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Unravelling the Evolution of Bryozoan Larvae. / Kotenko, Olga N.; Ostrovsky, Andrew N.

в: Paleontological Journal, Том 57, № 11, 2023, стр. 1306-1318.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Kotenko, ON & Ostrovsky, AN 2023, 'Unravelling the Evolution of Bryozoan Larvae', Paleontological Journal, Том. 57, № 11, стр. 1306-1318. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0031030123110072

APA

Vancouver

Author

Kotenko, Olga N. ; Ostrovsky, Andrew N. / Unravelling the Evolution of Bryozoan Larvae. в: Paleontological Journal. 2023 ; Том 57, № 11. стр. 1306-1318.

BibTeX

@article{27b010c03e5f4d81a7a9df541c9b2f54,
title = "Unravelling the Evolution of Bryozoan Larvae",
abstract = "The medium-sized lophotrochozoan phylum Bryozoa demonstrates a surprisingly wide range of larval forms. Few zygoparous species from the class Gymnolaemata possess long-lived planktotrophic larva (cyphonautes and paracyphonautes). The rest of gymnolaemates, and all species from classes Stenolaemata and Phylactolamata, incubate their embryos, whose development relies on egg{\textquoteright}s yolk, extraembryonic nutrition (matrotrophy) or both, and have a brief free-swimming larval stage. Comparative morpho-functional analysis indicates that in bryozoans, similar to many other marine invertebrates, transitions from planktotrophic to endotrophic larvae were multiple and, obviously, were based on changes in oogenesis. Besides, the acquisition of a new larval type has always occurred in association with the evolution of embryonic incubation in Bryozoa. In myolaemates, the main trends in the evolution of endotrophy were reduction of the larval gut, loss of the larval protective cuticle/shell, invagination of the pallial epithelium of the episphere, and increase of the corona. Furthermore, larvae of stenolaemates lost their aboral and pyriform organs. Although being planktotrophic, the cyphonautes is a highly modified larval form, and cannot be considered as an ancestral typeof bryozoan larvae. Phylactolaemates have a highly derived heterochronous development with a free-swimming stage that is, in fact, a chimera—either an ancestrula or a juvenile colony having a larval ciliary covering.",
author = "Kotenko, {Olga N.} and Ostrovsky, {Andrew N.}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1134/S0031030123110072",
language = "English",
volume = "57",
pages = "1306--1318",
journal = "Paleontological Journal",
issn = "0031-0301",
publisher = "МАИК {"}Наука/Интерпериодика{"}",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Unravelling the Evolution of Bryozoan Larvae

AU - Kotenko, Olga N.

AU - Ostrovsky, Andrew N.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The medium-sized lophotrochozoan phylum Bryozoa demonstrates a surprisingly wide range of larval forms. Few zygoparous species from the class Gymnolaemata possess long-lived planktotrophic larva (cyphonautes and paracyphonautes). The rest of gymnolaemates, and all species from classes Stenolaemata and Phylactolamata, incubate their embryos, whose development relies on egg’s yolk, extraembryonic nutrition (matrotrophy) or both, and have a brief free-swimming larval stage. Comparative morpho-functional analysis indicates that in bryozoans, similar to many other marine invertebrates, transitions from planktotrophic to endotrophic larvae were multiple and, obviously, were based on changes in oogenesis. Besides, the acquisition of a new larval type has always occurred in association with the evolution of embryonic incubation in Bryozoa. In myolaemates, the main trends in the evolution of endotrophy were reduction of the larval gut, loss of the larval protective cuticle/shell, invagination of the pallial epithelium of the episphere, and increase of the corona. Furthermore, larvae of stenolaemates lost their aboral and pyriform organs. Although being planktotrophic, the cyphonautes is a highly modified larval form, and cannot be considered as an ancestral typeof bryozoan larvae. Phylactolaemates have a highly derived heterochronous development with a free-swimming stage that is, in fact, a chimera—either an ancestrula or a juvenile colony having a larval ciliary covering.

AB - The medium-sized lophotrochozoan phylum Bryozoa demonstrates a surprisingly wide range of larval forms. Few zygoparous species from the class Gymnolaemata possess long-lived planktotrophic larva (cyphonautes and paracyphonautes). The rest of gymnolaemates, and all species from classes Stenolaemata and Phylactolamata, incubate their embryos, whose development relies on egg’s yolk, extraembryonic nutrition (matrotrophy) or both, and have a brief free-swimming larval stage. Comparative morpho-functional analysis indicates that in bryozoans, similar to many other marine invertebrates, transitions from planktotrophic to endotrophic larvae were multiple and, obviously, were based on changes in oogenesis. Besides, the acquisition of a new larval type has always occurred in association with the evolution of embryonic incubation in Bryozoa. In myolaemates, the main trends in the evolution of endotrophy were reduction of the larval gut, loss of the larval protective cuticle/shell, invagination of the pallial epithelium of the episphere, and increase of the corona. Furthermore, larvae of stenolaemates lost their aboral and pyriform organs. Although being planktotrophic, the cyphonautes is a highly modified larval form, and cannot be considered as an ancestral typeof bryozoan larvae. Phylactolaemates have a highly derived heterochronous development with a free-swimming stage that is, in fact, a chimera—either an ancestrula or a juvenile colony having a larval ciliary covering.

U2 - 10.1134/S0031030123110072

DO - 10.1134/S0031030123110072

M3 - Article

VL - 57

SP - 1306

EP - 1318

JO - Paleontological Journal

JF - Paleontological Journal

SN - 0031-0301

IS - 11

ER -

ID: 117413083