Abstract

Benthic colonial invertebrates share with higher plants a modular construction and a sessile adult life. Both types of organism show parallel evolutionary responses to common selective forces, but in contrast to the long-established focus on plants, comparable study of colonial invertebrates has developed relatively recently, largely owing to the application of new techniques in image processing and molecular biology. Species whose life cycles are readily completed under laboratory conditions and whose colonies are easily propagated from cuttings provide powerful models for experimentally investigating fundamental evolutionary problems, including metabolic allometry, the manifestation of ageing and the origin of allorecognition systems. Free of the confounding influences of behavioural manipulation and costs of copulation, colonial invertebrates whose water-borne sperm fertilize retained eggs lend themselves well to the experimental study of cryptic female choice, sperm competition and sexual conflict. In these respects, it will be productive to adopt and extend theoretical frameworks developed for flowering plants to guide experimental investigation of modular animals. Since mate choice occurs at the cellular level in modular animals, reproductive isolation is uncorrelated with morphology and cryptic speciation is likely to be widespread.

Highlights

  • The architectural resemblance between benthic colonial invertebrates and rooted higher plants once led zoologists, e.g. Johnston (1847), to use the term zoophyte for “...any one of numerous species of invertebrate animals which more or less resemble plants in appearance, or mode of growth, as the FUNCTIONAL CONSEQUENCES OF MODULARITY 169corals, gorgonians, sea anemones, hydroids, bryozoans, sponges, etc....” (Webster’s Dictionary, 1913)

  • Adult behavioral responses are denied, apart perhaps from chemical induction of spawning, and much depends on processes occurring at the cellular level, with implications concerning the evolution of allorecognition systems

  • Modularity and sessile adult life are common to aquatic colonial invertebrates and terrestrial higher plants, which may be expected to show parallel responses to similar selective forces

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Summary

SCIENTIA MARINA

PROMOTING MARINE SCIENCE: CONTRIBUTIONS TO CELEBRATE THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF SCIENTIA MARINA. SUMMARY: Benthic colonial invertebrates share with higher plants a modular construction and a sessile adult life. Free of the confounding influences of behavioural manipulation and costs of copulation, colonial invertebrates whose water-borne sperm fertilize retained eggs lend themselves well to the experimental study of cryptic female choice, sperm competition and sexual conflict. In these respects, it will be productive to adopt and extend theoretical frameworks developed for flowering plants to guide experimental investigation of modular animals. Palabras clave: envejecimiento, aloreconocimiento, arquitectura colonial, elección críptica, alometría metabólica, alocación de sexo

INTRODUCTION
COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE
FEMALE CHOICE
CRYPTIC SPECIATION
SEX ALLOCATION
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
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