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Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA. / Ostrovsky, A.N.; Taylor, P.D.

Bryozoan Studies 2004. ed. / Hugo Moyano; Juan Cancino; Patrick Wyse Jackson. Taylor & Francis, 2005. p. 223-230.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in an anthologypeer-review

Harvard

Ostrovsky, AN & Taylor, PD 2005, Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA. in H Moyano, J Cancino & P Wyse Jackson (eds), Bryozoan Studies 2004. Taylor & Francis, pp. 223-230.

APA

Ostrovsky, A. N., & Taylor, P. D. (2005). Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA. In H. Moyano, J. Cancino, & P. Wyse Jackson (Eds.), Bryozoan Studies 2004 (pp. 223-230). Taylor & Francis.

Vancouver

Ostrovsky AN, Taylor PD. Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA. In Moyano H, Cancino J, Wyse Jackson P, editors, Bryozoan Studies 2004. Taylor & Francis. 2005. p. 223-230

Author

Ostrovsky, A.N. ; Taylor, P.D. / Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA. Bryozoan Studies 2004. editor / Hugo Moyano ; Juan Cancino ; Patrick Wyse Jackson. Taylor & Francis, 2005. pp. 223-230

BibTeX

@inbook{fba2c3f1c70340bf940ac4c18f3b0f1c,
title = "Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA",
abstract = "The calloporid Wilbertopora Cheetham, 1954 is the oldest known cheilostome with brood chambers (ovicells). The pattern of initial ovicell formation, involving a single ooecial rudiment, is more reminiscent of ovicell development in some Recent cribrimorphs and other more advanced cheilostomes than it is of Recent calloporids that have a double rudiment. The distrubution of early ovicell developmental types among cheilostomes is discussed. During later ovicell growth in Wilbertopora two lateral lobes fuse to form the hemispherical hyperstomial ovicell. This fusion process demonstrates how such ovicells could have originated from a more primitive bispinose precursor.",
author = "A.N. Ostrovsky and P.D. Taylor",
year = "2005",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780415372930",
pages = "223--230",
editor = "Hugo Moyano and Juan Cancino and {Wyse Jackson}, Patrick",
booktitle = "Bryozoan Studies 2004",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Early stages of the ovicell development in the calloporid Wilbertopora (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Upper Cretaceous of the USA

AU - Ostrovsky, A.N.

AU - Taylor, P.D.

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - The calloporid Wilbertopora Cheetham, 1954 is the oldest known cheilostome with brood chambers (ovicells). The pattern of initial ovicell formation, involving a single ooecial rudiment, is more reminiscent of ovicell development in some Recent cribrimorphs and other more advanced cheilostomes than it is of Recent calloporids that have a double rudiment. The distrubution of early ovicell developmental types among cheilostomes is discussed. During later ovicell growth in Wilbertopora two lateral lobes fuse to form the hemispherical hyperstomial ovicell. This fusion process demonstrates how such ovicells could have originated from a more primitive bispinose precursor.

AB - The calloporid Wilbertopora Cheetham, 1954 is the oldest known cheilostome with brood chambers (ovicells). The pattern of initial ovicell formation, involving a single ooecial rudiment, is more reminiscent of ovicell development in some Recent cribrimorphs and other more advanced cheilostomes than it is of Recent calloporids that have a double rudiment. The distrubution of early ovicell developmental types among cheilostomes is discussed. During later ovicell growth in Wilbertopora two lateral lobes fuse to form the hemispherical hyperstomial ovicell. This fusion process demonstrates how such ovicells could have originated from a more primitive bispinose precursor.

M3 - Article in an anthology

SN - 9780415372930

SP - 223

EP - 230

BT - Bryozoan Studies 2004

A2 - Moyano, Hugo

A2 - Cancino, Juan

A2 - Wyse Jackson, Patrick

PB - Taylor & Francis

ER -

ID: 4409140