“…Particularly, invertebrate zoologists have started to employ micro-MRI (for an overview of taxa imaged so far with MRI see Ziegler et al 2011a) and micro-CT. Several studies already show the potential of these methods to deliver new data to test taxonomic hypotheses (Heim and Nickel 2010, McPeek et al 2011, Csösz 2012). They also provide new insights into morphology and anatomy (Golding and Jones 2006, Holford 2008, Dinley et al 2010, Huckstorf and Wirkner 2011), functional morphology (Alba-Tercedor and Sánchez-Tocino 2011, Bond et al 2008, Nickel et al 2006, Patek et al 2007, Wilhelm et al 2011) and developmental studies (Postnov et al 2002, Marxen et al 2007, Puce et al 2012) by studying species through a virtual, three-dimensional model. In palaeobiology, the technique is, for example, frequently used to reveal the morphology and even anatomy of fossilised organisms that cannot be removed from their enclosure medium (Dierick et al 2007, Dunlop et al 2011, Hendrickx et al 2006, Molineux et al 2007, Penney et al 2007, Sutton 2008).…”