Polyzoa and Krypotozoa
Polyzoa and Krypotozoa
Polyzoa and Krypotozoa
Chapter 15
Lophophores
Phylogenetic evidence indicates that
lophophores evolved more than once.
Lophophores have a crown of ciliated tentacles that
are used in food capture and respiration.
Cavity inside the lophophore is part of the coelom
and filled with coelomic fluid.
Thin ciliated walls act as respiratory surface for gas
exchange.
Lophophores normally extended but can be
withdrawn for protection.
Lophophores
Three major phyla were previously lumped
under lophophores: Phoronida, Ectoprocta,
Brachiopoda.
Lophophores and animals with trochophore larvae
features are merged to form a new group called
Lophotrochozoans.
Ectoprocta is now placed in a clade called Polyzoa
with Cycliophora and Entoprocta where all three taxa
share ciliated tentacles.
Brachipoda and Phoronida are placed in the clade
Brachiozoa.
Phylum Cycliophora
Phylogenetic studies using multiple genes have
supported the clade Polyzoa that unites the
cycliophorans, entoprocts and ectoprocts.
Members of the three groups have fascinating body
plans and life cycles.
Cycliophorans live exclusively on mouthparts of
marine decapod crustaceans in northern
hemisphere.
Attach to bristles with an adhesive disc on the end of
an acellular stalk.
Phylum Cycliophora
Feed by collecting bacteria or bits of food dropped
from their lobster host on a ring of compound cilia
that surrounds the mouth.
Simple body plan where the mouth leads to U-
shaped gut ending with an anus that opens outside
the ciliated ring.
Acoelomate body
Life cycle has sexual and asexual phases
Phylum Entoprocta
About 150 species in
the phylum
Entoprocta occur
worldwide.
Usually in marine
environments.