groups of organisms,[64] living members of the phylum Bryozoa are divided into:[18][28]

Class Phylactolaemata Stenolaemata Gymnolaemata
Order Plumatellida[65] Cyclostomatida Ctenostomatida Cheilostomata
Environments Freshwater Marine Mostly marine
Lip-like epistome overhanging mouth Yes none
Colony shapes Gelatinous masses or tubular branching structures[66] Erect or encrusting[67] Erect, encrusting or free-living
Exoskeleton material Gelatinous or membranous; unmineralized Mineralized Chitin, gelatinous or membranous; unmineralized Mineralized
Operculum ("lid") none none[67] (except in family Eleidae)[68] None in most species Yes (except in genus Bugula)
Shape of lophophore U-shaped appearance
(except in genus Fredericella, whose lophophore is circular)
Circular
How lophophore extended Compressing the whole body wall Compressing the membranous sac
(separate inner layer of epithelium that lines the coelom)
Compressing the whole body wall Pulling inwards of a flexible section of body wall, or making an internal sac expand.
Types of zooid Autozooids only Limited heterozooids, mainly gonozooids[69] Stolons and spines as well as autozooids[69] Full range of types

Fossil record

edit
 
Bryozoan fossils in an Upper Ordovician oil shale (kukersite), northern Estonia.
Stereo image
Left frame 
Right frame 
Parallel view ( )
Cross-eye view ( )
Fossilized skeleton of Archimedes Bryozoan

Fossils of about 15,000 bryozoan species have been found. Bryozoans are among the three dominant groups of Paleozoic fossils.[70] Bryozoans with calcitic skeletons were a major source of the carbonate minerals that make up limestones, and their fossils are incredibly common in marine sediments worldwide from the Ordovician onward. However, unlike corals and other colonial animals found in the fossil record, Bryozoan colonies did not reach large sizes.[71] Fossil bryozoan colonies are typically found highly fragmented and scattered; the preservation of complete zoaria is uncommon in the fossil record, and relatively little study has been devoted to reassembling fragmented zoaria.[72] The largest known fossil colonies are branching trepostome bryozoans from Ordovician rocks in the United States, reaching 66 centimeters in height.[71]

The oldest species with a mineralized skeleton occurs in the Lower Ordovician.[1] It is likely that the first bryozoans appeared much earlier and were entirely soft-bodied, and the Ordovician fossils record the appearance of mineralized skeletons in this phylum.[5] By the Arenigian stage of the Early Ordovician period,[21][73] about 480 million years ago, all the modern orders of stenolaemates were present,[74] and the ctenostome order of gymnolaemates had appeared by the Middle Ordovician, about 465 million years ago. The Early Ordovician fossils may also represent forms that had already become significantly different from the original members of the phylum.[74] Ctenostomes with phosphatized soft tissue are known from the Devonian.[75] Other types of filter feeders appeared around the same time, which suggests that some change made the environment more favorable for this lifestyle.[21] Fossils of cheilostomates, an order of gymnolaemates with mineralized skeletons, first appear in the Mid Jurassic, about 172 million years ago, and these have been the most abundant and diverse bryozoans from the Cretaceous to the present.[21] Evidence compiled from the last 100 million years show that cheilostomatids consistently grew over cyclostomatids in territorial struggles, which may help to explain how cheilostomatids replaced cyclostomatids as the dominant marine bryozoans.[76] Marine fossils from the Paleozoic era, which ended 251 million years ago, are mainly of erect forms, those from the Mesozoic are fairly equally divided by erect and encrusting forms, and more recent ones are predominantly encrusting.[77] Fossils of the soft, freshwater phylactolaemates are very rare,[21] appear in and after the Late Permian (which began about 260 million years ago) and consist entirely of their durable statoblasts.[66] There are no known fossils of freshwater members of other classes.[66]

Evolutionary family tree

edit
 
An Upper Ordovician cobble with the edrioasteroid Cystaster stellatus and the thin branching cyclostome bryozoan Corynotrypa. Kope Formation, northern Kentucky, United States.

Scientists are divided about whether the Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) are a monophyletic group (whether they include all and only a single ancestor species and all its descendants), about what are the phylum's closest relatives in the family tree of animals, and even about whether they should be regarded as members of the protostomes or deuterostomes, the two major groups that account for all moderately complex animals.

Molecular phylogeny, which attempts to work out the evolutionary family tree of organisms by comparing their biochemistry and especially their genes, has done much to clarify the relationships between the better-known invertebrate phyla.[54] However, the shortage of genetic data about "minor phyla" such as bryozoans and entoprocts has left their relationships to other groups unclear.[55]

Traditional view

edit

The traditional view is that the Bryozoa are a monophyletic group, in which the class Phylactolaemata is most closely related to Stenolaemata and Ctenostomatida, the classes that appear earliest in the fossil record.[78] However, in 2005 a molecular phylogeny study that focused on phylactolaemates concluded that these are more closely related to the phylum Phoronida, and especially to the only phoronid species that is colonial, than they are to the other ectoproct classes. That implies that the Entoprocta are not monophyletic, as the Phoronida are a sub-group of ectoprocts but the standard definition of Entoprocta excludes the Phoronida.[78]

 
Ropalonaria venosa, an etching trace fossil of a Late Ordovician ctenostome bryozoan on a strophomenid brachiopod valve; Cincinnatian of southeastern Indiana, United States.[79]

In 2009 another molecular phylogeny study, using a combination of genes from mitochondria and the cell nucleus, concluded that Bryozoa is a monophyletic phylum, in other words includes all the descendants of a common ancestor that is itself a bryozoan. The analysis also concluded that the classes Phylactolaemata, Stenolaemata and Gymnolaemata are also monophyletic, but could not determine whether Stenolaemata are more closely related to Phylactolaemata or Gymnolaemata. The Gymnolaemata are traditionally divided into the soft-bodied Ctenostomatida and mineralized Cheilostomata, but the 2009 analysis considered it more likely that neither of these orders is monophyletic and that mineralized skeletons probably evolved more than once within the early Gymnolaemata.[5]

Bryozoans' relationships with other phyla are uncertain and controversial. Traditional phylogeny, based on anatomy and on the development of the adult forms from embryos, has produced no enduring consensus about the position of ectoprocts.[24] Attempts to reconstruct the family tree of animals have largely ignored ectoprocts and other "minor phyla", which have received little scientific study because they are generally tiny, have relatively simple body plans, and have little impact on human economies – despite the fact that the "minor phyla" include most of the variety in the evolutionary history of animals.[80]

In the opinion of Ruth Dewel, Judith Winston, and Frank McKinney, "Our standard interpretation of bryozoan morphology and embryology is a construct resulting from over 100 years of attempts to synthesize a single framework for all invertebrates," and takes little account of some peculiar features of ectoprocts.[74]

 
Phaenopora superba, a ptilodictyine bryozoan from the Silurian of Ohio, United States
 
The flat, branching bryozoan Sulcoretepora, from the Middle Devonian of Wisconsin, United States

In ectoprocts, all of the larva's internal organs are destroyed during the metamorphosis to the adult form and the adult's organs are built from the larva's epidermis and mesoderm, while in other bilaterians some organs including the gut are built from endoderm. In most bilaterian embryos the blastopore, a dent in the outer wall, deepens to become the larva's gut, but in ectoprocts the blastopore disappears and a new dent becomes the point from which the gut grows. The ectoproct coelom is formed by neither of the processes used by other bilaterians, enterocoely, in which pouches that form on the wall of the gut become separate cavities, nor schizocoely, in which the tissue between the gut and the body wall splits, forming paired cavities.[74]

Entoprocts

edit

When entoprocts were discovered in the 19th century, they and bryozoans (ectoprocts) were regarded as classes within the phylum Bryozoa, because both groups were sessile animals that filter-fed by means of a crown of tentacles that bore cilia.

From 1869 onwards increasing awareness of differences, including the position of the entoproct anus inside the feeding structure and the difference in the early pattern of division of cells in their embryos, caused scientists to regard the two groups as separate phyla,[55] and "Bryozoa" became just an alternative name for ectoprocts, in which the anus is outside the feeding organ.[54] A series of molecular phylogeny studies from 1996 to 2006 have also concluded that bryozoans (ectoprocts) and entoprocts are not sister groups.[55]

However, two well-known zoologists, Claus Nielsen and Thomas Cavalier-Smith, maintain on anatomical and developmental grounds that bryozoans and entoprocts are member of the same phylum, Bryozoa. A molecular phylogeny study in 2007 also supported this old idea, while its conclusions about other phyla agreed with those of several other analyses.[55]

Grouping into the Lophophorata

edit

By 1891 bryozoans (ectoprocts) were grouped with phoronids in a super-phylum called "Tentaculata". In the 1970s comparisons between phoronid larvae and the cyphonautes larva of some gymnolaete bryozoans produced suggestions that the bryozoans, most of which are colonial, evolved from a semi-colonial species of phoronid.[81] Brachiopods were also assigned to the "Tentaculata", which were renamed Lophophorata as they all use a lophophore for filter feeding.[54]

The majority of scientists accept this,[54] but Claus Nielsen thinks these similarities are superficial.[24] The Lophophorata are usually defined as animals with a lophophore, a three-part coelom and a U-shaped gut.[81] In Nielsen's opinion, phoronids' and brachiopods' lophophores are more like those of pterobranchs,[24] which are members of the phylum Hemichordata.[82] Bryozoan's tentacles bear cells with multiple cilia, while the corresponding cells of phoronids', brachiopods' and pterobranchs' lophophores have one cilium per cell; and bryozoan tentacles have no hemal canal ("blood vessel"), which those of the other three phyla have.[24]

If the grouping of bryozoans with phoronids and brachiopods into Lophophorata is correct, the next issue is whether the Lophophorata are protostomes, along with most invertebrate phyla, or deuterostomes, along with chordates, hemichordates and echinoderms.

The traditional view was that lophophorates were a mix of protostome and deuterostome features. Research from the 1970s onwards suggested they were deuterostomes, because of some features that were thought characteristic of deuterostomes: a three-part coelom; radial rather than spiral cleavage in the development of the embryo;[54] and formation of the coelom by enterocoely.[24] However the coelom of ectoproct larvae shows no sign of division into three sections,[81] and that of adult ectoprocts is different from that of other coelomate phyla as it is built anew from epidermis and mesoderm after metamorphosis has destroyed the larval coelom.[74]

Lophophorate molecular phylogenetics

edit

Molecular phylogeny analyses from 1995 onwards, using a variety of biochemical evidence and analytical techniques, placed the lophophorates as protostomes and closely related to annelids and molluscs in a super-phylum called Lophotrochozoa.[54][83] "Total evidence" analyses, which used both morphological features and a relatively small set of genes, came to various conclusions, mostly favoring a close relationship between lophophorates and Lophotrochozoa.[83] A study in 2008, using a larger set of genes, concluded that the lophophorates were closer to the Lophotrochozoa than to deuterostomes, but also that the lophophorates were not monophyletic. Instead, it concluded that brachiopods and phoronids formed a monophyletic group, but bryozoans (ectoprocts) were closest to entoprocts, supporting the original definition of "Bryozoa".[83]

They are the only major phylum of exclusively clonal animals, composed of modular units known as zooids. Because they thrive in colonies, colonial growth allows them to develop unrestricted variations in form. Despite this, only a small number of basic growth forms have been found and have commonly reappeared throughout the history of the bryozoa.[70]

Lophotrochozoa

Ectoproct molecular phylogenetics

edit

The phylogenetic position of the ectoproct bryozoans remains uncertain, but it remains certain that they belong to the Protostomia and more specifically to the Lophotrochozoa. This implies that the ectoproct larva is a trochophore with the corona being a homologue of the prototroch; this is supported from the similarity between the coronate larvae and the Type 1 pericalymma larvae of some molluscs and sipunculans, where the prototroch zone is expanded to cover the hyposphere.[84]

A study of the mitochondrial DNA sequence suggests that the Bryozoa may be related to the Chaetognatha.[85]

Physiology

edit

Feeding and excretion

edit

Most species are filter feeders that sieve small particles, mainly phytoplankton (microscopic floating plants), out of the water.[18] The freshwater species Plumatella emarginata feeds on diatoms, green algae, cyanobacteria, non-photosynthetic bacteria, dinoflagellates, rotifers, protozoa, small nematodes, and microscopic crustaceans.[86] While the currents that bryozoans generate to draw food towards the mouth are well understood, the exact method of capture is still debated. All species also flick larger particles towards the mouth with a tentacle, and a few capture zooplankton (planktonic animals) by using their tentacles as cages. In addition the tentacles, whose surface area is increased by microvilli (small hairs and pleats), absorb organic compounds dissolved in the water.[18] Unwanted particles may be flicked away by tentacles or shut out by closing the mouth.[18] A study in 2008 showed that both encrusting and erect colonies fed more quickly and grew faster in gentle than in strong currents.[87]

In some species the first part of the stomach forms a muscular gizzard lined with chitinous teeth that crush armored prey such as diatoms. Wave-like peristaltic contractions move the food through the stomach for digestion. The final section of the stomach is lined with cilia (minute hairs) that compress undigested solids, which then pass through the intestine and out through the anus.[18]

There are no nephridia ("little kidneys") or other excretory organs in bryozoa,[28] and it is thought that ammonia diffuses out through the body wall and lophophore.[18] More complex waste products are not excreted but accumulate in the polypide, which degenerates after a few weeks. Some of the old polypide is recycled, but much of it remains as a large mass of dying cells containing accumulated wastes, and this is compressed into a "brown body". When the degeneration is complete, the cystid (outer part of the animal) produces a new polypide, and the brown body remains in the coelom, or in the stomach of the new polypide and is expelled next time the animal defecates.[18]

Respiration and circulation

edit

There are no respiratory organs, heart or blood vessels. Instead, zooids absorb oxygen and eliminate carbon dioxide through diffusion. Bryozoa accomplish diffusion through the use of either a thin membrane (in the case of anascans and some polyzoa) or through pseudopores located on the outer dermis of the zooid.[88] The different bryozoan groups use various methods to share nutrients and oxygen between zooids: some have quite large gaps in the body walls, allowing the coelomic fluid to circulate freely; in others, the funiculi (internal "little ropes")[34] of adjacent zooids connect via small pores in the body wall.[18][31]

Reproduction and life cycles

edit
 
Encrusting cyclostome bryozoans (B), the one on the right showing swollen gonozooids; T = thecideide brachiopod and S = sabellid worm tube; Jurassic of Poland.

Zooids of all phylactolaemate species are simultaneous hermaphrodites. Although those of many marine species are protandric, in other words function first as males and then as females, their colonies contain a combination of zooids that are in their male and female stages. In all species the ovaries develop on the inside of the body wall, and the testes on the funiculus connecting the stomach to the body wall.[28] Eggs and sperm are released into the coelom, and sperm exit into the water through pores in the tips of some of the tentacles, and then are captured by the feeding currents of zooids that are producing eggs.[18] Some species' eggs are fertilized externally after being released through a pore between two tentacles, which in some cases is at the tip of a small projection called the "intertentacular organ" in the base of a pair of tentacles. Others' are fertilized internally, in the intertentacular organ or in the coelom.[18]

All phylactolaemates and stenolaemates, and most gymnolaemates, exhibit placentation, and has therefore lecithotrophic (non-feeding) larvae. Except for Cyclostomata and the small gymnolaemate family Epistomiidae, which are viviparous, all are brooders. Phylactolaemata brood their embryos in an internal brood sac, but Gymnolaemata both external membranous sacs, skeletal chambers (ovicells) and internal brooding sacs exist.[89][90] The developing embryo relies on egg's yolk, extraembryonic nutrition (matrotrophy) or both.[91]

In ctenostomes the mother provides a brood chamber for the fertilized eggs, and her polypide disintegrates, providing nourishment to the embryo. Stenolaemates produce specialized zooids to serve as brood chambers, and their eggs divide within this to produce up to 100 identical embryos.[28]

Planktotrophic (feeding) larvae are only found in class Gymnolaemata: In the cheilostomatan suborder Malacostegina they are found in the two families Membraniporidae and Electridae, and in the three ctenostome families Alcyonidiidae, Farrellidae, and Hislopiidae. In addition there are a few unconfirmed records, like the solitary form Aethozoid where larvae has never been observed, but which is assumed to have planktotrophic larvae.[92][93][94]

The cleavage of bryozoan eggs is biradial, in other words the early stages are bilaterally symmetrical. It is unknown how the coelom forms, since the metamorphosis from larva to adult destroys all of the larva's internal tissues. In many animals the blastopore, an opening in the surface of the early embryo, tunnels through to form the gut. However, in bryozoans the blastopore closes, and a new opening develops to create the mouth.[18]

Bryozoan larvae vary in form, but all have a band of cilia round the body which enables them to swim, a tuft of cilia at the top, and an adhesive sac that everts and anchors them when they settle on a surface.[18] Some gymnolaemate species produce cyphonautes larvae which have little yolk but a well-developed mouth and gut, and live as plankton for a considerable time before settling. These larvae have triangular shells of chitin, with one corner at the top and the base open, forming a hood round the downward-facing mouth.[28] In 2006 it was reported that the cilia of cyphonautes larvae use the same range of techniques as those of adults to capture food.[95] Species that brood their embryos form larvae that are nourished by large yolks, have no gut and do not feed, and such larvae quickly settle on a surface.[18] In all marine species the larvae produce cocoons in which they metamorphose completely after settling: the larva's epidermis becomes the lining of the coelom, and the internal tissues are converted to a food reserve that nourishes the developing zooid until it is ready to feed.[18] The larvae of phylactolaemates produce multiple polypides, so that each new colony starts with several zooids.[18] In all species the founder zooids then grow the new colonies by budding clones of themselves. In phylactolaemates, zooids die after producing several clones, so that living zooids are found only round the edges of a colony.[18]

Phylactolaemates can also reproduce asexually by a method that enables a colony's lineage to survive the variable and uncertain conditions of freshwater environments.[28] Throughout summer and autumn they produce disc-shaped statoblasts, masses of cells that function as "survival pods" rather like the gemmules of sponges.[18] Statoblasts form on the funiculus connected to the parent's gut, which nourishes them.[28] As they grow, statoblasts develop protective bivalve-like shells made of chitin. When they mature, some statoblasts stick to the parent colony, some fall to the bottom ("sessoblasts"), some contain air spaces that enable them to float ("floatoblasts"),[18] and some remain in the parent's cystid to re-build the colony if it dies.[28] Statoblasts can remain dormant for considerable periods, and while dormant can survive harsh conditions such as freezing and desiccation. They can be transported across long distances by animals, floating vegetation, currents[18] and winds,[28] and even in the guts of larger animals.[96] When conditions improve, the valves of the shell separate and the cells inside develop into a zooid that tries to form a new colony. Plumatella emarginata produces both "sessoblasts", which enable the lineage to control a good territory even if hard times decimate the parent colonies, and "floatoblasts", which spread to new sites. New colonies of Plumatella repens produce mainly "sessoblasts" while mature ones switch to "floatoblasts".[86] A study estimated that one group of colonies in a patch measuring 1 square meter (11 sq ft) produced 800,000 statoblasts.[18]

Cupuladriid Bryozoa are capable of both sexual and asexual reproduction. The sexually reproducing colonies (aclonal) are the result of a larval cupuladriid growing into an adult stage whereas the asexual colonies(clonal) are a result of a fragment of a colony of cupuladriids growing into its own colony. The different forms of reproduction in cupuladriids are achieved through a variety of methods depending on the morphology and classification of the zooid.[97]

Ecology

edit

Habitats and distribution

edit

Most marine species live in tropical waters at depths less than 100 meters (330 ft; 55 fathoms). However, a few have been found in deep-sea trenches,[98] especially around cold seeps, and others near the poles.[99][100]

The great majority of bryozoans are sessile. Typically, sessile bryozoans live on hard substrates including rocks, sand or shells.[101] Encrusting forms are much the commonest of these in shallow seas, but erect forms become more common as the depth increases.[99] An example of incrustation on pebbles and cobbles is found in the diverse Pleistocene bryozoans found in northern Japan, where fossils have been found of single stones covered with more than 20 bryozoan species.[102] Sediments with smaller particles, like sand or silt, are usually unsuitable habitat for bryozoans, but tiny colonies have been found encrusting grains of coarse sand. [103] Some bryozoan species specialize in colonizing marine algae, seagrasses, and even mangrove roots; the genus Amphibiobeania lives on the leaves of mangrove trees and is called "amphibious" because it can survive regular exposure to air at low tide.[104]

There are a variety of "free-living" bryozoans that live un-attached to a substrate. A few forms such as Cristatella can move. Lunulitiform cheilostomes are one group of free-living bryozoans with mobile colonies. They form small round colonies un-attached to any substrate; colonies of the genus Selenaria have been observed to "walk" around using setae.[105] Another cheilostome family, the Cupuladriidae, convergently evolved similarly shaped colonies capable of movement. When observed in an aquarium, Selenaria maculata colonies were recorded to crawl at a speed of one meter per hour, climb over each other, move toward light, and right themselves when turned upside-down.[106] Later study of this genus showed that neuroelectrical activity in the colonies increased in correlation with movement toward light sources. It is theorized that the capacity for movement arose as a side effect when colonies evolved longer setae for unburying themselves from sediment.[106]

 
1851 watercolor of Alcyonidium by Jacques Burkhardt.

Other free-living bryozoans are moved freely by waves, currents, or other phenomena. An Antarctic species, Alcyonidium pelagosphaera, consists of floating colonies. The pelagic species is between 5.0 and 23.0 mm (0.20 and 0.91 in) in diameter, has the shape of a hollow sphere and consists of a single layer of autozooids. It is still not known if these colonies are pelagic their whole life or only represents a temporarily and previously undescribed juvenile stage.[99][107] Colonies of the species Alcyonidium disciforme, which is disc-shaped and similarly free-living, inhabit muddy seabeds in the Arctic and can sequester sand grains they have engulfed, potentially using the sand as ballast to turn themselves right-side-up after they have been overturned. Some bryozoan species can form bryoliths, sphere-shaped free-living colonies that grow outward in all directions as they roll about on the seabed. [108]

In 2014 it was reported that the bryozoan Fenestrulina rugula had become a dominant species in parts of Antarctica. Global warming has increased the rate of scouring by icebergs, and this species is particularly adept at recolonizing scoured areas.[109]

The phylactolaemates live in all types of freshwater environment – lakes and ponds, rivers and streams, and estuaries[66] – and are among the most abundant sessile freshwater animals.[78] Some ctenostomes are exclusively freshwater while others prefer brackish water but can survive in freshwater.[66] Scientists' knowledge of freshwater bryozoan populations in many parts of the world is incomplete, even in some parts of Europe. It was long thought that some freshwater species occurred worldwide, but since 2002 all of these have been split into more localized species.[66]

Bryozoans grow in clonal colonies. A larval Bryozoan settles on a hard substance and produces a colony asexually through budding. These colonies can grow thousands of individual zooids in a relatively short period of time. Even though colonies of zooids grow through asexual reproduction, Bryozoans are hermaphrodites and new colonies can be formed through sexual reproduction and the generation of free swimming larvae. When colonies grow too large, however, they can split in two. This is the only case where asexual reproduction results in a new colony separate from its predecessor. Most colonies are stationary. Indeed, these colonies tend to be settled on immobile substances such as sediment and coarse substances. There are some colonies of freshwater species such as Cristatella mucedo that are able to move slowly on a creeping foot.[110]

Interactions with non-human organisms

edit
 
Lacelike Membranipora membranacea

Marine species are common on coral reefs, but seldom a significant proportion of the total biomass. In temperate waters, the skeletons of dead colonies form a significant component of shell gravels, and live ones are abundant in these areas.[111] The marine lace-like bryozoan Membranipora membranacea produces spines in response to predation by several species of sea slugs (nudibranchs).[112] Other predators on marine bryozoans include fish, sea urchins, pycnogonids, crustaceans, mites[113] and starfish.[114] In general marine echinoderms and molluscs eat masses of zooids by gouging pieces of colonies, breaking their mineralized "houses", while most arthropod predators on bryozoans eat individual zooids.[115]

In freshwater, bryozoans are among the most important filter feeders, along with sponges and mussels.[116] Freshwater bryozoans are attacked by many predators, including snails, insects, and fish.[86]

In Thailand the introduced species Pomacea canaliculata (golden apple snail), which is generally a destructive herbivore, has wiped out phylactolaemate populations wherever it has appeared. P. canaliculata also preys on a common freshwater gymnolaemate, but with less devastating effect. Indigenous snails do not feed on bryozoans.[14]

Several species of the hydroid family Zancleidae have symbiotic relationships with bryozoans, some of which are beneficial to the hydroids while others are parasitic. Modifications appear in the shapes of some these hydroids, for example smaller tentacles or encrustation of the roots by bryozoans.[117] The bryozoan Alcyonidium nodosum protects the whelk Burnupena papyracea against predation by the powerful and voracious rock lobster Jasus lalandii. While whelk shells encrusted by the bryozoans are stronger than those without this reinforcement, chemical defenses produced by the bryozoans are probably the more significant deterrent.[118]

 
Mauritanian bryolith formed by circumrotatory growth of the bryozoan species Acanthodesia commensale

In the Banc d'Arguin offshore Mauritania the species Acanthodesia commensale, which is generally growing attached to gravel and hard-substrate, has formed a facultative symbiotic relationship with hermit crabs of the species Pseudopagurus cf. granulimanus resulting in egg-size structures known as bryoliths.[119] Nucleating on an empty gastropod shell, the bryozoan colonies form multilamellar skeletal crusts that produce spherical encrustations and extend the living chamber of the hermit crab through helicospiral tubular growth.

Some phylactolaemate species are intermediate hosts for a group of myxozoa that have also been found to cause proliferative kidney disease, which is often fatal in salmonid fish,[120] and has severely reduced wild fish populations in Europe and North America.[66]

Membranipora membranacea, whose colonies feed and grow exceptionally fast in a wide range of current speeds, was first noticed in the Gulf of Maine in 1987 and quickly became the most abundant organism living on kelps.[87] This invasion reduced the kelp population by breaking their fronds,[18] so that its place as the dominant "vegetation" in some areas was taken by another invader, the large alga Codium fragile tomentosoides.[87] These changes reduced the area of habitat available for local fish and invertebrates. M. membranacea has also invaded the northwest coast of the US.[18] A few freshwater species have been also found thousands of kilometers from their native ranges. Some may have been transported naturally as statoblasts. Others more probably were spread by humans, for example on imported water plants or as stowaways on ships.[96]

Interaction with humans

edit

Fish farms and hatcheries have lost stock to proliferative kidney disease, which is caused by one or more myxozoans that use bryozoans as alternate hosts.[120]

Some fishermen in the North Sea have had to find other work because of a form of eczema (a skin disease) known as "Dogger Bank itch",[99] caused by contact with bryozoans that have stuck to nets and lobster pots.[121]

Marine bryozoans are often responsible for biofouling on ships' hulls, on docks and marinas, and on offshore structures. They are among the first colonizers of new or recently cleaned structures.[111] Freshwater species are occasional nuisances in water pipes, drinking water purification equipment, sewage treatment facilities, and the cooling pipes of power stations.[66][122]

A group of chemicals called bryostatins can be extracted from the marine bryozoan Bugula neritina. In 2001 pharmaceutical company GPC Biotech licensed bryostatin 1 from Arizona State University for commercial development as a treatment for cancer. GPC Biotech canceled development in 2003, saying that bryostatin 1 showed little effectiveness and some toxic side effects.[123] In January 2008 a clinical trial was submitted to the United States National Institutes of Health to measure the safety and effectiveness of Bryostatin 1 in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. However, no participants had been recruited by the end of December 2008, when the study was scheduled for completion.[124] More recent work shows it has positive effects on cognition in patients with Alzheimer's disease with few side effects.[125] About 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb) of bryozoans must be processed to extract 1 gram (132 oz) of bryostatin, As a result, synthetic equivalents have been developed that are simpler to produce and apparently at least as effective.[126]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Taylor, P.D.; Berning, B.; Wilson, M.A. (November 2013). "Reinterpretation of the Cambrian 'bryozoan' Pywackia as an octocoral". Journal of Paleontology. 87 (6): 984–990. Bibcode:2013JPal...87..984T. doi:10.1666/13-029. S2CID 129113026. Archived from the original on 7 June 2019. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  2. ^ Ma, Junye; Taylor, Paul D.; Xia, Fengsheng; Zhan, Renbin (September 2015). "The oldest known bryozoan: Prophyllodictya (Cryptostomata) from the lower Tremadocian (Lower Ordovician) of Liujiachang, south-western Hubei, central China". Palaeontology. 58 (5): 925–934. Bibcode:2015Palgy..58..925M. doi:10.1111/pala.12189. S2CID 130040324.
  3. ^ a b Yang, Jie; Lan, Tian; Zhang, Xi-guang; Smith, Martin R. (8 March 2023). "Protomelission is an early dasyclad alga and not a Cambrian bryozoan". Nature. 615 (7952): 468–471. Bibcode:2023Natur.615..468Y. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-05775-5. PMID 36890226. S2CID 257425218.
  4. ^ Ernst, A. (2007). "A cystoporate bryozoan species from the Zechstein (Late Permian)". Paläontologische Zeitschrift. 81 (2): 113–117. Bibcode:2007PalZ...81..113E. doi:10.1007/BF02988385. S2CID 129637643.
  5. ^ a b c d Fuchs, J.; Obst, M.; Sundberg, P (July 2009). "The first comprehensive molecular phylogeny of Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) based on combined analyses of nuclear and mitochondrial genes". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 52 (1): 225–233. Bibcode:2009MolPE..52..225F. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2009.01.021. PMID 19475710.
  6. ^ Brusca, Richard C. (1980) [1973]. "21: The Lophophorate Phyla". Common intertidal invertebrates of the Gulf of California (revised & expanded, 2nd ed.). Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 9780816506828. OCLC 1029265317.
  7. ^ Bock, P.; Gordon, D.P. (August 2013). "Phylum Bryozoa Ehrenberg, 1831". Zootaxa. 3703 (1): 67–74. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3703.1.14.
  8. ^ Schwaha, Thomas F.; Ostrovsky, Andrew N.; Wanninger, Andreas (June 2020). "Key novelties in the evolution of the aquatic colonial phylum Bryozoa: evidence from soft body morphology". Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 95 (3): 696–729. doi:10.1111/brv.12583. PMC 7317743. PMID 32032476.
  9. ^ Schwaha, Thomas; Bernhard, Joan M.; Edgcomb, Virginia P.; Todaro, M. Antonio (1 August 2019). "Aethozooides uraniae, a new deep-sea genus and species of solitary bryozoan from the Mediterranean Sea, with a revision of the Aethozoidae". Marine Biodiversity. 49 (4): 1843–1856. Bibcode:2019MarBd..49.1843S. doi:10.1007/s12526-019-00948-w. hdl:11380/1174838.
  10. ^ Thompson, John V. (1830). "Memoir V: On Polyzoa, a new animal discovered as an inhabitant of some Zoophites". Zoological researches and illustrations; or Natural history of nondescript or imperfectly known animals. Cork, IE: King and Ridings. pp. 89–102.
  11. ^ Ehrenberg, Christian G. (1831). "Pars zoologica. Animalia evertebrata exclusis insectis [Invertebrata other than Insecta]". Symbolae physicae, seu lcones et descriptiones corporum naturalium novorum aut minus cognitorum (in Latin). Berolini Ex officina Academica. pp. 1–126.
  12. ^ Stebbing, T.R.R. (1911). "The terms Polyzoa and Bryozoa". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London. Session 123 (Symposium): 61–72.
  13. ^ a b Muir-Wood, H.M. (1955). A history of the classification of the phylum Brachiopoda. London: British Museum (Natural History). p. 13.
  14. ^ a b Wood, T.S. (May 2006). "Heavy Predation on Freshwater Bryozoans by the Golden Apple Snail, Pomacea canaliculata" (PDF). Natural History Journal of Chulalongkorn University. 6 (1): 31–36. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  15. ^ Lauer, Antje (2016). "Watersipora subtorquata and the Possible Role of Its Associated Microbes: An Attempt to Explain the Extraordinary Invasion Success of This Marine Bryozoan Species". The Mechanistic Benefits of Microbial Symbionts. Advances in Environmental Microbiology. Vol. 2. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 239–268. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-28068-4_9. ISBN 978-3-319-28066-0. Occasionally, the impact of an invertebrate invader can be substantial; such has been documented for Membranipora membranacea, a fast-growing invasive bryozoan species which has reduced kelp forests off the northeast and northwest coasts of the USA to an extent that it has affected local fish and invertebrate populations
  16. ^ "Introduction to the Bryozoa". Berkeley, CA: University of California Museum of Paleontology. Archived from the original on 8 December 2019. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  17. ^ Zhang, Zhiliang; Zhang, Zhifei; Ma, J.; Taylor, P. D.; Strotz, L. C.; Jacquet, S. M.; Skovsted, C. B.; Chen, F.; Han, J.; Brock, G. A. (2021). "Fossil evidence unveils an early Cambrian origin for Bryozoa". Nature. 599 (7884): 251–255. Bibcode:2021Natur.599..251Z. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-04033-w. PMC 8580826. PMID 34707285. S2CID 240073948.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Lophoporata". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 829–845. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  19. ^ a b c Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Lophoporata". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 817–821. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  20. ^ a b c Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Lophoporata". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 821–829. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rich, T.H.; Fenton, M.A.; Fenton, C.L. (1997). "'Moss Animals', or Bryozoans". The fossil book. Dover Publications. pp. 142–152. ISBN 978-0-486-29371-4. Retrieved 7 August 2009.
  22. ^ a b Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Kamptozoa and Cycliophora". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 808–812. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  23. ^ a b Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Lophoporata". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. p. 817. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nielsen, C. (July 2002). "The Phylogenetic Position of Entoprocta, Ectoprocta, Phoronida, and Brachiopoda". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 42 (3): 685–691. doi:10.1093/icb/42.3.685. PMID 21708765.
  25. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Annelida". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 414–420. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  26. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 284–291. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  27. ^ Giere, O. (2009). "Tentaculata". Meiobenthology (2nd ed.). Springer Verlag. p. 227. ISBN 978-3-540-68657-6. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 7 July 2009.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Doherty, P.J. (2001). "The Lophophorates". In Anderson, D.T. (ed.). Invertebrate Zoology (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 363–373. ISBN 978-0-19-551368-4.
  29. ^ Little, W.; Fowler, H.W; Coulson, J. & Onions, C.T. (1964). "Zooid". Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860613-0.
  30. ^ Bryozoans and Palaeoenvironmental Interpretation
  31. ^ a b c d e Nielsen, C. (2001). "Bryozoa (Ectoprocta: 'Moss' Animals)". Encyclopedia of Life Sciences. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. doi:10.1038/npg.els.0001613. ISBN 978-0470016176.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h McKinney, F.K.; Jackson, J.B.C. (1991). "Bryozoans as modular machines". Bryozoan evolution. University of Chicago Press. pp. 1–13. ISBN 978-0-226-56047-2. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
  33. ^ Riisgård, H.U.; Nielsen, C; Larsen, PS (2000). "Downstream collecting in ciliary suspension feeders: the catch-up principle" (PDF). Marine Ecology Progress Series. 207: 33–51. Bibcode:2000MEPS..207...33R. doi:10.3354/meps207033. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2009.
  34. ^ a b "funiculus". Random House Dictionary. Random House. Archived from the original on 13 May 2010. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  35. ^ Hayward, P.J. (1985). "Systematic part". Ctenostome Bryozoans. Synopses of the British fauna. Linnean Society of London. pp. 106–107. ISBN 978-90-04-07583-2. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  36. ^ Giere, O. (2009). "Tentaculata". Meiobenthology (2nd ed.). Springer-Verlag. p. 227. ISBN 978-3-540-68657-6. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  37. ^ Liddell, H.G.; Scott R. (1940). "kenos". A Greek-English Lexicon. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-864226-8. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  38. ^ Taylor 2020, pp. 72–73.
  39. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 74.
  40. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 59.
  41. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 60.
  42. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 65.
  43. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 75.
  44. ^ Branch, M.L.; Griffiths, C.I.; Beckley, L.E. (2007). "Bryozoa: Moss or Lace Animals". Two Oceans – A Guide to the Marine Life of Southern Africa. Struik. pp. 104–110. ISBN 978-1-77007-633-4. Retrieved 2 August 2009.[permanent dead link]
  45. ^ Little, W.; Fowler, H.W.; Coulson, J. & Onions, C.T. (1959). "Bryozoa". Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University. ISBN 978-0-19-860613-0.
  46. ^ Eckman, J.E.; Okamura, B (December 1998). "A Model of Particle Capture by Bryozoans in Turbulent Flow: Significance of Colony Form". The American Naturalist. 152 (6): 861–880. doi:10.1086/286214. PMID 18811433. S2CID 5535013.
  47. ^ Vogel, S. (1996). "Life in velocity gradients". Life in moving fluids (2nd ed.). Princeton University Press. p. 191. ISBN 978-0-691-02616-9. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 5 August 2009.
  48. ^ von Dassow, M. (1 August 2006). "Function-Dependent Development in a Colonial Animal". Biological Bulletin. 211 (1): 76–82. doi:10.2307/4134580. ISSN 0006-3185. JSTOR 4134580. PMID 16946244. Archived from the original on 6 July 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2009.
  49. ^ Taylor, Paul D.; James, Noel P. (August 2013). "Secular changes in colony-forms and bryozoan carbonate sediments through geological history". Sedimentology. 60 (5): 1184–1212. doi:10.1111/sed.12032. S2CID 128939236.
  50. ^ a b Beatty, J.A.; Blackwelder (1974). "Names of Invertebrate Phyla". Systematic Zoology. 23 (4): 545–547. doi:10.2307/2412472. JSTOR 2412472.
  51. ^ a b Mayr, E. (June 1968). "Bryozoa versus Ectoprocta". Systematic Zoology. 17 (2): 213–216. doi:10.2307/2412368. JSTOR 2412368.
  52. ^ Little, W.; Fowler, H.W; Coulson, J. & Onions, C.T. (1964). "Ecto-". Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860613-0.
  53. ^ Little, W.; Fowler, H.W.; Coulson, J. & Onions, C.T. (1964). "Ento-". Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860613-0.
  54. ^ a b c d e f g h Halanych, K.M. (2004). "The new view of animal phylogeny" (PDF). Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics. 35: 229–256. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.112202.130124. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  55. ^ a b c d e f Hausdorf, B.; Helmkampf, M.; Meyer, A.; Witek, A.; Herlyn, H.; Bruchhaus, I.; Hankeln, T.; Struck, T.H.; Lieb, B. (2007). "Spiralian Phylogenomics Supports the Resurrection of Bryozoa Comprising Ectoprocta and Entoprocta". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 24 (12): 2723–2729. doi:10.1093/molbev/msm214. PMID 17921486.
  56. ^ Cuffey, R. J. (1969). "Bryozoa versus Ectoprocta – The Necessity for Precision". Systematic Zoology. 18 (2): 250–251. doi:10.2307/2412617. JSTOR 2412617.
  57. ^ Ghiselin, M.T. (1977). "On Changing the Names of Higher Taxa". Systematic Zoology. 26 (3): 346–349. doi:10.2307/2412681. JSTOR 2412681.
  58. ^ Yokobori, S.; Iseto, T; Asakawa, S; Sasaki, T; Shimizu, N; Yamagishi, A; Oshima, T; Hirose, E (May 2008). "Complete nucleotide sequences of mitochondrial genomes of two solitary entoprocts, Loxocorone allax and Loxosomella aloxiata: Implications for lophotrochozoan phylogeny". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 47 (2): 612–628. Bibcode:2008MolPE..47..612Y. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2008.02.013. PMID 18374604.
  59. ^ Reynolds, K.T. (2000). "Taxonomically Important Features on the Surface of Floatoblasts in Plumatella (Bryozoa)". Microscopy and Microanalysis. 6 (3): 202–210. Bibcode:2000MiMic...6..202R. doi:10.1017/S1431927600000349. PMID 10790488. The text begins "Phylum Ectoprocta (Bryozoa) ..."
  60. ^ Trumble, W; Brown, L (2002). "Bryozoa". Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860457-0.
  61. ^ Taylor, Zaton 2008
  62. ^ Taylor, Paul D (October 2008). "Taxonomy of the bryozoan genera Oncousoecia, Microeciella and Eurystrotos". Journal of Natural History. 42 (39–40): 2557–2574. doi:10.1080/00222930802277640. S2CID 84315311.
  63. ^ Chapman, A.D. (2006). Numbers of Living Species in Australia and the World (PDF). Department of the Environment and Heritage, Australian Government. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-642-56849-6. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 7 August 2009.
  64. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Introduction to Invertebrates". Invertebrate Zoology (7 ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 2–9. ISBN 978-0-03-025982-1.
  65. ^ "ITIS Standard Report Page: Phylactolaemata". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Archived from the original on 18 January 2018. Retrieved 12 August 2009.
  66. ^ a b c d e f g h Massard, J.A.; Geimer, Gaby (2008). "Global diversity of bryozoans (Bryozoa or Ectoprocta) in freshwater". Hydrobiologia. 595: 93–99. doi:10.1007/s10750-007-9007-3. S2CID 13057599.
  67. ^ a b Fish, J.D.; Fish, S. (1996). "Bryozoa". A student's guide to the seashore (2 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 418–419. ISBN 978-0-521-46819-0.
  68. ^ Jablonski, D.; Lidgard, S.; Taylor, P.D. (1997). "Comparative Ecology of Bryozoan Radiations: Origin of novelties in cyclostomes and Cheilostomes". PALAIOS. 12 (6): 505–523. Bibcode:1997Palai..12..505J. doi:10.2307/3515408. JSTOR 3515408.
  69. ^ a b Hayward, P.J.; Ryland, J.S. (1985). "Key to the higher taxa of marine Bryozoa". Cyclostome bryozoans. Linnean Society of London. p. 7. ISBN 978-90-04-07697-6. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  70. ^ a b McKinney; Frank K; Jeremy. "Bryozoan Evolution". Boston: Unwin & Hyman, 1989.
  71. ^ a b Ernst, Andrej (2020). "2- Fossil record and evolution of Bryozoa". Phylum Bryozoa. pp. 11–56.
  72. ^ Jackson, Patrick N. Wyse; Key, Marcus M. Key Jr. (2019). "Epizoan and endoskeletozoan distribution across reassembled ramose stenolaemate bryozoan zoaria from the Upper Ordovician (Katian) of the Cincinnati Arch region, USA". Australasian Palaeontological Memoirs. 52: 169–178.
  73. ^ Torsvik, T.H.; Ryan, Paul D.; Trench, Allan; Harper, David A.T. (January 1991). "Cambrian-Ordovician paleogeography of Baltica". Geology. 19 (1): 7–10. Bibcode:1991Geo....19....7T. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1991)019<0007:COPOB>2.3.CO;2.
  74. ^ a b c d e Dewel, R.A.; Winston, J.E.; McKinney, F.J. (2002). "Deconstructing byozoans: origin and consequences of a unique body plan". In Wyse Jacksdon, P.E.; Buttler, C.E.; Spencer Jones, M.E. (eds.). Bryozoan studies 2001: proceedings of the Twelfth International Bryozoology Conference. M.E. Lisse: Swets and Zeitlinger. pp. 93–96. ISBN 978-90-5809-388-2. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2009.
  75. ^ Olempska, E. (2012). "Exceptional soft-tissue preservation in boring ctenostome bryozoans and associated "fungal" borings from the Early Devonian of Podolia, Ukraine". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 57 (4): 925–940. doi:10.4202/app.2011.0200.
  76. ^ McKinney, F.K. (1994). "One hundred million years of competitive interactions between bryozoan clades: asymmetrical but not escalating". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 56 (3): 465–481. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1995.tb01105.x.
  77. ^ Wood, R. (1999). Reef evolution. Oxford University Press. pp. 235–237. ISBN 978-0-19-857784-3. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
  78. ^ a b c Wood, T.S.; Lore M. (2005). "The higher phylogeny of phylactolaemate bryozoans inferred from 18S ribosomal DNA sequences" (PDF). In Moyano, H. I.; Cancino, J.M.; Wyse-Jackson, P.N. (eds.). Bryozoan Studies 2004: Proceedings of the 13th International Bryozoology Association. London: Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 361–367. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2009.
  79. ^ Pohowsky, R.A. (1978). "The boring ctenostomate bryozoa: taxonomy and paleobiology based on cavities in calcareous substrata". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 73: 192p.
  80. ^ Garey, J.R.; Schmidt-Rhaesa, Andreas (1998). "The Essential Role of "Minor" Phyla in Molecular Studies of Animal Evolution". American Zoologist. 38 (6): 907–917. doi:10.1093/icb/38.6.907.
  81. ^ a b c Nielsen, C. (2001). "Phylum Ectoprocta". Animal evolution: interrelationships of the living phyla (2 ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 244–264. ISBN 978-0-19-850681-2. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
  82. ^ "Introduction to the Hemichordata". University of California Museum of Paleontology. Archived from the original on 1 February 2019. Retrieved 22 September 2008.
  83. ^ a b c Helmkampf, M.; Bruchhaus, Iris; Hausdorf, Bernhard (2008). "Phylogenomic analyses of lophophorates (brachiopods, phoronids and bryozoans) confirm the Lophotrochozoa concept". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 275 (1645): 1927–1933. doi:10.1098/rspb.2008.0372. PMC 2593926. PMID 18495619.
  84. ^ Nielsen, C.; Worsaae, K. (September 2010). "Structure and occurrence of cyphonautes larvae (Bryozoa, Ectoprocta)". Journal of Morphology. 271 (9): 1094–1109. doi:10.1002/jmor.10856. PMID 20730922. S2CID 11453241.
  85. ^ Shen, X.; Tian, M.; Meng, X.; Liu, H.; Cheng, H.; Zhu, C.; Zhao, F. (September 2012). "Complete mitochondrial genome of Membranipora grandicella (Bryozoa: Cheilostomatida) determined with next-generation sequencing: The first representative of the suborder Malacostegina". Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part D: Genomics and Proteomics. 7 (3): 248–253. doi:10.1016/j.cbd.2012.03.003. PMID 22503287.
  86. ^ a b c Callaghan, T.P.; R., Karlson (June 2002). "Summer dormancy as a refuge from mortality in the freshwater bryozoan Plumatella emarginata". Oecologia. 132 (1): 51–59. Bibcode:2002Oecol.132...51C. doi:10.1007/s00442-002-0946-0. PMID 28547286. S2CID 19925846.
  87. ^ a b c Pratt, M.C. (2008). "Living where the flow is right: How flow affects feeding in bryozoans" (PDF). Integrative and Comparative Biology. 48 (6): 808–822. doi:10.1093/icb/icn052. PMID 21669834.
  88. ^ Ryland, J.S. (1967). "Respiration in polyzoa (ectoprocta)". Nature. 216 (5119): 1040–1041. Bibcode:1967Natur.216.1040R. doi:10.1038/2161040b0. S2CID 4207120.
  89. ^ Nekliudova, U. A.; Schwaha, T. F.; Kotenko, O. N.; Gruber, D.; Cyran, N.; Ostrovsky, A. N. (2021). "Three in one: Evolution of viviparity, coenocytic placenta and polyembryony in cyclostome bryozoans". BMC Ecology and Evolution. 21 (1): 54. doi:10.1186/s12862-021-01775-z. PMC 8042935. PMID 33845757.
  90. ^ Moosbrugger, M.; Schwaha, T.; Walzl, M. G.; Obst, M.; Ostrovsky, A. N. (2012). "The placental analogue and the pattern of sexual reproduction in the cheilostome bryozoan Bicellariella ciliata (Gymnolaemata)". Frontiers in Zoology. 9 (1): 29. doi:10.1186/1742-9994-9-29. PMC 3489856. PMID 23098166.
  91. ^ Kotenko, O. N.; Ostrovsky, A. N. (2024). "Unravelling the Evolution of Bryozoan Larvae". Paleontological Journal. 57 (11): 1306. Bibcode:2024PalJ...57.1306K. doi:10.1134/S0031030123110072.
  92. ^ Decker, Sebastian; Wanninger, Andreas; Schwaha, Thomas (2020). "Morphology and life cycle of an epiphytic pherusellid ctenostome bryozoan from the Mediterranean Sea". Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 20 (3): 417–437. doi:10.1007/s13127-020-00443-2.
  93. ^ Schwaha, Thomas (23 November 2020). Phylum Bryozoa. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. ISBN 978-3-11-058631-2.
  94. ^ Schwaha, Thomas; Zeppilli, Daniela; González-Casarrubios, Alberto; Cepeda, Diego (2024). "The first deep-sea ctenostome bryozoan from the Indian Ocean: Aethozoon flavum sp. nov". Marine Biodiversity. 54 (2): 19. Bibcode:2024MarBd..54...19S. doi:10.1007/s12526-024-01409-9.
  95. ^ Strathmann, R.R. (March 2006). "Versatile ciliary behaviour in capture of particles by the bryozoan cyphonautes larva". Acta Zoologica. 87 (1): 83–89. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6395.2006.00224.x.
  96. ^ a b Wood, T.S.; Okamura, Beth (December 1998). "Asajirella gelatinosa in Panama: a bryozoan range extension in the Western Hemisphere". Hydrobiologia. 390 (1–3): 19–23. doi:10.1023/A:1003502814572. S2CID 1525771.
  97. ^ O'Dea, Aaron; Jackson, Jeremy B. C.; Taylor, Paul D.; Rodríguez, Felix (2008). "Modes of reproduction in recent and fossil cupuladriid bryozoans". Palaeontology. 51 (4): 847–864. Bibcode:2008Palgy..51..847O. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2008.00790.x. S2CID 41016220.
  98. ^ Emiliani, C. (1992). "The Paleozoic". Planet Earth: Cosmology, Geology, & the Evolution of Life & the Environment. Cambridge University Press. pp. 488–490. ISBN 978-0-19-503652-7. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
  99. ^ a b c d Jones, R.W. (2006). "Principal fossil groups". Applied palaeontology. Cambridge University Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-521-84199-3. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
  100. ^ Kuklinski, P.; Bader, Beate (2007). "Comparison of bryozoan assemblages from two contrasting Arctic shelf regions". Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 73 (3–4): 835–843. Bibcode:2007ECSS...73..835K. doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2007.03.024.
  101. ^ Brusca, R; Brusca, G. "Invertebrates (2nd Edition)". Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates.
  102. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 159.
  103. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 164.
  104. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 162–163.
  105. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 112–113.
  106. ^ a b Taylor 2020, p. 79.
  107. ^ Peck, L. S.; Hayward, P. J.; Spencer-Jones, M. E. (October 1995). "A pelagic bryozoan from Antarctica". Marine Biology. 123 (4): 757–762. Bibcode:1995MarBi.123..757P. doi:10.1007/BF00349118. S2CID 83529565. Archived from the original on 3 August 2017. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
  108. ^ Taylor 2020, p. 114.
  109. ^ Matt McGrath (16 June 2014). "'Weedy thing' thrives as Antarctic shores warm". BBC News. Archived from the original on 17 June 2014. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
  110. ^ Ramel, Gordon (5 March 2020). "Bryozoans: The Fascinating Colonies Of Phylum Ectoprocta". Earthlife. Archived from the original on 27 March 2022. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  111. ^ a b Margulis, L.; Schwartz K.V. (1998). "Bryozoa". Five kingdoms: an illustrated guide to the phyla of life on earth. Elsevier. p. 335. ISBN 978-0-7167-3027-9. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  112. ^ Iyengar, E.V.; Harvell, CD (2002). "Specificity of cues inducing defensive spines in the bryozoan Membranipora membranacea". Marine Ecology Progress Series. 225: 205–218. Bibcode:2002MEPS..225..205I. doi:10.3354/meps225205. Archived from the original on 26 January 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  113. ^ Hayward, P. J.; Ryland, J.S. (1985). "Predators". Cyclostome bryozoans: keys and notes for the identification of the species. Brill Archive. p. 27. ISBN 978-90-04-07697-6. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  114. ^ Day, R.W.; Osman, R.W. (January 1981). "Predation by Patiria miniata (Asteroidea) on bryozoans". Oecologia. 51 (3): 300–309. Bibcode:1981Oecol..51..300D. doi:10.1007/BF00540898. PMID 28310012. S2CID 19976956.
  115. ^ McKinney, F.K.; Taylor, P.D.; Lidgard, S. (2003). "Predation on Bryozoans and its Reflection in the Fossil Record". In Kelley, P.H.; Kowalewski, M.; Hansen, T.A. (eds.). Predator-prey interactions in the fossil record. Springer. pp. 239–246. ISBN 978-0-306-47489-7. Archived from the original on 8 March 2023. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  116. ^ Wood, T.S. (October 2006). "Freshwater Bryozoans of Thailand (Ectoprocta and Entoprocta)" (PDF). The Natural History Journal of Chulalongkorn University. 6 (2): 83–119. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2009.
  117. ^ Puce, S. (2007). "Symbiotic relationships between hydroids and bryozoans". International Symbiosis Society Congress Number 5. 44 (1–3): 137–143. Archived from the original on 26 January 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  118. ^ Gray, C.A.; McQuaid, CD; Davies-Coleman, MT (December 2005). "A symbiotic shell-encrusting bryozoan provides subtidal whelks with chemical defence against rock lobsters". African Journal of Marine Science. 27 (3): 549–556. Bibcode:2005AfJMS..27..549G. doi:10.2989/18142320509504115. S2CID 84531235.
  119. ^ Klicpera, André; Taylor, Paul D.; Westphal, Hildegard (30 July 2013). "Bryoliths constructed by bryozoans in symbiotic associations with hermit crabs in a tropical heterozoan carbonate system, Golfe d'Arguin, Mauritania". Marine Biodiversity. 43 (4): 429–444. Bibcode:2013MarBd..43..429K. doi:10.1007/s12526-013-0173-4. S2CID 15841444. Archived from the original on 11 January 2020. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  120. ^ a b Anderson, C.; Canning, E.U.; Okamura, B. (1999). "Molecular data implicate bryozoans as hosts for PKX (Phylum Myxozoa) and identify a clade of bryozoan parasites within the Myxozoa". Parasitology. 119 (6): 555–561. doi:10.1017/S003118209900520X. PMID 10633916. S2CID 2851575. Archived from the original on 26 January 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  121. ^ Clin, B. (2008). "Professional photosensitive eczema of fishermen by contact with bryozoans: disabling occupational dermatosis" (PDF). International Maritime Health. 59 (1–4): 1–4. PMID 19227737. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 18 August 2009.
  122. ^ Wood, T.S.; Marsh, Terrence G (February 1999). "Biofouling of wastewater treatment plants by the freshwater bryozoan, Plumatella vaihiriae". Water Research. 33 (3): 609–614. doi:10.1016/S0043-1354(98)00274-7.
  123. ^ "Bryostatin 1". 19 June 2006. Archived from the original on 9 May 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  124. ^ "Safety, Efficacy, Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics Study of bryostatin 1 in Patients With Alzheimer's Disease". National Institutes of Health. 19 August 2009. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  125. ^ Nelson, T. J.; Sun, M. K.; Lim, C.; Sen, A.; Khan, T.; Chirila, F. V.; Alkon, D. L. (2017). "Bryostatin Effects on Cognitive Function and PKCɛ in Alzheimer's Disease Phase IIA and Expanded Access Trials". Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. 58 (2): 521–535. doi:10.3233/JAD-170161. PMC 5438479. PMID 28482641.
  126. ^ Wender, P.A.; Baryza, JL; Bennett, CE; Bi, FC; Brenner, SE; Clarke, MO; Horan, JC; Kan, C; et al. (20 November 2002). "The Practical Synthesis of a Novel and Highly Potent Analogue of Bryostatin". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 124 (46): 13648–13649. doi:10.1021/ja027509+. PMID 12431074.

Bibliography

edit
  • Taylor, Paul D. (2020). Bryozoan Paleobiology. London: Natural History Museum. ISBN 9781118455005.

Further reading

edit
edit