Identifying Larval Type in the Fossil Bryozoans
Joseph F. Pachut and Margaret M. Fisherkeller
Department of Geology, Indiana University-Purdue
University at Indianapolis, 723 West Michigan Street, Indianapolis, IN 46202,
and
Indiana State Museum, 202 North Alabama Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204 <PFisherkeller@dnr.state.in.us>
ABSTRACT--The
larvae of living marine invertebrates appear to be the same size as the initial
post-larval organism permitting the recognition of larval type for extinct,
fossilized, organisms. Planktotrophic larvae of living marine invertebrate
species are small ecological generalists that generally have a long larval
existence and a broad geographic range. Conversely, living lecithotrophic larvae
are larger, often settle quickly after release, and typically have more
restricted species distributions. The larvae of some lecithotrophic bryozoans
complicate the relationship between larval size and type by undergoing fission
forming polyembryonic larvae. These larvae are smaller than non-polyembryonic
lecithotrophic larvae and, based on size alone, could be confused with
planktotrophs.
The
relationship between size and larval type was evaluated in bryozoans by
measuring the sizes of ancestrulae, the founding individual of a colony.
Fifty-seven fossil and Recent specimens selected from the literature and
forty-five fossil specimens collected from a portion of the Upper Ordovician,
Cincinnatian, strata of southeastern Indiana were measured. Cincinnatian
trepostome (stenolaemate or tubular) genera include representatives of Dekayia,
Parvohallopora, Heterotrypa, and Homotrypella. Cyclostomes
are the only living stenolaemate suborder and possess polyembryonic larvae. No
statistically-significant difference in ancestrular sizes could be detected
between living cyclostome larvae, the ancestrulae of fossil cyclostomes, the
ancestrulae of the majority of fossil stenolaemate species measured from the
literature, and the ancestrulae of each of the four genera of Cincinnatian
trepostomes. All of these groups are smaller, statistically, than the larvae or
ancestrulae of cheilostomes. It appears that the sizes of fossil ancestrulae may
be useful in distinguishing between taxa that had non-polyembryonic
lecithotrophic larvae and those that had small planktotrophic or polyembryonic
lecithotrophic larvae. However, size alone does not permit clear discrimination
between taxa that had a planktotrophic larva and those that had polyembryonic
lecithotrophic larvae. Small sizes coupled with restricted paleogeographic
distributions suggest that the larvae of most stenolaemates were polyembryonic
lecithotrophs. Exceptions include specimens of Paleschara,
Prasopora, and Peronopora that
most
likely possessed large lecithotrophic larvae.
Brood
chambers have been used as indicators of polyembryony in the fossil record and
they have been reported in thirty-one Paleozoic species. Paleogeographic
distributional data exist for at least four of these species and indicates
restricted distributions, strengthening the inference of polyembryony.
The
presence of Early Ordovician cyclostomes suggests that polyembryony may have
been acquired during the initial radiation of the phylum. However, the taxonomic
distribution of brood chambers currently indicates that polyembryony represents
a polyphyletic attribute unless species of several other stenolaemate suborders
possessed polyembryonic lecithotrophic larvae in the absence of skeletally
expressed brooding structures. If true, then the acquisition of polyembryony in
the Stenolaemata would represent a monophyletic trait with exceptions to this
pattern reflecting the later reacquisition of full-sized, non-polyembryonic,
lecithotrophic larvae.