首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Brachiopod orientation to water movement: functional morphology
Brachiopod orientation to water movement: functional morphology

 

作者: MICHAEL LaBARBERA,  

 

期刊: Lethaia  (WILEY Available online 1978)
卷期: Volume 11, issue 1  

页码: 67-79

 

ISSN:0024-1164

 

年代: 1978

 

DOI:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1978.tb01219.x

 

出版商: Blackwell Publishing Ltd

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

Previous work by the author has shown thatLaqueus californianus. Terebratulina unguicula, and. to a lesser extent,Hemithyris psittaceawill actively reorient to water currents in the laboratory;Terebratalia transversawill not. This active reorientation is effected primarily by the dorsal adjustor muscles; the ventral adjustors function to depress and tilt the shell. The torque around the pedicle generated by drag on the shell is low at moderate current speeds. The dorsal adjustor muscles are competent to resist these torques up to current speeds of 35 cm/s forL. californianusandH. psittaceaand 56 cm/s forT. unguicula. Shell shape, gross pedicle form, and form of the pedicle foramen are unreliable indicators of a brachiopod's ability to actively reorient. Shape of the pedicle bulb and position and size of the pedicle connectives are better indicators but. on functional grounds, the dorsal adjustor muscle morphology is the best indicator of active reorientation. An angle α (the maximum possible rotation of the shell that can be produced by contraction of one of the dorsal adjustor muscles) correlates well with both the maximum observed rotations and the exhibition of active reorientation to currents. For fossil material, the existence of dorsal adjustor muscle scars that touch medially should also be a good indicator of active reorientation ability

 

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