Currently, between one-third and two-thirds of marine species may be undescribed, and previous estimates of there being well over one million marine species appear highly unlikely. More species than ever before are being described annually by an increasing number of authors. If the current trend continues, most species will be discovered this century.
Emig, C. C. 1992 07 15: Functional disposition of the lophophore in living Brachiopoda.
The shape and disposition of adult brachiopod lophophores relate to in‐ and excurrent apertures. to the internal water irrigation system, to shell orientation at substratum and to near‐bottom currents. The arrangement of the mantle canals and gonads of different lophophores are induccd by water circulation. The trocholophe (2% of living species) is considered as a plesiomorphic character which represents the basic plan of the lophophore, shared by all Lophophorata. Three different types of schizolophe (10%) are represented in terebratuloids, thecidioids and discinids. The spirolophe (19%), characteristic of rhynchonellides and most inarticulate brachiopods, except the schizolophe Pelagodiscus, has evolved divergently into specific arrangements of the mantle canals and gonads. The zygo‐plectolophe (67%) is characteristic of most Terebratulida. The ptycholophe (2%) probably evolved independently in Megathlris and the thecidioids. The mesolophe, known in the fossil chonetdceans, is considered to be a primitive zygo‐plectolophe. The median brachiopod sulcus increases the efficiency of the excurrent system and is considered as an evolved character but a homoplasy within the brachiopods. The characteristics of Recent lophophore types have to be taken into account when reconstructing the lophophore in fossil forms. Brachiopoda, Lophophorata, lophophore, water system, orientation, evolution.
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