Brachiopods and Bryozoans
Brachiopods and bryozoans are lophophorate filter feeders whose dense Paleozoic fossils dominate many marine assemblages and reveal long-term ecological change.
Definition
Brachiopods are solitary, bivalved marine lophophorates with shells oriented dorso-ventrally, while bryozoans are colonial lophophorates built of many tiny calcified zooids; both filter feed using a lophophore.
Scope
This topic covers brachiopod shell structure, hinge and lophophore support, and the major articulate and inarticulate groups, alongside the colonial bryozoans, their zooids, colony forms, and roles as reef and substrate builders.
Core questions
- How do brachiopod shells differ from superficially similar bivalves?
- What functions do the lophophore and its skeletal supports serve?
- How are colonial bryozoan growth forms related to environment?
- Why did brachiopods decline relative to bivalves after the Paleozoic?
Key concepts
- Lophophore and ciliary feeding
- Articulate and inarticulate brachiopods
- Zooids and colonial integration
- Encrusting versus erect growth forms
Key theories
- Lophophore filter feeding
- Both groups capture suspended food with a ciliated lophophore, and skeletal structures supporting the lophophore are diagnostic for classifying brachiopods.
- Brachiopod-bivalve faunal replacement
- The shift from brachiopod-dominated to bivalve-dominated benthic faunas across the end-Permian extinction is a classic case study in ecological turnover.
Clinical relevance
Brachiopod and bryozoan assemblages are sensitive indicators of substrate, water energy, and depth, and their shells provide stable-isotope records used to reconstruct Paleozoic seawater temperature and chemistry.
History
Brachiopods were once mistaken for mollusks until their distinct anatomy was recognized in the nineteenth century, and the revised Treatise volumes synthesized their classification. Bryozoans have been studied as colonial model organisms for questions of individuality and competition in the fossil record.
Debates
- Causes of the brachiopod-to-bivalve transition
- Whether bivalves outcompeted brachiopods or simply rediversified faster after mass extinction remains contested.
Key figures
- Alwyn Williams
- Frank K. McKinney
- Jeremy B. C. Jackson
Related topics
Seminal works
- williams1997
- mckinney1989
Frequently asked questions
- How can you tell a brachiopod from a clam?
- A brachiopod's two valves differ from each other but each is symmetric about a midline, whereas a clam's two valves are mirror images of each other.
- Are bryozoans single animals?
- No, a bryozoan colony is built of many tiny connected individuals called zooids, each housed in its own skeletal chamber.