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Biol. Bull. 215: 3-23. (August 2008)
© 2008 Marine Biological Laboratory

Evolutionary and Structural Diversification of the Larval Nervous System Among Marine Bryozoans

Scott Santagata*

Smithsonian Marine Station, 701 Seaway Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida 34949

* To whom correspondence should be addressed, at Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Marine Invasions Laboratory, 647 Contees Wharf Road, Edgewater, MD 21037. E-mail: scott.santagata{at}gmail.com

Regardless of the morphological divergence among larval forms of marine bryozoans, the larval nervous system and its major effector organs (musculature and ciliary fields) are largely molded on the basis of functional demands of feeding, ciliary propulsion, phototactic behaviors, and substrate exploration. Previously published ultrastructural information and immunohistochemical reconstructions presented here indicate that neuronal pathways are largely ipsilateral, with more complex synaptic connections localized within the nerve nodule. Multiciliated sensory-motor neurons diversify structurally and functionally on the basis of their position along the axis of swimming largely due to the functional demands of photoklinotaxis and substrate exploration. Vesiculariform, buguliform, and ascophoran coronate larvae all have patches of sensory neurons bordering the pyriform organ's ciliated groove (juxtapapillary cells and border cells) that are active during substrate selection. Despite their simplified form, cyclostome larvae maintain swimming and probing behaviors with sensory-motor systems functionally similar to those of some parenchymella and planula larval types. Considering the evolutionary relationships among the morphological grades of marine bryozoans, particular lineages within the gymnolaemates have independently evolved larval traits that convey a greater range of sensory abilities and increased propulsive capacity. The larval nervous system of bryozoans may be evolutionarily derived from the pretrochal region of a trochophore-like larval form.




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A. Wanninger
Shaping the Things to Come: Ontogeny of Lophotrochozoan Neuromuscular Systems and the Tetraneuralia Concept
Biol. Bull., June 1, 2009; 216(3): 293 - 306.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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