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The ontogenetical and supposed phylogenetical fate of the parietal muscles in the Ctenostomata (Bryozoa)

 

作者: By D. Jebram,  

 

期刊: Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research  (WILEY Available online 1986)
卷期: Volume 24, issue 1  

页码: 58-82

 

ISSN:0947-5745

 

年代: 1986

 

DOI:10.1111/j.1439-0469.1986.tb00616.x

 

出版商: Blackwell Publishing Ltd

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

AbstractA new term, “trophon”, has been introduced for the feeding and sexually propagating unit in the stolonate ctenostomes; the “stolon” and the “trophon” represent “sukzooids”, because they are homologous only to parts of the autozooids in the uniserially arranged ctenostomes. – The ontogeny of the muscles, especially the parietal muscles, has been studied in 17 species of ctenostomatous bryozoans belonging to different sub‐groups of this order; the main effort was directed toward the details of the differentiations in living animals (14 of the investigated species). In various species of the Ctenostomata two separate sets of parietal muscles develop – probably as a consequence of the elongation of the cystid; the functional parietal muscles in the trophons of the stolonial forms are homologous to the secondary parietal muscles found in several uniserial ctenostomes. Contrary to the supposition by Soule(1954) in the different families of the serially arranged forms the muscles appear in different sequences during the development of the zooid and partly have different ontogenetical fates. Neither the “Carnosa” nor the “Paludicellea” (s. 1.) nor the “Stolonifera” can be maintained as taxa with the argument of a similar ontogeny of the muscles. A detailed comparison regarding the fate of the parietal muscles (and the polypide anlage) showed similarities between certain of the uniserial to either some of the stolonial, the sheet like, or the cystid‐fusing forms suggesting a separate evolutionary origin of the advanced forms in those groups of the serially growing forms. – A new family, Pottsiellidae fam.

 

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