Arctonula arctica (Sars, 1851)

Serova, K. M., Belikova, E. V., Kotenko, O. N., Vishnyakov, A. E., Bogdanov, E. A., Zaitseva, O. V., Shunatova, N. N. & Ostrovsky, A. N., 2022, Reduction, rearrangement, fusion, and hypertrophy: evolution of the muscular system in polymorphic zooids of cheilostome Bryozoa, Organisms Diversity & Evolution (New York, N. Y.) 22 (4), pp. 925-964 : 936-939

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s13127-022-00562-y

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC87AF-FFA6-FFA5-FC98-CC9D80B29C7A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Arctonula arctica
status

 

Arctonula arctica View in CoL ( Figs. 1B View Fig , 8 View Fig , 17C View Fig )

Avicularium

Cystid and mandible Two small adventitious avicularia are situated proximo-laterally near the autozooidal orifice ( Figs. 1B View Fig , 8A View Fig ). The avicularian cystid is oval in a frontal plane. It is associated with the lateral wall of autozooid and deeply immersed in the autozooid, but does not reach its basal wall. The slightly widening proximal edge of sclerotinized, semicircular mandible rests on the transverse skeletal pivotal crossbar, dividing the frontal side of the avicularium into two parts: mandibular and postmandibular; the latter occupied by the frontal membrane ( Figs. 8A, B, D View Fig , 17C View Fig ). The mandible is hollow, consisting of three walls and enclosed cavity connected with the body cavity of the avicularium via oval opening in the lower wall ( Fig. 8B View Fig ). An external (upper) and internal (lower) walls merge at the free mandible edge, forming a thickened peripheral sclerite with slightly curved and tapering margin ( Fig. 8B, D View Fig ). The most part of the lower mandibular wall is internal ( Fig. 8B View Fig ), with the upper vestibular wall positioned beneath. This wall is distally attached to the sclerite, then extending proximally towards the mandible base and continuing to the palate (lower vestibular wall). Proximally, the mandibular walls are connected by the narrow vertical wall ( Fig. 8B, D View Fig ).

elements of avcularium (lateral view) (note longitudinal muscles of tentacle sheath in C). Large opening in the lower mandibular wall is visible in B and C. Abbreviations: dm, diaphragm, fm, frontal membrane, g, ganglion of vestigial polypide, mab, abductor, mad, adductor, md, mandible, p, palate, rm, retractor muscles, t, tendon of adductor, ts, tentacle sheath, vp, vestigial polypide

Polypide and muscular system The vestigial polypide is an oval “cell mass” situated in a distal part of avicularian cystid in front of the adductor muscles ( Figs. 8B–D View Fig , 17C View Fig ). Its upper part is represented by a rudimentary lophophore surrounded by a tentacle sheath, whereas its lower part consists of a round ganglion. The tentacle sheath proceeds distally to a small invagination in the center of the palate ( Fig. 8B, D View Fig ) that is a lower wall of the modified vestibulum.

Diaphragmatic muscles (3–4 annular muscle fibers forming a loose, narrow “cone” and sometimes interconnected by the “spiral” fibers) are situated in the uppermost narrow part of the tentacle sheath. The wall of the latter also bears 7–8 thin longitudinal muscle fibers. The upper ends of these muscles intersect with the annular muscles in the lower half of the diaphragm ( Fig. 8C View Fig ). Distal ends of the retractors composed of two to three muscle fibers insert to the polypide between the ganglion and the tentacle sheath; their proximal ends attach to the lower part of the cystid wall in the distal part of the avicularium ( Fig. 8B–D View Fig ). Some confocal images showed that they are striated.

tentacle sheath). C, inset Muscular elements of avicularium (frontolateral view) (note longitudinal muscles of tentacle sheath in C and inset). In C dotted line indicates borders of avicularian mandible. Abbreviations: dm, diaphragm, g, ganglion, mab, abductor, mad, adductor, md, mandible, rm, retractor muscles, sc, sclerite of mandible, ts, tentacle sheath, vp, vestigial polypide

Two pairs of symmetrical adductors and abductors occupy most of the avicularian cystid volume. Smaller smooth abductors are comprised of five short and relatively thick muscle bundles each. A single bundle consists of several muscle cells ( Fig. 8B, E View Fig ). Two zones of their attachment to the frontal membrane are short, narrow, and parallel to each other. The lower ends of the abductors are attached to the proximal and lateral cystid walls of the avicularium, behind the adductor attachment zones and slightly overlapping with them.

Larger striated adductors insert to the upper vestibular wall behind the sclerite by a pair of tendons ( Figs. 8B–E View Fig , 17C View Fig ). The distal ends of both tendons run just beyond than the distal margin of the central opening, slightly widening at the sites of attachment. Because of their large size, the proximal attachment zones of adductors occupy most of the cystid walls in the lower third of the avicularium ( Fig. 8C, E View Fig ).

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