“…The separate origins of asexual fissioning contradict the traditional assumption that asexual fissioning is a basal macrostomorphan reproductive strategy shared with the Catenulida (Rieger, 1986(Rieger, , 2001, and casts additional doubts on the proposed plesiomorphy of asexual reproduction in Platyhelminthes, and even in early divergent Bilateria (Ehlers, 1985;Rieger, 1986). Indeed, Jondelius et al (2011) found asexual fissioning to be a derived feature in the Acoela, and also within the Tricladida there seem to be multiple origins of asexual fissioning (Riutort et al, 2012;Álvarez-Presas and Riutort, 2014). Interestingly, there seems to be a clear link between the presence of asexual fissioning and the capability of regeneration (Egger et al, 2007), suggesting that the presence of a totipotent neoblast stem cell system may play a crucial role in the evolution of asexual fissioning (Martín-Durán and Egger, 2012).…”