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Pteropoda

Pteropoda (common name pteropods, from the Greek meaning "wing-foot") are specialized free-swimming pelagic sea snails and sea slugs, marine opisthobranch gastropods. Most live in the top 10 m of the ocean and are less than 1 cm long. The monophyly of Pteropoda is the subject of a lengthy debate; they have even been considered as paraphyletic with respect to cephalopods.[1] Current consensus, guided by molecular studies, leans towards interpreting the group as monophyletic.[2]

Pteropoda
Temporal range: Campanian–Recent
A sea angel of the species Clione limacina
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Heterobranchia
Clade: Euopisthobranchia
Order: Pteropoda
Cuvier (1804)

Pteropoda encompasses the two clades Thecosomata, the sea butterflies, and Gymnosomata, the sea angels. The Thecosomata (lit. "case-body"[3]) have a shell, while the Gymnosomata ("naked body") do not. The two clades may or may not be sister taxa; if not, their similarity (in that they are both pelagic, small, and transparent, and both groups swim using wing-like flaps (parapodia) which protrude from their bodies) may reflect convergent adaptation to their particular lifestyle.

Taxonomy edit

The group Pteropoda was established by Cuvier as "ptéropodes" in 1804.[4] François Péron and Charles Alexandre Lesueur thought the group to be larger, and so they also included the opisthobranch taxa (Phyllirhoë and Glaucus), the heteropoda taxa (Carinaria and Firola), and even the Ctenophora (Callianira). In 1810, these authors divided the whole group in two separate groups: Those with a shell and those without a shell.

In 1824, H.M.D. de Blainville named these two groups Gymnosomata and Thecosomata and named the combining order Aporobranchia instead of Pteropoda.[5] He rejected the additional genera, except Phyllirhoë which he upgraded to a third group that he called Psilosomata. Only much later was Phyllirhoë classified within the order Nudibranchia.

Other attempts were made to describe the Pteropoda: J.E. Gray divided the Pteropoda into Dactylobranchia (with just the genus Cavolinia) and Pterobranchia (including all the other genera).[6] Cuvier (and his followers) did not accept the classification by de Blainville; they preferred the original classification as described in Le Règne Animal.

Rang (1829) followed the Cuvierian classification but tried to include the character of having a distinct head or not.[7] The German naturalist L. Oken went one step further and, for the sake of symmetry, wanted each order to contain four families and each family to contain four genera.[8][failed verification] P.A. 1829, divided the Pteropoda according to the size of their fins: "Macroptérygiens" (including only Pneumonoderma) and "Microptérygiens" (including all the others). W.B. Clark (1829) treated the Pteropoda as a family and emended the spelling to Pteropodidae (a name now re-used for a family of fruit bats)

Finally, all these attempts were abandoned and, as more and more species were described as a result of several scientific expeditions, the classification of the Pteropoda into Thecosomata and Gymnosomata was generally adopted.[a]

The relationship between these two clades is not unequivocally established, but it seems that they are sister taxa.[2]

Evolutionary history edit

Pteropods are estimated to have originated during the Early Cretaceous, around 133 million years ago, with the diversification into the major lineages occurring during the mid-late Cretaceous. The oldest known fossil pteropod is a member of Limacinidae from the early-middle Campanian deposits of the San Juan Islands.[9][10]

Phylogeny edit

Cladogram of genera and species of pteropods.
  Pteropoda  
  Gymnosomata  
         

  Clione antarctica

 Clione limacina

Paedoclione doliiformis

         

  Pneumodermopsis spoeli

         
  Thecosomata  
  Pseudothecosomata  
         

  Cymbulia sibogae

  Peracle reticulata

  Euthecosomata  
  Limacinoidea  
         

  Heliconoides inflatus

  Limacinidae  
         

  Limacina lesueurii

         

  Limacina trochiformis

         

  Limacina bulimoides

  Cavolinioidea  
         
         

  Creseis acicula

  Creseis virgula

  Cavoliniidae  

  Styliola subula

         

  Hyalocylis striata

         
         

  Clio pyramidata

         

  Cuvierina atlantica

         

  Clio cuspidata

         

  Telodiacria danae

         

  Diacria trispinosa

The phylogenetic tree has been inferred from 2,654 nuclear proteins (representing 834,394 concatenated amino acid positions).[11]

Threats edit

Vulnerability to ocean acidification edit

 
Unhealthy pteropod showing effects of ocean acidification

A study was conducted on the West Coast of the United States to see ocean acidification's effects on pteropods.[12] Limacina helicina was used to test the sensitivity to decreasing pH.[12] This species of pteropod is potentially vulnerable to the corrosive waters associated with ocean acidification due to their calcium carbonate shell.[13] The shell of a pteropod was immersed in ocean water with the projected pH level that the water will reach by the year 2100. After a month and a half in the water, the shell had almost completely dissolved.[12]

Distribution edit

Pteropods are found in all major oceans, usually 0–10 metres (0–33 ft) below the ocean surface and in all levels of latitude. Pteropods can be found lower than 10 meters, but in less amounts in terms of biomass, however, pteropod distribution is more spread out deeper based on findings. This can be explained as Pteropods from tropical areas become more common in deeper areas. They are not found commonly in the deep sea, in fact, few live lower than 500 meters below sea level. Continental shelves, areas containing many opportunities for nutrients, and productivity are locations in which Pteropods are usually populous, according to patterns in data. Springtime is a peak season for pteropoda, as they reach higher populations, though data shows that pteropoda south of the equator are less abundant seasonally. In addition, current data suggests that 93% of the world's pteropods are part of the Thecosomata family, while the 7% are Gymnosomata.[14]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Many of the new Pteropoda species were first described by French zoologists, for example, Jean René Constant Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard, Paul Rang, Alcide d'Orbigny, and Louis François Auguste Souleyet.

References edit

  1. ^ Wägele, Heike; Klussmann-Kolb, Annette; Verbeek, Eva; Schrödl, Michael (2013). "Flashback and foreshadowing – a review of the taxon Opisthobranchia". Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 14: 133–149. doi:10.1007/s13127-013-0151-5.
  2. ^ a b Klussmann-Kolb, A.; Dinapoli, A. (2006). "Systematic position of the pelagic Thecosomata and Gymnosomata within Opisthobranchia (Mollusca, Gastropoda) - revival of the Pteropoda". Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 44 (2): 118. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0469.2006.00351.x.
  3. ^ "theco-". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  4. ^ Cuvier, G. (1804). "Mémoire sur l'Hyale et Ie Pneumoderme". Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris. 4: 232.
  5. ^ de Blainville, H.M.D. (1824). Diet. d. Sci. Nat (in French). Vol. xxxii. p. 271.
  6. ^ Gray, J.E. (1821). London Medical Repository. p. 235.
  7. ^ Rang, P. (1829). Manuel de l'histoire naturelle des mollusques et leurs coquilles [Handbook of the Natural History of Molluscs and their Shells] (in French).
  8. ^ Rang, S. (1825). "Description d'un genre nouveau de la classe des Ptéropodes" [Description of a new genera in the class Pteropoda]. Annales des Sciences Naturelles. 1 (in French). V: 284.
  9. ^ Peijnenburg, Katja T.C.A.; Janssen, Arie W.; Wall-Palmer, Deborah; Goetze, Erica; Maas, Amy E.; Todd, Jonathan A.; Marlétaz, Ferdinand (13 October 2020). "The origin and diversification of pteropods precede past perturbations in the Earth's carbon cycle". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA. 117 (41): 25609–25617. Bibcode:2020PNAS..11725609P. doi:10.1073/pnas.1920918117. PMC 7568333. PMID 32973093.
  10. ^ Janssen, A.W.; Goedert, J.L. (2016). "Notes on the systematics, morphology, and biostratigraphy of fossil holoplanktonic Mollusca, [part] 24. First observation of a genuinely Late Mesozoic thecosomatous pteropod". Basteria. 80: 59–63.
  11. ^ Peijnenburg, Katja T.C.A.; Janssen, Arie W.; Wall-Palmer, Deborah; Goetze, Erica; Maas, Amy E.; Todd, Jonathan A.; Marlétaz, Ferdinand (24 September 2020). "The origin and diversification of pteropods precede past perturbations in the Earth's carbon cycle". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA. 117 (41): 25609–25617. Bibcode:2020PNAS..11725609P. doi:10.1073/pnas.1920918117. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 7568333. PMID 32973093.
  12. ^ a b c Bednaršek, N.; Feely, R.A.; Reum, J.C.P.; Peterson, B.; Menkel, J.; Alin, S.R.; Hales, B. (2014). "Limacina helicina shell dissolution as an indicator of declining habitat suitability owing to ocean acidification in the California Current Ecosystem". Proc. R. Soc. B. 281 (1785): 20140123. doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.0123. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 4024287. PMID 24789895.
  13. ^ Comeau, S.; Gorsky, G.; Jeffree, R.; Teyssié, J.-L.; Gattuso, J.-P. (4 September 2009). "Impact of ocean acidification on a key Arctic pelagic mollusc (Limacina helicina)". Biogeosciences. 6 (9): 1877–1882. Bibcode:2009BGeo....6.1877C. doi:10.5194/bg-6-1877-2009. hdl:10453/14721. ISSN 1726-4189.
  14. ^ Bednaršek, N.; Možina, J.; Vogt, M.; O'Brien, C.; Tarling, G.A. (10 Dec 2012). "The global distribution of pteropods and their contribution to carbonate and carbon biomass in the modern ocean". Earth System Science Data. 4 (1): 167–186. Bibcode:2012ESSD....4..167B. doi:10.5194/essd-4-167-2012. hdl:20.500.11850/60379. Retrieved 18 June 2018.

External links edit

  • Chun, Carl (22 January 1905). Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Deutschen Tiefsee-Expedition auf dem Dampfer Valdivia 1898–1899 [Scientific results of the German deep-sea expedition on the steam ship Valdivia 1898–1899]. Atlas (Report) (in German). Part 9. Retrieved 2023-04-25 – via biodiversitylibrary.org. — by German planktologist Carl Chun; beautifully illustrated; free download
  • . planktonchronicles.org (short videos & photos). Plankton Chronicles. Archived from the original on 12 January 2012. — archived documentary website with film clips & photos
  • "Pteropoda". WoRMS taxon data. WoRMS – World Registry of Marine Species (marinespecies.org). AlphaID 325345.
  • Pelseneer, Paul (1887). . Report of the Scientific results of the Voyage of the H.M.S. Challenger (1873–1876). Zoology, part LVIII (Report). Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 – via 19thcenturyscience.org.
  • Burridge, Alice K.; Hörnlein, Christine; Janssen, Arie W.; Hughes, Martin; Bush, Stephanie L.; Marlétaz, Ferdinand; et al. (12 June 2017). "Time-calibrated molecular phylogeny of pteropods". PLoS One. 12 (6): e0177325. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0177325. PMC 5467808. PMID 28604805.

pteropoda, confused, with, theropoda, dinosaurs, pteropodidae, megabats, pterosaur, extinct, flying, reptiles, common, name, pteropods, from, greek, meaning, wing, foot, specialized, free, swimming, pelagic, snails, slugs, marine, opisthobranch, gastropods, mo. Not to be confused with Theropoda dinosaurs Pteropodidae megabats or Pterosaur extinct flying reptiles Pteropoda common name pteropods from the Greek meaning wing foot are specialized free swimming pelagic sea snails and sea slugs marine opisthobranch gastropods Most live in the top 10 m of the ocean and are less than 1 cm long The monophyly of Pteropoda is the subject of a lengthy debate they have even been considered as paraphyletic with respect to cephalopods 1 Current consensus guided by molecular studies leans towards interpreting the group as monophyletic 2 PteropodaTemporal range Campanian Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NA sea angel of the species Clione limacinaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum MolluscaClass GastropodaSubclass HeterobranchiaClade EuopisthobranchiaOrder PteropodaCuvier 1804 Pteropoda encompasses the two clades Thecosomata the sea butterflies and Gymnosomata the sea angels The Thecosomata lit case body 3 have a shell while the Gymnosomata naked body do not The two clades may or may not be sister taxa if not their similarity in that they are both pelagic small and transparent and both groups swim using wing like flaps parapodia which protrude from their bodies may reflect convergent adaptation to their particular lifestyle Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Evolutionary history 3 Phylogeny 4 Threats 4 1 Vulnerability to ocean acidification 5 Distribution 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editThe group Pteropoda was established by Cuvier as pteropodes in 1804 4 Francois Peron and Charles Alexandre Lesueur thought the group to be larger and so they also included the opisthobranch taxa Phyllirhoe and Glaucus the heteropoda taxa Carinaria and Firola and even the Ctenophora Callianira In 1810 these authors divided the whole group in two separate groups Those with a shell and those without a shell In 1824 H M D de Blainville named these two groups Gymnosomata and Thecosomata and named the combining order Aporobranchia instead of Pteropoda 5 He rejected the additional genera except Phyllirhoe which he upgraded to a third group that he called Psilosomata Only much later was Phyllirhoe classified within the order Nudibranchia Other attempts were made to describe the Pteropoda J E Gray divided the Pteropoda into Dactylobranchia with just the genus Cavolinia and Pterobranchia including all the other genera 6 Cuvier and his followers did not accept the classification by de Blainville they preferred the original classification as described in Le Regne Animal Rang 1829 followed the Cuvierian classification but tried to include the character of having a distinct head or not 7 The German naturalist L Oken went one step further and for the sake of symmetry wanted each order to contain four families and each family to contain four genera 8 failed verification P A 1829 divided the Pteropoda according to the size of their fins Macropterygiens including only Pneumonoderma and Micropterygiens including all the others W B Clark 1829 treated the Pteropoda as a family and emended the spelling to Pteropodidae a name now re used for a family of fruit bats Finally all these attempts were abandoned and as more and more species were described as a result of several scientific expeditions the classification of the Pteropoda into Thecosomata and Gymnosomata was generally adopted a The relationship between these two clades is not unequivocally established but it seems that they are sister taxa 2 Evolutionary history editPteropods are estimated to have originated during the Early Cretaceous around 133 million years ago with the diversification into the major lineages occurring during the mid late Cretaceous The oldest known fossil pteropod is a member of Limacinidae from the early middle Campanian deposits of the San Juan Islands 9 10 Phylogeny editCladogram of genera and species of pteropods Pteropoda Gymnosomata Clione antarctica Clione limacinaPaedoclione doliiformis Pneumodermopsis spoeli Spongiobranchaea australis Pneumoderma violaceum Thecosomata Pseudothecosomata Cymbulia sibogae Peracle reticulata Euthecosomata Limacinoidea Heliconoides inflatus Limacinidae Limacina retroversa Limacina antarctica Limacina helicina Limacina lesueurii Limacina trochiformis Limacina bulimoides Cavolinioidea Creseis acicula Creseis virgula Cavoliniidae Styliola subula Hyalocylis striata Clio pyramidata Cuvierina atlantica Clio cuspidata Diacavolinia longirostris Cavolinia inflexa Telodiacria danae Diacria trispinosaThe phylogenetic tree has been inferred from 2 654 nuclear proteins representing 834 394 concatenated amino acid positions 11 Threats editVulnerability to ocean acidification edit nbsp Unhealthy pteropod showing effects of ocean acidificationMain article Ocean acidification A study was conducted on the West Coast of the United States to see ocean acidification s effects on pteropods 12 Limacina helicina was used to test the sensitivity to decreasing pH 12 This species of pteropod is potentially vulnerable to the corrosive waters associated with ocean acidification due to their calcium carbonate shell 13 The shell of a pteropod was immersed in ocean water with the projected pH level that the water will reach by the year 2100 After a month and a half in the water the shell had almost completely dissolved 12 Distribution editPteropods are found in all major oceans usually 0 10 metres 0 33 ft below the ocean surface and in all levels of latitude Pteropods can be found lower than 10 meters but in less amounts in terms of biomass however pteropod distribution is more spread out deeper based on findings This can be explained as Pteropods from tropical areas become more common in deeper areas They are not found commonly in the deep sea in fact few live lower than 500 meters below sea level Continental shelves areas containing many opportunities for nutrients and productivity are locations in which Pteropods are usually populous according to patterns in data Springtime is a peak season for pteropoda as they reach higher populations though data shows that pteropoda south of the equator are less abundant seasonally In addition current data suggests that 93 of the world s pteropods are part of the Thecosomata family while the 7 are Gymnosomata 14 Footnotes edit Many of the new Pteropoda species were first described by French zoologists for example Jean Rene Constant Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard Paul Rang Alcide d Orbigny and Louis Francois Auguste Souleyet References edit Wagele Heike Klussmann Kolb Annette Verbeek Eva Schrodl Michael 2013 Flashback and foreshadowing a review of the taxon Opisthobranchia Organisms Diversity amp Evolution 14 133 149 doi 10 1007 s13127 013 0151 5 a b Klussmann Kolb A Dinapoli A 2006 Systematic position of the pelagic Thecosomata and Gymnosomata within Opisthobranchia Mollusca Gastropoda revival of the Pteropoda Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 44 2 118 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0469 2006 00351 x theco Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Cuvier G 1804 Memoire sur l Hyale et Ie Pneumoderme Ann Mus Hist Nat Paris 4 232 de Blainville H M D 1824 Diet d Sci Nat in French Vol xxxii p 271 Gray J E 1821 London Medical Repository p 235 Rang P 1829 Manuel de l histoire naturelle des mollusques et leurs coquilles Handbook of the Natural History of Molluscs and their Shells in French Rang S 1825 Description d un genre nouveau de la classe des Pteropodes Description of a new genera in the class Pteropoda Annales des Sciences Naturelles 1 in French V 284 Peijnenburg Katja T C A Janssen Arie W Wall Palmer Deborah Goetze Erica Maas Amy E Todd Jonathan A Marletaz Ferdinand 13 October 2020 The origin and diversification of pteropods precede past perturbations in the Earth s carbon cycle Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 117 41 25609 25617 Bibcode 2020PNAS 11725609P doi 10 1073 pnas 1920918117 PMC 7568333 PMID 32973093 Janssen A W Goedert J L 2016 Notes on the systematics morphology and biostratigraphy of fossil holoplanktonic Mollusca part 24 First observation of a genuinely Late Mesozoic thecosomatous pteropod Basteria 80 59 63 Peijnenburg Katja T C A Janssen Arie W Wall Palmer Deborah Goetze Erica Maas Amy E Todd Jonathan A Marletaz Ferdinand 24 September 2020 The origin and diversification of pteropods precede past perturbations in the Earth s carbon cycle Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 117 41 25609 25617 Bibcode 2020PNAS 11725609P doi 10 1073 pnas 1920918117 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 7568333 PMID 32973093 a b c Bednarsek N Feely R A Reum J C P Peterson B Menkel J Alin S R Hales B 2014 Limacina helicina shell dissolution as an indicator of declining habitat suitability owing to ocean acidification in the California Current Ecosystem Proc R Soc B 281 1785 20140123 doi 10 1098 rspb 2014 0123 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 4024287 PMID 24789895 Comeau S Gorsky G Jeffree R Teyssie J L Gattuso J P 4 September 2009 Impact of ocean acidification on a key Arctic pelagic mollusc Limacina helicina Biogeosciences 6 9 1877 1882 Bibcode 2009BGeo 6 1877C doi 10 5194 bg 6 1877 2009 hdl 10453 14721 ISSN 1726 4189 Bednarsek N Mozina J Vogt M O Brien C Tarling G A 10 Dec 2012 The global distribution of pteropods and their contribution to carbonate and carbon biomass in the modern ocean Earth System Science Data 4 1 167 186 Bibcode 2012ESSD 4 167B doi 10 5194 essd 4 167 2012 hdl 20 500 11850 60379 Retrieved 18 June 2018 External links editChun Carl 22 January 1905 Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Deutschen Tiefsee Expedition auf dem Dampfer Valdivia 1898 1899 Scientific results of the German deep sea expedition on the steam ship Valdivia 1898 1899 Atlas Report in German Part 9 Retrieved 2023 04 25 via biodiversitylibrary org by German planktologist Carl Chun beautifully illustrated free download Episode 17 planktonchronicles org short videos amp photos Plankton Chronicles Archived from the original on 12 January 2012 archived documentary website with film clips amp photos Pteropoda WoRMS taxon data WoRMS World Registry of Marine Species marinespecies org AlphaID 325345 Pelseneer Paul 1887 Report on the Pteropoda Report of the Scientific results of the Voyage of the H M S Challenger 1873 1876 Zoology part LVIII Report Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 via 19thcenturyscience org Burridge Alice K Hornlein Christine Janssen Arie W Hughes Martin Bush Stephanie L Marletaz Ferdinand et al 12 June 2017 Time calibrated molecular phylogeny of pteropods PLoS One 12 6 e0177325 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0177325 PMC 5467808 PMID 28604805 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pteropoda amp oldid 1193563126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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