Zooid \Zo"oid\, n.
(Biol.) An organic body or cell having
locomotion, as a spermatic cell or spermatozooid. [1913
Webster]
(Zool.) (a) An animal in one of its inferior
stages of development, as one of the intermediate forms in
alternate generation. (b) One of the individual animals in a
composite group, as of Anthozoa, Hydroidea, and Bryozoa; --
sometimes restricted to those individuals in which the mouth and
digestive organs are not developed. [1913 Webster]
Word Net
zooid n : one of the distinct individuals forming a colonial animal such as a bryozoan or hydrozoanEnglish
Noun
zooid- (Biol.) An organic body or cell having locomotion, as a spermatic cell or spermatozooid.
- (Zoöl.) (a) An animal in one of its inferior stages of development, as one of the intermediate forms in alternate generation. (b) One of the individual animals in a composite group, as of Anthozoa, Hydroidea, and Bryozoa; — sometimes restricted to those individuals in which the mouth and digestive organs are not developed.
Bryozoans are tiny colonial animals that generally build
stony skeletons of
calcium
carbonate, superficially similar to coral (although some species lack
any calcification in the colony and instead have a mucilaginous
structure.) Bryozoa are also known as moss animals or moss
animacules (which is the literal Greek translation of bryozoa) or
as sea mats. They generally prefer warm, tropical waters, but are
known to occur worldwide. There are about 8,000 living species, with several times that
number of fossil forms known.
Ecology
Most species of Bryozoan live in marine environments, though there are about 50 species which inhabit freshwater. In their aquatic habitats, bryozoans may be found on all types of hard substrates: sand grains, rocks, shells, wood, blades of kelp, pipes and ships may be heavily encrusted with bryozoans. Some bryozoan colonies, however, do not grow on solid substrates, but form colonies on sediment. While some species have been found at depths of , most bryozoans inhabit much shallower water. Most bryozoans are sessile and immobile, but a few colonies are able to creep about, and some non-colonial bryozoans live and move about in the spaces between sand grains. One remarkable species makes its living while floating in the Southern Ocean. Fossil bryozoans are common throughout the world in sedimentary rocks representing shallow marine habitats, especially in rocks of post-Cambrian Paleozoic age.Bryozoans are also colony-forming animals. Many
millions of individuals can form one colony. The colonies range
from millimeters to meters in size, but the individuals that make
up the colonies are tiny, usually less than a millimeter long. In
each colony, different individuals assume different functions. Some
individuals gather up the food for the colony (autozooids), others
depend on them (heterozooids). Some individuals are devoted to
strengthening the colony (kenozooids), and still others to cleaning
the colony (vibracula). There is only a single known solitary
species, Monobryozoon
ambulans, which does not form colonies.
Anatomy
Bryozoan skeletons grow in a variety of shapes
and patterns: mound-shaped, lacy fans, branching twigs, and even
corkscrew-shaped. Their skeletons have numerous tiny
openings, each of which is the home of a minute animal called a
zooid. They also have a coelomate
body with a looped alimentary canal or gut, opening at the mouth and terminating at the
anus. They feed with a
specialized, ciliated
structure called a lophophore, which is a crown
of tentacles
surrounding the mouth. Their diet consists of small microorganisms,
including diatoms and
other unicellular algae.
In turn, bryozoans are preyed on by grazing organisms such as
sea
urchins and fish.
Bryozoans do not have any defined respiratory, or circulatory
systems due to their small size. However, they do have a simple
nervous system and a hydrostatic skeletal system. Several studies
have been undertaken on the crystallography of bryozoan skeletons,
revealing a complex fabric suite of oriented calcite or aragonite crystallites within
an organic matrix - see for example Hall et al. (2002).
The tentacles of the bryozoans are ciliated, and
the beating of the cilia
creates a powerful current of water which drives water together
with entrained food particles (mainly phytoplankton) towards the
mouth. The gut is U-shaped, and consists of a pharynx which passes into the
esophagus, followed by
the stomach, which has
three parts: the cardia,
the caecum, and the
pylorus. The pylorus
leads to an intestine and a short rectum terminating at the anus,
which opens outside the lophophore. In some groups,
notably some ctenostomes, a specialized gizzard may be formed from the
proximal part of the cardia. Gut and lophophore are the principal
components of the polypide. Cyclical degeneration
and regeneration of the polypide is characteristic of marine
bryozoans. After the final polypide degeneration, the skeletal
aperture of the feeding zooid may become sealed by the secretion of
a terminal diaphragm.
In many bryozoans only the zooids within a few generations of the
growing edge are in an actively feeding state; older, more proximal
zooids (e.g. in the interiors of bushy colonies) are usually
dormant.
Because of their small size, bryozoans have no
need of a blood system.
Gaseous exchange occurs across the entire surface of the body, but
particularly through the tentacles of the lophophore.
Bryozoans can reproduce both sexually and
asexually. All bryozoans, as far as is known, are hermaphroditic (meaning
they are both male and female). Asexual
reproduction occurs by budding off new zooids as the colony
grows, and is the main way by which a colony expands in size. If a
piece of a bryozoan colony breaks off, the piece can continue to
grow and will form a new colony. A colony formed this way is
composed entirely of clones (genetically
identical individuals) of the first animal, which is called the
ancestrula.
One species of bryozoan, Bugula neritina, is of
current interest as a source of cytotoxic chemicals,
bryostatins, under
clinical investigation as anti-cancer agents.
Fossils
Fossil bryozoans are
found in rocks beginning in the early
Ordovician. They were often major components of Ordovician
seabed communities and, like modern-day bryozoans, played an
important role in sediment stabilization and
binding, as well as providing sources of food for other benthic organisms. During the
Mississippian
(354 to 323 million years ago) bryozoans were so common that their
broken skeletons form entire limestone beds. Bryozoan
fossil record comprises more than 1,000 described species. It is
plausible that the Bryozoa existed in the Cambrian but were
soft-bodied or not preserved for some other reason; perhaps they
evolved from a phoronid-like ancestor at about
this time.
Bryozoans are important members of sclerobiont
(organisms which dwell on hard substrates such as shells and rocks)
communities in the fossil record and in the Recent. For a review of
sclerobiont evolution, history and ecology, see Taylor & Wilson
(2003).
Most fossil bryozoans have mineralized skeletons.
The skeletons of individual zooids vary from tubular to box-shaped
and contain a terminal aperture from which the lophophore is protruded to
feed. No pores are present in the great majority of Ordovician
bryozoans, but skeletal evidence shows that epithelia were continuous from
one zooid to the next.
With regard to the bryozoan groups lacking
mineralized skeletons, the statoblasts of freshwater
phylactolaemates have
been recorded as far back as the Permian, and the
ctenostome fossils
date only from the Triassic.
One of the most important events during bryozoan
evolution was the acquisition of a calcareous skeleton and the
related change in the mechanism of tentacle protrusion. The
rigidity of the outer body walls allowed a greater degree of zooid
contiguity and the evolution of massive, multiserial colony
forms.
Classification
The Bryozoans were formerly considered to contain two subgroups: the Ectoprocta and the Entoprocta, based on the similar bodyplans and mode of life of these two groups. (Some researchers also included the Cycliophora, which are thought to be closely related to the Entoprocta.) However, the Ectoprocta are coelomate (possessing a body cavity) and their embryos undergo radial cleavage, while the Entoprocta are acoelemate and undergo spiral cleavage. Molecular studies are ambiguous about the exact position of the Entoprocta, but do not support a close relationship with the Ectoprocta. For these reasons, the Entoprocta are now considered a phylum of their own. The removal of the 150 species of Entoprocta leaves Bryozoa synonymous with Ectoprocta; some authors have adopted the latter name for the group, but the majority continue to use the former.References
- Hall, S.R., Taylor, P.D., Davis, S.A. and Mann, S., 2002. Electron diffraction studies of the calcareous skeletons of bryozoans. Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry 88: 410-419. http://www.inchm.bris.ac.uk/mann/J%20Inorg%20Biochem%202002%20bryozoans.pdf
- Taylor, P.D. and Wilson, M.A., 2003. Palaeoecology and evolution of marine hard substrate communities. Earth-Science Reviews 62: 1-103. http://www.wooster.edu/geology/Taylor%26Wilson2003.pdf
- Sharp, J.H., Winson, M.K. and Porter, J.S. 2007. Bryozoan metabolites: an ecological perspective. Natureal Product Reports 24: 659-673.
External links
- Index to Bryozoa Bryozoa Home Page, was at RMIT; now bryozoa.net
- Other Bryozoan WWW Resources
- International Bryozoology Association official website
- Bryozoan Introduction
- The Phylum Ectoprocta (Bryozoa)
- Phylum Bryozoa at Wikispecies
- Bryozoans in the Connecticut River
zooid in Catalan: Briozou
zooid in German: Moostierchen
zooid in Estonian: Sammalloomad
zooid in Spanish: Bryozoa
zooid in Persian: خزهزیان
zooid in French: Ectoprocta
zooid in Croatian: Mahovnjaci
zooid in Italian: Bryozoa
zooid in Lithuanian: Samangyviai
zooid in Macedonian: Мовести животни
zooid in Dutch: Mosdiertjes
zooid in Japanese: 外肛動物
zooid in Norwegian: Mosdyr
zooid in Occitan (post 1500): Ectoprocta
zooid in Polish: Mszywioły
zooid in Portuguese: Ectoprocta
zooid in Russian: Мшанки
zooid in Simple English: Bryozoa
zooid in Slovak: Machovky
zooid in Serbian: Морске маховине
zooid in Finnish: Sammaleläimet
zooid in Swedish: Mossdjur
zooid in Turkish: Yosun hayvancıkları
zooid in Chinese: 外肛动物门