Lophophorates: Biology 370 1
Lophophorates: Biology 370 1
Lophophorates: Biology 370 1
Biology 370
Metazoan phylogenies. 1
(A) The traditional phylogeny based on morphology and embryology, adapted
from Hyman (11). (B) The new molecule-based phylogeny. A conservative approach was taken in B:
i.e., some datasets provide resolution within some of the unresolved multifurcations displayed, but we
have limited the extent of resolution displayed to that solidly provided by rRNA only.
http://www.pnas.org/content/97/9/4453.full
Lophophorates
• Protostomes
• 3 suspension-feeding Phyla
possessing a lophophore: a ring of
ciliated tentacles, used for suspension
feeding.
• The tentacles contain extensions of the
body cavity (coelom)
• The mouth is inside of the ring, the anus
is outside.
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Lophophore forms
Mouth
Anus
Tentacles
Lophophorate phyla
• Phoronida (tube-dwelling marine worms)
• Brachiopoda (marine bivalves, mainly
Paleozoic but some modern)
• Bryozoa (=Ectoprocta) marine and
freshwater, colonial
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Phylum Phoronida
Small group of sessile,
tubicolous, marine
lophophorates
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Phoronids, cont.
• Worldwide distribution, marine
sediments.
• Secreted tube of chitin lines the burrow.
• Morphologically convergent with
tubicolous polychaetes
Phoronopsis up to 12 inches
(most phoronids are much
smaller)
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Phylum Brachiopoda
• Only ~380 living species, but >30,000
Paleozoic species have been described
• Sessile, bivalve suspension feeders,
superficially similar to bivalve molluscs
• Abundant and diverse fossils- important
stratigraphic indicators
Brachiopods, continued
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Attachment to
substrate via usually burrowing
pedicle through
ventral valve
Brachiopods, continued
Class Inarticulata
• Appeared and radiated early, includes modern
Lingula and Glottidia
• Shells usually of apatite (CaPO4), not hinged, no
brachidium
Class Articulata
• Most extinct and living Brachiopods are in this class,
eg. Terebratula
• Hinged shell of calcite, opened by diductor muscles,
closed by adductor muscles
• Lophophore support (brachidium) on dorsal valve
• Lack anus
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Inarticulata
Lingula– a living fossil
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
An articulate brachiopod
Dorsal valve with
brachidia
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Lophophorate phyla
• Phoronida (tube-dwelling marine worms)
• Brachiopoda (marine bivalves, mainly
Paleozoic but some modern)
• Bryozoa (= Ectoprocta) marine and
freshwater, colonial
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Bryozoa (Ectoprocta)
• ~5,000 living species, many more extinct
• Mainly clonal colonies of interconnected
individuals (zooids).
• colonies range from millimeters to meters in
size, but the zooids seldom exceed 1 mm.
• Reproduction – budding, statoblasts, sexual
• bryozoans produce bryostatin, currently under
testing as an anti-cancer and memory-
enhancing drug. link
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Bryozoan taxa
• Phylactolaemata (“guarded throat”):
Freshwater, no zooid polymorphism, no
calcification; form statoblasts (resting buds).
• Stenolaemata (“narrow throat”): Marine
bryozoans with tubular zooids with calcified
walls.
• Gymnolaemata (“naked throat”): Mostly
marine with cylindrical or flattened zooids in
calcified exoskeletons. Includes most living
bryozoans.
Gymnolaemata
operculum
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
Some
Bryozoa have
polymorphic
zooids
Note the
defensive
avicularium
Phylactolaemata
Freshwater
bryozoan
Lophopus
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Zooids of Pectinatella
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Hooks may
facilitate
dispersal on
wading
birds,
mammals or
or insects
Archimedes
An extinct bryozoan that formed spiral
colonies (Mississippian period)
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Bio 370 Lophophorates
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