Abstract

ABSTRACTMolecular techniques are currently the leading tools for reconstructing phylogenetic relationships, but our understanding of ancestral, plesiomorphic and apomorphic characters requires the study of the morphology of extant forms for testing these phylogenies and for reconstructing character evolution. This review highlights the potential of soft body morphology for inferring the evolution and phylogeny of the lophotrochozoan phylum Bryozoa. This colonial taxon comprises aquatic coelomate filter‐feeders that dominate many benthic communities, both marine and freshwater. Despite having a similar bauplan, bryozoans are morphologically highly diverse and are represented by three major taxa: Phylactolaemata, Stenolaemata and Gymnolaemata. Recent molecular studies resulted in a comprehensive phylogenetic tree with the Phylactolaemata sister to the remaining two taxa, and Stenolaemata (Cyclostomata) sister to Gymnolaemata. We plotted data of soft tissue morphology onto this phylogeny in order to gain further insights into the origin of morphological novelties and character evolution in the phylum. All three larger clades have morphological apomorphies assignable to the latest molecular phylogeny. Stenolaemata (Cyclostomata) and Gymnolaemata were united as monophyletic Myolaemata because of the apomorphic myoepithelial and triradiate pharynx. One of the main evolutionary changes in bryozoans is a change from a body wall with two well‐developed muscular layers and numerous retractor muscles in Phylactolaemata to a body wall with few specialized muscles and few retractors in the remaining bryozoans. Such a shift probably pre‐dated a body wall calcification that evolved independently at least twice in Bryozoa and resulted in the evolution of various hydrostatic mechanisms for polypide protrusion. In Cyclostomata, body wall calcification was accompanied by a unique detachment of the peritoneum from the epidermis to form the hydrostatic membraneous sac. The digestive tract of the Myolaemata differs from the phylactolaemate condition by a distinct ciliated pylorus not present in phylactolaemates. All bryozoans have a mesodermal funiculus, which is duplicated in Gymnolaemata. A colonial system of integration (CSI) of additional, sometimes branching, funicular cords connecting neighbouring zooids via pores with pore‐cell complexes evolved at least twice in Gymnolaemata. The nervous system in all bryozoans is subepithelial and concentrated at the lophophoral base and the tentacles. Tentacular nerves emerge intertentacularly in Phylactolaemata whereas they partially emanate directly from the cerebral ganglion or the circum‐oral nerve ring in myolaemates. Overall, morphological evidence shows that ancestral forms were small, colonial coelomates with a muscular body wall and a U‐shaped gut with ciliary tentacle crown, and were capable of asexual budding. Coloniality resulted in many novelties including the origin of zooidal polymorphism, an apomorphic landmark trait of the Myolaemata.

Highlights

  • Cyclostomata were renamed into Stenolaemata [term coined by Borg (1926) from stenos – narrow], subsequently modified to Stenostomata by Marcus (1938) – a distinct clade that in addition to cyclostomes includes four Palaeozoic groups

  • Two distinct groups are recognized among the Gymnolaemata: the uncalcified and paraphyletic ‘Ctenostomata’ and the calcified Cheilostomata that comprise most postPaleozoic bryozoan species (Cheetham & Cook, 1983)

  • Both Cyclostomata and Cheilostomata are considered rooted among ancient ‘ctenostome-like’ bryozoans, suggesting at least two independent calcification events in the Paleozoic and Mesozoic (Larwood & Taylor, 1979; Taylor & Larwood, 1990; Ernst & Schäfer, 2006; Taylor & Waeschenbach, 2015)

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Summary

KEY NOVELTIES IN BRYOZOAN EVOLUTION

Modification of the bryozoan ancestral ground plan involved a number of important morphological innovations. Highly complex morpho-functional polymorphism led to the appearance of so-called cormidial structures – zooidal complexes consisting of autozooids with adventitious avicularia and kenozooids forming their frontal shields, as well as the protective brood chamber (Lidgard et al, 2012; Schack et al, 2019) Such polymorphism evolved independently in all three main lineages of Myolaemata but is absent in Phylactolaemata. Embryonic incubation was associated with a shift from an oligolecithal to macrolecithal mode of oogenesis, resulting in the evolution of non-feeding larvae, possibly triggering the evolutionary radiations of bryozoans seen in the fossil record (Taylor, 1988) This change of mode of oogenesis is present in all three major clades (Phylactolaemata, Stenolaemata and Gymnolaemata) (Ostrovsky, 2013a,b, 2019)

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