Английская Википедия:Flustra foliacea

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Flustra foliacea is a species of bryozoans found in the northern Atlantic Ocean. It is a colonial animal that is frequently mistaken for a seaweed. Colonies begin as encrusting mats, and only produce loose fronds after their first year of growth. They may reach Шаблон:Convert long, and smell like lemons. Its microscopic structure was examined by Robert Hooke and illustrated in his 1665 work Micrographia.

Taxonomic history

Файл:Micrographia Scheme 14.png
Scheme XIII from Robert Hooke's Micrographia: Figure 1 (top) shows the structure of Flustra foliacea.

Flustra foliacea was studied as early as 1665, when Robert Hooke published observations of various organisms and materials made with an early microscope.[1] It was first given a binomial name in 1758, when Carl Linnaeus included it in the 10th edition of his Шаблон:Lang as Eschara foliacea.[2] In later publications, Linnaeus divided bryozoans into more than one genus, and so the species came to be called Flustra foliacea. It is the type species of the genus Flustra.[3]

Description

Flustra foliacea is often mistaken for a seaweed, but is actually a colony of animals.[4] The fronds can reach a height of Шаблон:Convert and have rounded ends.[4] They have a strong aroma of lemons.[4] It differs from the superficially similar Securiflustra securifrons by the tendency of the frond branches to become markedly wider towards the tip.[5] Each zooid is roughly rectangular, with 4–5 short spines at the distal end and 13–14 tentacles around the lophophore.[4]

Distribution and ecology

Flustra foliacea has a wide distribution in the north Atlantic Ocean, on both the European and American sides.[5] It is restricted to colder sublittoral waters, and reaches its southern limit in northern Spain.[6]

The fronds of Flustra foliacea are often used by other animals as a substrate to live on. Such epibionts include other bryozoa such as Crista eburnea, hydroids, sessile polychaete worms and the porcelain crab Pisidia longicornis.[4][7] Other animals feed on F. foliacea, including the sea urchins Echinus esculentus and Psammechinus miliaris and the nudibranch Crimora papillata; the pycnogonid Achelia echinata feeds preferentially on F. foliacea.[7]

Life cycle

Flustra foliacea colonies only grow in spring and summer, which can result in visible annual growth rings.[4] Breeding occurs between separate male and female zooids within the colony in autumn and winter.[4] The cells produce outgrowths known as ovicells, which contain embryos and are visible from October to February.[4] The larvae are released in spring and, after a short period, settle to the substrate. For the first year, colonies grow only along the surface (encrusting), with loose fronds only being formed in subsequent years.[4] These are produced when two encrusting colonies meet, and the two edges that make contact begin to grow upwards, back to back.[7] The total lifespan of a colony may reach 12 years.[4] It is frequently found washed up on beaches after storms.[8]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Taxonbar