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Entoprocta

Entoprocta /ɛntˈprɒktə/ (lit.'inside rectum/anus'), or Kamptozoa /kæm(p)təˈzə/, is a phylum of mostly sessile aquatic animals, ranging from 0.1 to 7 millimetres (0.004 to 0.3 in) long. Mature individuals are goblet-shaped, on relatively long stalks. They have a "crown" of solid tentacles whose cilia generate water currents that draw food particles towards the mouth, and both the mouth and anus lie inside the "crown". The superficially similar Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) have the anus outside a "crown" of hollow tentacles. Most families of entoprocts are colonial, and all but 2 of the 150 species are marine. A few solitary species can move slowly.

Entoprocta
Temporal range: Early Cambrian–Recent [1][2]
Barentsia ramosa
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Eumetazoa
Clade: ParaHoxozoa
Clade: Bilateria
Clade: Nephrozoa
(unranked): Protostomia
(unranked): Spiralia
Superphylum: Lophotrochozoa
Clade: Lophophorata
Phylum: Entoprocta
Nitsche, 1870
Families

Some species eject unfertilized ova into the water, while others keep their ova in brood chambers until they hatch, and some of these species use placenta-like organs to nourish the developing eggs. After hatching, the larvae swim for a short time and then settle on a surface. There they metamorphose, and the larval gut rotates by up to 180°, so that the mouth and anus face upwards. Both colonial and solitary species also reproduce by cloning — solitary species grow clones in the space between the tentacles and then release them when developed, while colonial ones produce new members from the stalks or from corridor-like stolons.

Fossils of entoprocts are very rare, and the earliest specimens that have been identified with confidence date from the Late Jurassic. Most studies from 1996 onwards have regarded entoprocts as members of the Trochozoa, which also includes molluscs and annelids. However, a study in 2008 concluded that entoprocts are closely related to bryozoans.

Names edit

"Entoprocta", coined in 1870,[3] means "anus inside".[4] The alternative name "Kamptozoa", meaning "bent" or "curved" animals,[5] was assigned in 1929.[3] Some authors use "Entoprocta",[6][7] while others prefer "Kamptozoa".[4][8]

Description edit

Most species are colonial, and their members are known as "zooids",[9] since they are not fully independent animals.[10] Zooids are typically 1 millimetre (0.039 in) long but range from 0.1 to 7 millimetres (0.004 to 0.3 in) long.[4]

Distinguishing features edit

Entoprocts are superficially like bryozoans (ectoprocts), as both groups have a "crown" of tentacles whose cilia generate water currents that draw food particles towards the mouth. However, they have different feeding mechanisms and internal anatomy, and ectoprocts undergo a metamorphosis from larva to adult that destroys most of the larval tissues; their colonies also have a founder zooid which is different from its "daughters".[4]

Summary of distinguishing features
  Entoprocta[4] Bryozoa (Ectoprocta)[4]
Tentacles Solid Hollow
Feeding current From bases to tips of tentacles From tips to bases of tentacles
Position of anus Inside "crown" of tentacles Outside "crown" of tentacles
Coelom none Three-part
Shape of founder zooid in a colony Same as other zooids Round, unlike normal zooids[11]
Metamorphosis to adult Retains most larval structures Destroys most larval structures
Excretory organs Protonephridia None

Zooids edit

 
Barentsia laxa

The body of a mature entoproct zooid has a goblet-like structure with a calyx mounted on a relatively long stalk that attaches to a surface. The rim of the calyx bears a "crown" of 8 to 30 solid tentacles, which are extensions of the body wall. The base of the "crown" of tentacles is surrounded by a membrane that partially covers the tentacles when they retract. The mouth and anus lie on opposite sides of the atrium (space enclosed by the "crown" of tentacles), and both can be closed by sphincter muscles. The gut is U-shaped, curving down towards the base of the calyx, where it broadens to form the stomach. This is lined with a membrane consisting of a single layer of cells, each of which has multiple cilia.[4]

 
Pedicellina cernua (magnified x 27)

The stalks of colonial species arise from shared attachment plates or from a network of stolons, tubes that run across a surface.[4] In solitary species, the stalk ends in a muscular sucker, or a flexible foot, or is cemented to a surface.[7] The stalk is muscular and produces a characteristic nodding motion. In some species it is segmented. Some solitary species can move, either by creeping on the muscular foot or by somersaulting.[4]

The body wall consists of the epidermis and an external cuticle,[4] which consists mainly of criss-cross collagen fibers. The epidermis contains only a single layer of cells, each of which bears multiple cilia ("hairs") and microvilli (tiny "pleats") that penetrate through the cuticle.[4] The stolons and stalks of colonial species have thicker cuticles, stiffened with chitin.[7]

There is no coelom (internal fluid-filled cavity lined with peritoneum) and the other internal organs are embedded in connective tissue that lies between the stomach and the base of the "crown" of tentacles. The nervous system runs through the connective tissue and just below the epidermis, and is controlled by a pair of ganglia. Nerves run from these to the calyx, tentacles and stalk, and to sense organs in all these areas.[4]

Vegetative functions edit

A band of cells, each with multiple cilia, runs along the sides of the tentacles, connecting each tentacle to its neighbors, except that there is a gap in the band nearest the anus. A separate band of cilia grows along a groove that runs close to the inner side of the base of the "crown", with a narrow extension up the inner surface of each tentacle.[7] The cilia on the sides of the tentacles create a current that flows into the "crown" at the bases of the tentacles and exits above the center of the "crown".[4] These cilia pass food particles to the cilia on the inner surface of the tentacles, and the inner cilia produce a downward current that drives particles into and around the groove, and then to the mouth.[7]

Entoprocts generally use one or both of: ciliary sieving, in which one band of cilia creates the feeding current and another traps food particles (the "sieve"); and downstream collecting, in which food particles are trapped as they are about to exit past them. In entoprocts, downstream collecting is carried out by the same bands of cilia that generate the current; trochozoan larvae also use downstream collecting, but use a separate set of cilia to trap food particles.[12]

In addition, glands in the tentacles secrete sticky threads that capture large particles.[4] A non-colonial species reported from around the Antarctic Peninsula in 1993 has cells that superficially resemble the cnidocytes of cnidaria, and fire sticky threads. These unusual cells lie around the mouth, and may provide an additional means of capturing prey.[13]

The stomach and intestine are lined with microvilli, which are thought to absorb nutrients. The anus, which opens inside the "crown", ejects solid wastes into the outgoing current after the tentacles have filtered food out of the water; in some families it is raised on a cone above the level of the groove that conducts food to the mouth.[4][14] Most species have a pair of protonephridia which extract soluble wastes from the internal fluids and eliminate them through pores near the mouth. However, the freshwater species Urnatella gracilis has multiple nephridia in the calyx and stalk.[4]

The zooids absorb oxygen and emit carbon dioxide by diffusion,[4] which works well for small animals.[15]

Reproduction and life cycle edit

 
Apical tuft (cilia)
Prototroch (cilia)
Stomach
Mouth
Metatroch (cilia)
Mesoderm
Anus
/// = cilia
 
Trochophore larva[16]

Most species are simultaneous hermaphrodites, but some switch from male to female as they mature, while individuals of some species remain of the same sex all their lives. Individuals have one or two pairs of gonads, placed between the atrium and stomach, and opening into a single gonopore in the atrium.[7] The eggs are thought to be fertilized in the ovaries. Most species release eggs that hatch into planktonic larvae, but a few brood their eggs in the gonopore. Those that brood small eggs nourish them by a placenta-like organ, while larvae of species with larger eggs live on stored yolk.[4] The development of the fertilized egg into a larva follows a typical spiralian pattern: the cells divide by spiral cleavage, and mesoderm develops from a specific cell labelled "4d" in the early embryo.[17] There is no coelom at any stage.[4]

In some species the larva is a trochophore which is planktonic and feeds on floating food particles by using the two bands of cilia round its "equator" to sweep food into the mouth, which uses more cilia to drive them into the stomach, which uses further cilia to expel undigested remains through the anus.[18] In some species of the genera Loxosomella and Loxosoma, the larva produces one or two buds that separate and form new individuals, while the trochophore disintegrates. However, most produce a larva with sensory tufts at the top and front, a pair of pigment-cup ocelli ("little eyes"), a pair of protonephridia, and a large, cilia-bearing foot at the bottom.[7] After settling, the foot and frontal tuft attach to the surface. Larvae of most species undergo a complex metamorphosis, and the internal organs may rotate by up to 180°, so that the mouth and anus both point upwards.[4]

All species can produce clones by budding. Colonial species produce new zooids from the stolon or from the stalks, and can form large colonies in this way.[4] In solitary species, clones form on the floor of the atrium, and are released when their organs are developed.[7]

Taxonomy edit

The phylum consists of about 150 recognized species, grouped into 4 families:[4][6]

Family Barentsiidae Pedicellinidae Loxokalypodidae Loxosomatidae
Genera Barentsia, Coriella, Pedicellinopsis, Pseudopedicellina, Urnatella[19] Chitaspis, Loxosomatoides, Myosoma, Pedicellina[20] Loxokalypus[21] Loxocore, Loxomitra, Loxosoma, Loxosomella, Loxosomespilon[22]
Colonial[8] Colonial Solitary
Septum between calyx and stalk[8] Yes No
Star-cell organ[8] Yes No
Anus on cone[4] No Yes
Stolons present[8] Yes No, colonies grow on shared baseplate Not colonial
Segmented stems[4][8] Yes No

Evolutionary history edit

Fossil record edit

 
The Mid-Cambrian Dinomischus was once hailed as the earliest fossil entoproct,[23] but the classification is uncertain[24]

Since entoprocts are small and soft-bodied, fossils have been extremely rare.[24] In 1977, Simon Conway Morris provided the first description of Dinomischus, a sessile animal with calyx, stalk and holdfast, found in Canada's Burgess Shale, which was formed about 505 million years ago. Morris regarded this animal as the earliest known entoproct, since its mouth and anus lay inside a ring of structures above the calyx, but noted that these structures were flat and rather stiff, while the tentacles of modern entoprocts are flexible and have a round cross-section.[23]

In 1992 J.A. Todd and P.D. Taylor concluded that Dinomischus was not an entoproct, because it did not have the typical rounded, flexible tentacles, and the fossils showed no other features that clearly resembled those of entoprocts. In their opinion, the earliest fossil entoprocts were specimens they found from Late Jurassic rocks in England. These resemble the modern colonial genus Barentsia in many ways, including: upright zooids linked by a network of stolons encrusting the surface to which the colony is attached; straight stalks joined to the stolons by bulky sockets with transverse bands of wrinkles; overall size and proportions similar to that of modern species of Barentsia.[24]

Another species, Cotyledion tylodes, first described in 1999, was larger than extant entoprocts, reaching 8–56 mm in height, and unlike modern species, was "armored" with sclerites, scale-like structures. C. tylodes did have a similar sessile lifestyle to modern entoprocts. The identified fossils of C. tylodes were found in 520-million-year-old rocks from southern China. This places early entoprocts in the period of the Cambrian explosion.[25] This entoproct interpretation of Cotyledion, however, has been questioned by Mark McMenamin, who considers it best interpreted as a stem group echinoderm based on the morphology of its stem sclerites.[26]

Family tree edit

When entoprocts were discovered in the nineteenth century, they and bryozoans (ectoprocts) were regarded as classes within the phylum Bryozoa, because both groups were sessile animals that filter-fed by means of a "crown" of tentacles that bore cilia. However, from 1869 onwards, increasing awareness of differences, including the position of the entoproct anus inside the feeding structure and the difference in the early pattern of division of cells in their embryos, caused scientists to regard the two groups as separate phyla.[27] "Bryozoa" then became just an alternative name for ectoprocts, in which the anus is outside the feeding organ.[28] However, studies by one team in 2007 and 2008 argue for sinking Entoprocta into Bryozoa as a class, and resurrecting Ectoprocta as a name for the currently identified bryozoans.[27][29]

The consensus of studies from 1996 onwards has been that entoprocts are part of the Trochozoa, a protostome "superphylum" whose members are united in having as their most basic larval form the trochophore type. The trochozoa also include molluscs, annelids, flatworms, nemertines and others. However, scientists disagree about which phylum is mostly closely related to enctoprocts within the trochozoans.[30] An analysis in 2008 re-introduced the pre-1869 meaning of the term "Bryozoa", for a group in which entoprocts and ectoprocts are each other's closest relatives.[27]

Ecology edit

Distribution and habitats edit

All species are sessile.[4] While the great majority are marine, two species live in freshwater: Loxosomatoides sirindhornae, reported in 2004 in central Thailand, and Urnatella gracilis, found in all the continents except Antarctica.[3] Colonial species are found in all the oceans, living on rocks, shells, algae and underwater buildings.[4] The solitary species, which are marine,[3] live on other animals that feed by producing water currents, such as sponges, ectoprocts and sessile annelids.[7] The majority of species live no deeper than 50 meters, but a few species are found in the deep ocean.[31]

Interaction with other organisms edit

Some species of nudibranchs ("sea slugs"), particularly those of the genus Trapania, as well as turbellarian flatworms, prey on entoprocts.[32]

Small colonies of the freshwater entoproct Urnatella gracilis have been found living on the aquatic larvae of the dobsonfly Corydalus cornutus. The ectoprocts gain a means of dispersal, protection from predators and possibly a source of water that is rich in oxygen and nutrients, as colonies often live next to the gills of the larval flies.[33] In the White Sea, the non-colonial entoproct Loxosomella nordgaardi prefers to live attached to bryozoan (ectoproct) colonies, mainly on the edges of colonies or in the "chimneys", gaps by which large bryozoan colonies expel water from which they have sieved food. Observation suggests that both the entoprocts and the bryozoans benefit from the association: each enhances the water flow that the other needs for feeding; and the longer cilia of the entoprocts may help them to capture different food from that caught by the bryozoans, so that the animals do not compete for the same food.[34]

Entoprocts are small and have been little studied by zoologists. Hence it is difficult to determine whether a specimen belongs to a species that already occurs in the same area or is an invader, possibly as a result of human activities.[35]

References edit

  1. ^ Zhang, Zhifei; et al. (January 2013). "A sclerite-bearing stem group entoproct from the early Cambrian and its implications". Scientific Reports. 3: 1066. Bibcode:2013NatSR...3E1066Z. doi:10.1038/srep01066. PMC 3548229. PMID 23336066.
  2. ^ Todd, J. A.; Taylor, P. D. (1992). "The first fossil entoproct". Naturwissenschaften. 79 (7): 311–314. Bibcode:1992NW.....79..311T. doi:10.1007/BF01138708. S2CID 44229586.
  3. ^ a b c d Wood, T.S. (2005). "Loxosomatoides sirindhornae, new species, a freshwater kamptozoan from Thailand (Entoprocta)". Hydrobiologia. 544: 27–31. doi:10.1007/s10750-004-7909-x. S2CID 23481992.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Kamptozoa and Cycliophora". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks/Cole. pp. 808–812. ISBN 0-03-025982-7.
  5. ^ The prefix "campto-" is explained at:
    • Gledhill, D. (2008). The names of plants. Cambridge University Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-521-86645-3. Retrieved 10 Sep 2009.
    • Oestreich, A.E.; Kahane, H.; Kahane, R. (1983). "Camptomelic dysplasia". Pediatric Radiology. 13 (4): 246–247. doi:10.1007/BF00973171. PMID 6888999. S2CID 28821842.
  6. ^ a b "ITIS Standard Report Page: Entoprocta". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. 2006. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nielsen, C. (2002). "Entoprocta". Encyclopedia of Life Sciences. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. doi:10.1038/npg.els.0001596. ISBN 0-470-01617-5.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Wasson, K. (1997). "Systematic revision of colonial kamptozoans (entoprocts) of the Pacific coast of North America". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 121 (1): 1–63. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1997.tb00146.x.
  9. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Lophoporata". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 829–845. ISBN 0-03-025982-7.
  10. ^ Little, W.; Fowler, H.W.; Coulson, J. & Onions, C.T. (1964). "Zooid". Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860613-3.
  11. ^ Rich, T.H.; Fenton, M.A.; Fenton, C.L. (1997). ""Moss Animals", or Bryozoans". The fossil book. Dover Publications. pp. 142–152. ISBN 978-0-486-29371-4. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  12. ^ Riisgård, H.U.; Nielsen, C.; Larsen, P.S. (2000). "Downstream collecting in ciliary suspension feeders: the catch-up principle" (PDF). Marine Ecology Progress Series. 207: 33–51. Bibcode:2000MEPS..207...33R. doi:10.3354/meps207033. Retrieved 12 Sep 2009.
  13. ^ Emschermann, P. (April 1993). "On Antarctic Entoprocta" (PDF). Biological Bulletin. 184 (2): 153–185. doi:10.2307/1542225. JSTOR 1542225. PMID 29300524. Retrieved 12 Sep 2009.
  14. ^ Barnes, R.S.K. (2001). "The Lophophorates". The invertebrates: a synthesis (3rd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 142–143. ISBN 0-632-04761-5.
  15. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Introduction to Metazoa". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. p. 65. ISBN 0-03-025982-7.
  16. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Mollusca". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 290–291. ISBN 0030259827.
  17. ^ Lambert, J.D. (2008). "Mesoderm in spiralians: the organizer and the 4d cell". Journal of Experimental Zoology. Wiley InterScience. 310B (1): 15–23. doi:10.1002/jez.b.21176. PMID 17577229.
  18. ^ Ruppert, E.E.; Fox, R.S. & Barnes, R.D. (2004). "Mollusca". Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Brooks / Cole. pp. 290–291. ISBN 0-03-025982-7.
  19. ^ "ITIS Standard Report Page: Barentsiidae". 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  20. ^ "ITIS Standard Report Page: Pedicellinidae". 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  21. ^ "ITIS Standard Report Page: Loxokalypodidae". 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  22. ^ "ITIS Standard Report Page: Loxosomatidae". 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  23. ^ a b Morris, S.C. (1977). "A new entoproct-like organism from the Burgess Shale of British Columbia" (PDF). Palaeontology. 20 (4): 833–845. Retrieved 13 Sep 2009.
  24. ^ a b c Todd, J.A.; Taylor, P.D. (July 1992). "The first fossil entoproct". Naturwissenschaften. 79 (7): 311–314. Bibcode:1992NW.....79..311T. doi:10.1007/BF01138708. S2CID 44229586.
  25. ^ Sid Perkins, "ScienceShot: Fossils of Enigmatic Sea Creature Emerge", ScienceNOW, January 17, 2013
  26. ^ McMenamin, M. A. S. (2013). "Breakthrough on the Cambrian Explosion". BioScience. 63 (10): 834–835. doi:10.1525/bio.2013.63.10.14.
  27. ^ a b c Hausdorf, B.; Helmkampf, M.; Meyer, A.; et al. (December 2007). "Spiralian phylogenomics supports the resurrection of Bryozoa comprising Ectoprocta and Entoprocta". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 24 (12): 2723–2729. doi:10.1093/molbev/msm214. PMID 17921486.
  28. ^ Halanych, K.M.. (2004). "The new view of animal phylogeny" (PDF). Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics. 35: 229–256. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.112202.130124.
  29. ^ Helmkampf, M.; Bruchhaus, I.; Hausdorf, B. (22 August 2008). "Phylogenomic analyses of lophophorates (brachiopods, phoronids and bryozoans) confirm the Lophotrochozoa concept". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 275 (1645): 1927–1933. doi:10.1098/rspb.2008.0372. PMC 2593926. PMID 18495619.
  30. ^ Haszprunar, G.; Schander, C.; Halanych, K.M. (2008). "Relationships of Higher Molluscan Taxa". In Ponder, W.F.; Lindberg, D.R. (eds.). Phylogeny and evolution of the Mollusca. University of California Press. pp. 19–22. ISBN 978-0-520-25092-5. Retrieved 13 Sep 2009.
  31. ^ A New Inside Anus Found Very Deep
  32. ^ Canning, M.H.; Carlton, J.T. (11 May 2005). "Predation on kamptozoans (Entoprocta)". Invertebrate Biology. 119 (4): 386–387. doi:10.1111/j.1744-7410.2000.tb00107.x.
  33. ^ Tracy, B.H.; Hazelwood, D.H. (November 1983). "The phoretic association of Urnatella gracilis (Entoprocta: Urnatellidae) and Nanocladius downesi (Diptera: Chironomidae) on Corydalus cornutus (Megaloptera: Corydalidae)". Freshwater Invertebrate Biology. The North American Benthological Society. 2 (4): 186–191. doi:10.2307/1467150. JSTOR 1467150. S2CID 87592771.
  34. ^ Yakovis, E.L. (December 2002). "Substrate preferences of a non-colonial kamptozoan, and its interactions with bryozoan hosts". Marine Biology. 141 (6): 1109–1115. doi:10.1007/s00227-002-0902-x. S2CID 85767673.
  35. ^ Wasson, K.; Von Holle, B.; Toft, J.; Ruiz, G. (March 2000). "Detecting invasions of marine organisms: kamptozoan case histories". Biological Invasions. 2 (1): 59–74. doi:10.1023/A:1010049907067. S2CID 38120150.

Further reading edit

  • Nielsen, C. (1989). "Entoprocts". In Kermack, D.M.; Barnes, R.S.K. (eds.). Synopsis of the British Fauna No. 41. Leiden: Brill.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Entoprocta at Wikimedia Commons
  • Information on Entoprocta from earthlife.net

entoprocta, inside, rectum, anus, kamptozoa, phylum, mostly, sessile, aquatic, animals, ranging, from, millimetres, long, mature, individuals, goblet, shaped, relatively, long, stalks, they, have, crown, solid, tentacles, whose, cilia, generate, water, current. Entoprocta ɛ n t oʊ ˈ p r ɒ k t e lit inside rectum anus or Kamptozoa k ae m p t e ˈ z oʊ e is a phylum of mostly sessile aquatic animals ranging from 0 1 to 7 millimetres 0 004 to 0 3 in long Mature individuals are goblet shaped on relatively long stalks They have a crown of solid tentacles whose cilia generate water currents that draw food particles towards the mouth and both the mouth and anus lie inside the crown The superficially similar Bryozoa Ectoprocta have the anus outside a crown of hollow tentacles Most families of entoprocts are colonial and all but 2 of the 150 species are marine A few solitary species can move slowly EntoproctaTemporal range Early Cambrian Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N 1 2 Barentsia ramosaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaSubkingdom EumetazoaClade ParaHoxozoaClade BilateriaClade Nephrozoa unranked Protostomia unranked SpiraliaSuperphylum LophotrochozoaClade LophophorataPhylum EntoproctaNitsche 1870FamiliesBarentsiidae Urnatellidae Loxokalypodidae Loxosomatidae PedicellinidaeSome species eject unfertilized ova into the water while others keep their ova in brood chambers until they hatch and some of these species use placenta like organs to nourish the developing eggs After hatching the larvae swim for a short time and then settle on a surface There they metamorphose and the larval gut rotates by up to 180 so that the mouth and anus face upwards Both colonial and solitary species also reproduce by cloning solitary species grow clones in the space between the tentacles and then release them when developed while colonial ones produce new members from the stalks or from corridor like stolons Fossils of entoprocts are very rare and the earliest specimens that have been identified with confidence date from the Late Jurassic Most studies from 1996 onwards have regarded entoprocts as members of the Trochozoa which also includes molluscs and annelids However a study in 2008 concluded that entoprocts are closely related to bryozoans Contents 1 Names 2 Description 2 1 Distinguishing features 2 2 Zooids 3 Vegetative functions 4 Reproduction and life cycle 5 Taxonomy 6 Evolutionary history 6 1 Fossil record 6 2 Family tree 7 Ecology 7 1 Distribution and habitats 7 2 Interaction with other organisms 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksNames edit Entoprocta coined in 1870 3 means anus inside 4 The alternative name Kamptozoa meaning bent or curved animals 5 was assigned in 1929 3 Some authors use Entoprocta 6 7 while others prefer Kamptozoa 4 8 Description editMost species are colonial and their members are known as zooids 9 since they are not fully independent animals 10 Zooids are typically 1 millimetre 0 039 in long but range from 0 1 to 7 millimetres 0 004 to 0 3 in long 4 Distinguishing features edit Entoprocts are superficially like bryozoans ectoprocts as both groups have a crown of tentacles whose cilia generate water currents that draw food particles towards the mouth However they have different feeding mechanisms and internal anatomy and ectoprocts undergo a metamorphosis from larva to adult that destroys most of the larval tissues their colonies also have a founder zooid which is different from its daughters 4 Summary of distinguishing features Entoprocta 4 Bryozoa Ectoprocta 4 Tentacles Solid HollowFeeding current From bases to tips of tentacles From tips to bases of tentaclesPosition of anus Inside crown of tentacles Outside crown of tentaclesCoelom none Three partShape of founder zooid in a colony Same as other zooids Round unlike normal zooids 11 Metamorphosis to adult Retains most larval structures Destroys most larval structuresExcretory organs Protonephridia None Zooids edit nbsp Barentsia laxaThe body of a mature entoproct zooid has a goblet like structure with a calyx mounted on a relatively long stalk that attaches to a surface The rim of the calyx bears a crown of 8 to 30 solid tentacles which are extensions of the body wall The base of the crown of tentacles is surrounded by a membrane that partially covers the tentacles when they retract The mouth and anus lie on opposite sides of the atrium space enclosed by the crown of tentacles and both can be closed by sphincter muscles The gut is U shaped curving down towards the base of the calyx where it broadens to form the stomach This is lined with a membrane consisting of a single layer of cells each of which has multiple cilia 4 nbsp Pedicellina cernua magnified x 27 The stalks of colonial species arise from shared attachment plates or from a network of stolons tubes that run across a surface 4 In solitary species the stalk ends in a muscular sucker or a flexible foot or is cemented to a surface 7 The stalk is muscular and produces a characteristic nodding motion In some species it is segmented Some solitary species can move either by creeping on the muscular foot or by somersaulting 4 The body wall consists of the epidermis and an external cuticle 4 which consists mainly of criss cross collagen fibers The epidermis contains only a single layer of cells each of which bears multiple cilia hairs and microvilli tiny pleats that penetrate through the cuticle 4 The stolons and stalks of colonial species have thicker cuticles stiffened with chitin 7 There is no coelom internal fluid filled cavity lined with peritoneum and the other internal organs are embedded in connective tissue that lies between the stomach and the base of the crown of tentacles The nervous system runs through the connective tissue and just below the epidermis and is controlled by a pair of ganglia Nerves run from these to the calyx tentacles and stalk and to sense organs in all these areas 4 Vegetative functions editA band of cells each with multiple cilia runs along the sides of the tentacles connecting each tentacle to its neighbors except that there is a gap in the band nearest the anus A separate band of cilia grows along a groove that runs close to the inner side of the base of the crown with a narrow extension up the inner surface of each tentacle 7 The cilia on the sides of the tentacles create a current that flows into the crown at the bases of the tentacles and exits above the center of the crown 4 These cilia pass food particles to the cilia on the inner surface of the tentacles and the inner cilia produce a downward current that drives particles into and around the groove and then to the mouth 7 Entoprocts generally use one or both of ciliary sieving in which one band of cilia creates the feeding current and another traps food particles the sieve and downstream collecting in which food particles are trapped as they are about to exit past them In entoprocts downstream collecting is carried out by the same bands of cilia that generate the current trochozoan larvae also use downstream collecting but use a separate set of cilia to trap food particles 12 In addition glands in the tentacles secrete sticky threads that capture large particles 4 A non colonial species reported from around the Antarctic Peninsula in 1993 has cells that superficially resemble the cnidocytes of cnidaria and fire sticky threads These unusual cells lie around the mouth and may provide an additional means of capturing prey 13 The stomach and intestine are lined with microvilli which are thought to absorb nutrients The anus which opens inside the crown ejects solid wastes into the outgoing current after the tentacles have filtered food out of the water in some families it is raised on a cone above the level of the groove that conducts food to the mouth 4 14 Most species have a pair of protonephridia which extract soluble wastes from the internal fluids and eliminate them through pores near the mouth However the freshwater species Urnatella gracilis has multiple nephridia in the calyx and stalk 4 The zooids absorb oxygen and emit carbon dioxide by diffusion 4 which works well for small animals 15 Reproduction and life cycle edit nbsp Apical tuft cilia Prototroch cilia Stomach Mouth Metatroch cilia Mesoderm Anus cilia nbsp Trochophore larva 16 Most species are simultaneous hermaphrodites but some switch from male to female as they mature while individuals of some species remain of the same sex all their lives Individuals have one or two pairs of gonads placed between the atrium and stomach and opening into a single gonopore in the atrium 7 The eggs are thought to be fertilized in the ovaries Most species release eggs that hatch into planktonic larvae but a few brood their eggs in the gonopore Those that brood small eggs nourish them by a placenta like organ while larvae of species with larger eggs live on stored yolk 4 The development of the fertilized egg into a larva follows a typical spiralian pattern the cells divide by spiral cleavage and mesoderm develops from a specific cell labelled 4d in the early embryo 17 There is no coelom at any stage 4 In some species the larva is a trochophore which is planktonic and feeds on floating food particles by using the two bands of cilia round its equator to sweep food into the mouth which uses more cilia to drive them into the stomach which uses further cilia to expel undigested remains through the anus 18 In some species of the genera Loxosomella and Loxosoma the larva produces one or two buds that separate and form new individuals while the trochophore disintegrates However most produce a larva with sensory tufts at the top and front a pair of pigment cup ocelli little eyes a pair of protonephridia and a large cilia bearing foot at the bottom 7 After settling the foot and frontal tuft attach to the surface Larvae of most species undergo a complex metamorphosis and the internal organs may rotate by up to 180 so that the mouth and anus both point upwards 4 All species can produce clones by budding Colonial species produce new zooids from the stolon or from the stalks and can form large colonies in this way 4 In solitary species clones form on the floor of the atrium and are released when their organs are developed 7 Taxonomy editSee also List of bilaterial animal orders The phylum consists of about 150 recognized species grouped into 4 families 4 6 Family Barentsiidae Pedicellinidae Loxokalypodidae LoxosomatidaeGenera Barentsia Coriella Pedicellinopsis Pseudopedicellina Urnatella 19 Chitaspis Loxosomatoides Myosoma Pedicellina 20 Loxokalypus 21 Loxocore Loxomitra Loxosoma Loxosomella Loxosomespilon 22 Colonial 8 Colonial SolitarySeptum between calyx and stalk 8 Yes NoStar cell organ 8 Yes NoAnus on cone 4 No YesStolons present 8 Yes No colonies grow on shared baseplate Not colonialSegmented stems 4 8 Yes NoEvolutionary history editFossil record edit nbsp The Mid Cambrian Dinomischus was once hailed as the earliest fossil entoproct 23 but the classification is uncertain 24 Since entoprocts are small and soft bodied fossils have been extremely rare 24 In 1977 Simon Conway Morris provided the first description of Dinomischus a sessile animal with calyx stalk and holdfast found in Canada s Burgess Shale which was formed about 505 million years ago Morris regarded this animal as the earliest known entoproct since its mouth and anus lay inside a ring of structures above the calyx but noted that these structures were flat and rather stiff while the tentacles of modern entoprocts are flexible and have a round cross section 23 In 1992 J A Todd and P D Taylor concluded that Dinomischus was not an entoproct because it did not have the typical rounded flexible tentacles and the fossils showed no other features that clearly resembled those of entoprocts In their opinion the earliest fossil entoprocts were specimens they found from Late Jurassic rocks in England These resemble the modern colonial genus Barentsia in many ways including upright zooids linked by a network of stolons encrusting the surface to which the colony is attached straight stalks joined to the stolons by bulky sockets with transverse bands of wrinkles overall size and proportions similar to that of modern species of Barentsia 24 Another species Cotyledion tylodes first described in 1999 was larger than extant entoprocts reaching 8 56 mm in height and unlike modern species was armored with sclerites scale like structures C tylodes did have a similar sessile lifestyle to modern entoprocts The identified fossils of C tylodes were found in 520 million year old rocks from southern China This places early entoprocts in the period of the Cambrian explosion 25 This entoproct interpretation of Cotyledion however has been questioned by Mark McMenamin who considers it best interpreted as a stem group echinoderm based on the morphology of its stem sclerites 26 Family tree edit When entoprocts were discovered in the nineteenth century they and bryozoans ectoprocts were regarded as classes within the phylum Bryozoa because both groups were sessile animals that filter fed by means of a crown of tentacles that bore cilia However from 1869 onwards increasing awareness of differences including the position of the entoproct anus inside the feeding structure and the difference in the early pattern of division of cells in their embryos caused scientists to regard the two groups as separate phyla 27 Bryozoa then became just an alternative name for ectoprocts in which the anus is outside the feeding organ 28 However studies by one team in 2007 and 2008 argue for sinking Entoprocta into Bryozoa as a class and resurrecting Ectoprocta as a name for the currently identified bryozoans 27 29 The consensus of studies from 1996 onwards has been that entoprocts are part of the Trochozoa a protostome superphylum whose members are united in having as their most basic larval form the trochophore type The trochozoa also include molluscs annelids flatworms nemertines and others However scientists disagree about which phylum is mostly closely related to enctoprocts within the trochozoans 30 An analysis in 2008 re introduced the pre 1869 meaning of the term Bryozoa for a group in which entoprocts and ectoprocts are each other s closest relatives 27 Ecology editDistribution and habitats edit All species are sessile 4 While the great majority are marine two species live in freshwater Loxosomatoides sirindhornae reported in 2004 in central Thailand and Urnatella gracilis found in all the continents except Antarctica 3 Colonial species are found in all the oceans living on rocks shells algae and underwater buildings 4 The solitary species which are marine 3 live on other animals that feed by producing water currents such as sponges ectoprocts and sessile annelids 7 The majority of species live no deeper than 50 meters but a few species are found in the deep ocean 31 Interaction with other organisms edit Some species of nudibranchs sea slugs particularly those of the genus Trapania as well as turbellarian flatworms prey on entoprocts 32 Small colonies of the freshwater entoproct Urnatella gracilis have been found living on the aquatic larvae of the dobsonfly Corydalus cornutus The ectoprocts gain a means of dispersal protection from predators and possibly a source of water that is rich in oxygen and nutrients as colonies often live next to the gills of the larval flies 33 In the White Sea the non colonial entoproct Loxosomella nordgaardi prefers to live attached to bryozoan ectoproct colonies mainly on the edges of colonies or in the chimneys gaps by which large bryozoan colonies expel water from which they have sieved food Observation suggests that both the entoprocts and the bryozoans benefit from the association each enhances the water flow that the other needs for feeding and the longer cilia of the entoprocts may help them to capture different food from that caught by the bryozoans so that the animals do not compete for the same food 34 Entoprocts are small and have been little studied by zoologists Hence it is difficult to determine whether a specimen belongs to a species that already occurs in the same area or is an invader possibly as a result of human activities 35 References edit Zhang Zhifei et al January 2013 A sclerite bearing stem group entoproct from the early Cambrian and its implications Scientific Reports 3 1066 Bibcode 2013NatSR 3E1066Z doi 10 1038 srep01066 PMC 3548229 PMID 23336066 Todd J A Taylor P D 1992 The first fossil entoproct Naturwissenschaften 79 7 311 314 Bibcode 1992NW 79 311T doi 10 1007 BF01138708 S2CID 44229586 a b c d Wood T S 2005 Loxosomatoides sirindhornae new species a freshwater kamptozoan from Thailand Entoprocta Hydrobiologia 544 27 31 doi 10 1007 s10750 004 7909 x S2CID 23481992 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Ruppert E E Fox R S amp Barnes R D 2004 Kamptozoa and Cycliophora Invertebrate Zoology 7th ed Brooks Cole pp 808 812 ISBN 0 03 025982 7 The prefix campto is explained at Gledhill D 2008 The names of plants Cambridge University Press p 88 ISBN 978 0 521 86645 3 Retrieved 10 Sep 2009 Oestreich A E Kahane H Kahane R 1983 Camptomelic dysplasia Pediatric Radiology 13 4 246 247 doi 10 1007 BF00973171 PMID 6888999 S2CID 28821842 a b ITIS Standard Report Page Entoprocta Integrated Taxonomic Information System 2006 Retrieved 2009 08 26 a b c d e f g h i Nielsen C 2002 Entoprocta Encyclopedia of Life Sciences John Wiley amp Sons Ltd doi 10 1038 npg els 0001596 ISBN 0 470 01617 5 a b c d e f Wasson K 1997 Systematic revision of colonial kamptozoans entoprocts of the Pacific coast of North America Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 121 1 1 63 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1997 tb00146 x Ruppert E E Fox R S amp Barnes R D 2004 Lophoporata Invertebrate Zoology 7th ed Brooks Cole pp 829 845 ISBN 0 03 025982 7 Little W Fowler H W Coulson J amp Onions C T 1964 Zooid Shorter Oxford English Dictionary Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860613 3 Rich T H Fenton M A Fenton C L 1997 Moss Animals or Bryozoans The fossil book Dover Publications pp 142 152 ISBN 978 0 486 29371 4 Retrieved 2009 08 07 Riisgard H U Nielsen C Larsen P S 2000 Downstream collecting in ciliary suspension feeders the catch up principle PDF Marine Ecology Progress Series 207 33 51 Bibcode 2000MEPS 207 33R doi 10 3354 meps207033 Retrieved 12 Sep 2009 Emschermann P April 1993 On Antarctic Entoprocta PDF Biological Bulletin 184 2 153 185 doi 10 2307 1542225 JSTOR 1542225 PMID 29300524 Retrieved 12 Sep 2009 Barnes R S K 2001 The Lophophorates The invertebrates a synthesis 3rd ed Wiley Blackwell pp 142 143 ISBN 0 632 04761 5 Ruppert E E Fox R S amp Barnes R D 2004 Introduction to Metazoa Invertebrate Zoology 7th ed Brooks Cole p 65 ISBN 0 03 025982 7 Ruppert E E Fox R S amp Barnes R D 2004 Mollusca Invertebrate Zoology 7th ed Brooks Cole pp 290 291 ISBN 0030259827 Lambert J D 2008 Mesoderm in spiralians the organizer and the 4d cell Journal of Experimental Zoology Wiley InterScience 310B 1 15 23 doi 10 1002 jez b 21176 PMID 17577229 Ruppert E E Fox R S amp Barnes R D 2004 Mollusca Invertebrate Zoology 7th ed Brooks Cole pp 290 291 ISBN 0 03 025982 7 ITIS Standard Report Page Barentsiidae 2006 Retrieved 2009 09 14 ITIS Standard Report Page Pedicellinidae 2006 Retrieved 2009 09 14 ITIS Standard Report Page Loxokalypodidae 2006 Retrieved 2009 09 14 ITIS Standard Report Page Loxosomatidae 2006 Retrieved 2009 09 14 a b Morris S C 1977 A new entoproct like organism from the Burgess Shale of British Columbia PDF Palaeontology 20 4 833 845 Retrieved 13 Sep 2009 a b c Todd J A Taylor P D July 1992 The first fossil entoproct Naturwissenschaften 79 7 311 314 Bibcode 1992NW 79 311T doi 10 1007 BF01138708 S2CID 44229586 Sid Perkins ScienceShot Fossils of Enigmatic Sea Creature Emerge ScienceNOW January 17 2013 McMenamin M A S 2013 Breakthrough on the Cambrian Explosion BioScience 63 10 834 835 doi 10 1525 bio 2013 63 10 14 a b c Hausdorf B Helmkampf M Meyer A et al December 2007 Spiralian phylogenomics supports the resurrection of Bryozoa comprising Ectoprocta and Entoprocta Molecular Biology and Evolution 24 12 2723 2729 doi 10 1093 molbev msm214 PMID 17921486 Halanych K M 2004 The new view of animal phylogeny PDF Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics 35 229 256 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 35 112202 130124 Helmkampf M Bruchhaus I Hausdorf B 22 August 2008 Phylogenomic analyses of lophophorates brachiopods phoronids and bryozoans confirm the Lophotrochozoa concept Proceedings of the Royal Society B 275 1645 1927 1933 doi 10 1098 rspb 2008 0372 PMC 2593926 PMID 18495619 Haszprunar G Schander C Halanych K M 2008 Relationships of Higher Molluscan Taxa In Ponder W F Lindberg D R eds Phylogeny and evolution of the Mollusca University of California Press pp 19 22 ISBN 978 0 520 25092 5 Retrieved 13 Sep 2009 A New Inside Anus Found Very Deep Canning M H Carlton J T 11 May 2005 Predation on kamptozoans Entoprocta Invertebrate Biology 119 4 386 387 doi 10 1111 j 1744 7410 2000 tb00107 x Tracy B H Hazelwood D H November 1983 The phoretic association of Urnatella gracilis Entoprocta Urnatellidae and Nanocladius downesi Diptera Chironomidae on Corydalus cornutus Megaloptera Corydalidae Freshwater Invertebrate Biology The North American Benthological Society 2 4 186 191 doi 10 2307 1467150 JSTOR 1467150 S2CID 87592771 Yakovis E L December 2002 Substrate preferences of a non colonial kamptozoan and its interactions with bryozoan hosts Marine Biology 141 6 1109 1115 doi 10 1007 s00227 002 0902 x S2CID 85767673 Wasson K Von Holle B Toft J Ruiz G March 2000 Detecting invasions of marine organisms kamptozoan case histories Biological Invasions 2 1 59 74 doi 10 1023 A 1010049907067 S2CID 38120150 Further reading editNielsen C 1989 Entoprocts In Kermack D M Barnes R S K eds Synopsis of the British Fauna No 41 Leiden Brill External links edit nbsp Media related to Entoprocta at Wikimedia Commons Information on Entoprocta from earthlife net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Entoprocta amp oldid 1183242995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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