Dictionary Definition
brachiopod adj : of or belonging to the phylum
Brachiopoda [syn: brachiopodous] n : marine
animal with bivalve shell having a pair of arms bearing tentacles
for capturing food; found worldwide [syn: lamp shell,
lampshell]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any of many marine invertebrates, of the phylum Brachiopoda, that have bivalve dorsal and ventral shells with two tentacle-bearing arms that capture food
Synonyms
Extensive Definition
Brachiopods (from Latin bracchium, arm
+ New Latin -poda, foot) are a small phylum
of benthic invertebrates. Also known
as lamp shells (or lampshells), "brachs" or Brachiopoda, they are
sessile, two-valved,
marine
animals with an external
morphology
superficially resembling pelecypods (for
instance, clams) of phylum
Mollusca
to which they are not closely related. It is estimated by paleobiologists that 99
percent of all documented lamp-shell species are both fossils and extinct.
Despite superficial similarities, bivalves and
brachiopods differ markedly: Bivalves usually
have a plane of symmetry between the valves of the shell, which are
mirror images of each other; most brachiopods have a plane of
bilateral symmetry through the valves and perpendicular to the
hinge. The two brachiopod
valves differ in shape and size from one another. Bivalves use
adductor
muscles to hold their two valves closed, and they open them by
means of an external or internal ligament once the adductor
muscles are relaxed. Brachiopods use internal diductor muscles to pull their
two valves apart; they close the two with adductor muscles.
A second major difference is that most
brachiopods are attached to the substrate by means of a fleshy
"stalk" or pedicle. In
contrast, although some bivalves (pelecypods such as oysters, mussels and the extinct rudists) are fixed to the
substrate, most are free-moving, usually by means of a muscular
"foot".
Furthermore, brachiopod shells may be either
phosphatic or --
much more commonly -- calcitic, as
mollusks generally are. Only rarely do brachiopods produce aragonitic shells, which are
composed of a less-permanent form of calcium
carbonate. Lastly, in contrast to most bivalves, some extinct
brachiopods exhibit elaborate flanges and spines.
On July 16, 1986, the Kentucky
State Legislature designated the brachiopod to be the Kentucky state
fossil.
General description
Brachiopods may be divided into two types: inarticulate brachiopods are held together entirely by musculature, whereas articulate brachiopods have a hinge-like articulation between the shells. All brachiopods are marine and are found either attached to substrates by a structure called a pedicle or resting on muddy bottoms. Brachiopods are suspension feeders with a distinctive feeding organ called a lophophore, which is found in two other animal phyla (Bryozoa and Phoronida). Modern brachiopods generally live in areas of cold water, either near the poles or in deep parts of the ocean.Modern brachiopods range in shell size from less
than 5 mm
(¼ in) to just
over 8 cm (3 in). Fossil brachiopods generally
fall within this size range, but some adult species have a shell of
less than 1 mm across, and a few gigantic forms have been
found measuring up to 38½ cm (15 in) in
width.
Evolutionary history
The earliest unequivocal brachiopods in the fossil record occur in the early Cambrian, with the hingeless, inarticulate forms appearing first, followed soon thereafter by the hinged, articulate forms. Possible brachiopods have also been found in much older upper Neoproterozoic strata, although their assignment remains uncertain. Brachiopods are extremely common fossils throughout the Paleozoic. The major shift came with the Permian extinction. Before this extinction event, brachiopods were more numerous and diverse than bivalve mollusks. Afterwards, in the Mesozoic, their diversity and numbers were drastically reduced, and they were largely replaced by bivalve mollusks. Mollusks continue to dominate today, and the remaining orders of brachiopods survive largely in fringe environments of more extreme cold and depth.The most abundant modern brachiopods are the
Class Terebratulida.
The perceived resemblance of terebratulid shells to ancient oil
lamps gave the brachiopods their common name "lamp shell". The
phylum most closely related to Brachiopoda is probably the small
phylum Phoronida (known
as "horseshoe worms"). Along with the Bryozoa and
possibly the Entoprocta,
these phyla constitute the informal superphylum Lophophorata.
The inarticulate brachiopod genus Lingula is the
oldest, relatively evolutionarily unchanged
animal known. The oldest Lingula fossils are found in Lower
Cambrian rocks dating to roughly 550 million years ago. The origin
of brachiopods is unknown. A possible ancestor is a sort of ancient
"armored slug" known as Halkieria that
was recently been found to have had small brachiopod-like shields
on its head and tail.
During the Ordovician and
Silurian
periods, brachiopods became adapted to life in most marine
environments and became particularly numerous in shallow water
habitats, in some cases forming whole banks in much the same way as
bivalves (such as mussels) do today. In some
places, large sections of limestone strata and reef
deposits are composed largely of their shells.
Throughout their long geological history, the
brachiopods have gone through several major proliferations and
diversifications, and have also suffered from major extinctions as well.
It has been suggested that the slow decline of
the brachiopods over the last 100 million years or so is a direct
result of (1) the rise in diversity of filter feeding bivalves,
which have ousted the brachiopods from their former habitats; (2)
the increasing disturbance of sediments by roving deposit feeders
(including many burrowing bivalves); and/or (3) the increased
intensity and variety of shell-crushing predation. However, it
should be noted that the greatest successes for the bivalves have
been in habitats which have never been adopted by the brachiopods,
such as burrowing.
The abundance, diversity, and rapid evolution of
brachiopods during the Paleozoic make them useful as index
fossils when correlating strata across large areas.
Classification
In older classification schemes, Phylum Brachiopoda was divided into two classes: Articulata and Inarticulata. Since most orders of brachiopods have been extinct since the end of the Paleozoic Era, classifications have always relied extensively on the morphology (that is, the shape) of fossils. In the last 40 years further analysis of the fossil record and of living brachiopods, including genetic study, has led to changes in taxonomy.The taxonomy is still unstable, however, so
different authors have made different groupings. In their 2000
article as part of the Treatise on Invertebrate
Paleontology, Alwyn Williams, Sandra J. Carlson, and C. Howard
C. Brunton present current ideas on brachiopod classification;
their grouping is followed here. They subdivide Brachiopoda into
three subphyla, eight classes, and 26 orders. These categories are
believed to be approximately phylogenetic. Brachiopod
diversity declined significantly at the end of the Paleozoic. Only
five orders in three classes include forms which survive today, a
total of between 300 and 500 extant species. Compare this to the
mid-Silurian Period, when 16 orders of brachiopods coexisted.
Brachiopod Taxonomy Extant taxa in green, extinct
taxa in grey after Williams, Carlson, and Brunton, 2000 SubphylaClassesOrdersExtinct
LinguliformeaLingulata
Lingulidano
SiphonotretidaOrdovician
AcrotretidaDevonian
PaterinataPaterinidaOrdovician
Rhychonelliformea
Chileata
ChileidaCambrian DictyonellidinaPermian
ObolellataObolellidaCambrian
KutorginataKutorginidaCambrian
Strophomenata
OrthotetidinaPermian
TriplesiidinaSilurian
BillingselloideaOrdovician
ClitambonitidinaOrdovician
StrophomenidaCarboniferous
ProductidaPermian
Rhynchonellata
ProtorthidaCambrian
OrthidaCarboniferous
PentameridaDevonian
Rhynchonellidano
AtrypidaDevonian
SpiriferidaJurassic
Thecideidano
AthyrididaCretaceous
Terebratulidano
See also
Footnotes
External links
References
- Brachiopoda (revised)
brachiopod in Catalan: Braquiòpode
brachiopod in Czech: Ramenonožci
brachiopod in German: Armfüßer
brachiopod in Estonian: Käsijalgsed
brachiopod in Spanish: Brachiopoda
brachiopod in Persian: بازوپایان
brachiopod in French: Brachiopoda
brachiopod in Croatian: Ramenonošci
brachiopod in Italian: Brachiopoda
brachiopod in Hungarian: Pörgekarúak
brachiopod in Dutch: Armpotigen
brachiopod in Japanese: 腕足動物
brachiopod in Norwegian: Armføttinger
brachiopod in Occitan (post 1500):
Brachiopoda
brachiopod in Polish: Ramienionogi
brachiopod in Portuguese: Brachiopoda
brachiopod in Russian: Плеченогие
brachiopod in Slovak: Ramenonožce
brachiopod in Serbian: Шкољке светиљке
brachiopod in Finnish: Lonkerojalkaiset
brachiopod in Swedish: Armfotingar
brachiopod in Turkish: Dallı bacaklılar
brachiopod in Chinese: 腕足动物门