Bryozoa, a colonial animal phylum with a long evolutionary history, remain widespread today, even recording ambient environmental conditions in their skeletons. This synthesis of current research in Bryozoology covers both extant and extinct taxa.
Bryozoa are a colonial animal phylum with a long evolutionary history, having existed from the early Ordovician (480 My) onward and still flourishing today. Several mass extinctions in earth history shaped and triggered bryozoan evolution through drastic turnover of faunas and new evolutionary lineages. Bryozoa are widespread across all latitudes from Equator to Polar Regions and occur in marine and freshwater environments. They are shaping benthic ecosystems and recording ambient environmental conditions in their skeletons. The book provides a synthesis of the current main topics of research in the field of Bryozoology including combined research on both extant, and extinct taxa. Fields or current research span molecular genetics and phylogeny, life history, reproduction and anatomy, biodiversity and evolutionary patterns in time and space, taxonomy, zoogeography, ecology, sediment interactions, and climate response.
1. Distribution over Space and Time in Epizoobiontic North Sea
Bryozoans.-
2. The World´s Oldest-Known Bryozoan Reefs: Late Tremadocian,
mid-Early Ordovician: Yichang, Central China.-
3. Molecular Distance and
Morphological Divergence in Cauloramphus (Cheilostomata: Calloporidae.-
4.
Acanthocladia (Rhabdomesina, Cryptostomata) from the Devonian of Europe.-
5.
Growth Rates, Age Determination and Calcification Levels in Flustra foliacea
(L.) (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) Preliminary Assessment.-
6. Life on the Edge
Parachnoidea (Ctenostomata) and Barentsia (Kamptozoa) on Bathymodiolin
Mussels from an Active Submarine Volcano in the Kermadec Volcanic Arc.-
7.
Occurrence and Identity of White Spots in Phylactolaemata.-
8. Testing
Habitat Complexity as a Control over Bryozoan Colonial Growth Form and Space
Distribution.- 9.- Distribution and Diversity of Erect Bryozoan Assemblages
along the Pacific Coast of Japan.-
10. Epizoic Bryozoans on Predatory
Pycnogonids from the South Orkney Islands, Antarctica: If you can´t beat
them, join them.-
11. Growth Rate of Selected Sheet-Encrusting Bryozoan
Colonies along a Latitudinal Transect Preliminary Results.-
12. Patterns of
Magnesium-Calcite Distribution in the Skeleton of some Polar Bryozoan
Species.-
13. Seagrass-Associated Bryozoan Communities from the Late Pliocene
of the Island of Rhodes (Greece).-
14. A New Species of the Genus Electra
(Bryozoa, Cheilostomata) from Southern Oman, Arabian Sea.-
15. Molecular
Phylogenetic Analysis Confirms the Species Status of Electra verticillata .-
16. Large Sediment Encrusting Trepostome Bryozoans from the Permian of
Tasmania, Australia.-
17. Bryozoan Communities and Thanatocoenoses from
Submarine Caves in the Plemmirio Marine Protected Area (SE Sicily).-
18. The
Genus Sparsiporina d´Orbigny, 1852 (Bryozoa, Cheilostomata), Late Eocene to
Holocene.-
19. Species of Alcyonidium (Ctenostomatida) from the Pacific Caves
of North America: a Preliminary Account.- 20.Distribution and Zoogeography of
Cheilostomate Bryozoa along the Pacific Coast of Panama: Comparison between
the Gulf of Panama and Gulf of Chiriqui.-
21. High Resolution Non-Destructive
Imaging Techniques for Internal Fine Structure of Bryozoan Skeletons.-
22.
Being a Bimineralic Bryozoan in an Acidifying Ocean.-
23. Hornera striata
Milne Edwards, 1838, a British Pliocene Cyclostome Bryozoan Incorrectly
Recorded from New Zealand, with Notes on some Non-Fenestrate Hornera from the
Coralline Crag.-
24. Schizomavella grandiporosa and Schizomavella sarniensis:
two Cryptic Species.-
25. A diverse Bryozoan Fauna from Pleistocene Marine
Gravels at Koromatsunai, Hokkaido, Japan.-
26. Early Carboniferous Bryozoans
from Western Siberia, Russia.-
27. The Use of Early Miocene Bryozoans Fauna
Affinities in the Central Paratethys for Inferring Climatic Change and Seaway
Connections.-
28. Palaeoecology, Preservation and Taxonomy of Encrusting
Ctenostome Bryozoans Inhabiting Ammonite Body Chambers in the Late Cretaceous
Pierre Shale of Wyoming and South Dakota, USA.-
29. Krka River (Croatia):
Case Study of Bryozoan Settlement from Source to Estuary.