Population biology of bryozoans: correlates of sessile,colonial life histories in freshwater habitats |
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Authors: | B. Okamura T. Hatton-Ellis |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, BS8 1UG Bristol, UK |
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Abstract: | Bryozoans are common, often abundant, sessile, colonial invertebrates of freshwaters. By reviewing what is known of their general ecology and considering in further detail the population biology of specific groups, we provide evidence that 1) populations are locally ephemeral and regional persistence is attained via a dynamic equilibrium between dispersal and colonization, and 2) sex may often be infrequent and a high degree of clonality obtains at both local and regional scales. On the basis of these characteristics we discuss how the group offers exceptional opportunities for investigating a number of fundamentally important ecological and evolutionary questions.The highly curious modification of the Molluscan type which the Polyzoa [=Bryozoa] present... the great beauty of their forms, and the facility with which they can in general be observed in a living state, cannot but render them special favorites for every lover of Nature; and for the more profound student must confer on them a peculiar significance, and invest their study with a scientific interest which is scarcely surpassed by that of any other group of animals.... (Allman 1856) |
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Keywords: | Freshwater bryozoans coloniality sexuality clonality habitat subdivision population structure dispersal molecular studies |
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