Research topic:Brachiopoda

Pictures from Google Image Search

Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Find more facts and information on our topic page about Brachiopoda

Brachiopoda

A Dictionary of Earth Sciences | 1999 | | © A Dictionary of Earth Sciences 1999, originally published by Oxford University Press 1999. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Brachiopoda (lampshells) A phylum of solitary, benthic, marine, bivalved, coelomate, invertebrate animals that have existed from the Lower Cambrian to the present day. Brachiopods are commonly attached posteriorly to the sea bed by a stalk (pedicle), but may be secondarily cemented, or free-living (e.g. the fossil form Productus which, like many productids, was spinose, thick-shelled, and lived partly buried in the mud of the sea bed). Usually they consist of two unequal valves: a larger pedicle (ventral) valve and a brachial (dorsal) valve, lined by reduplications (mantle lobes) of the body wall which enclose the large mantle cavity. They are bilaterally symmetrical about the posterior-anterior mid-line of the valves (i.e. through the valves, compare BIVALVIA). The characteristic feeding and respiratory organ, the lophophore, surrounds the mouth and is covered by ciliated tentacles. It may be a simple horseshoe but more often forms two ciliated arms or brachia that project through the gape (thus giving the phylum its name). The alimentary canal is divided into oesophagus, stomach, and intestine, with or without an anus. The nervous system consists of a circum-oesophogeal ring with a small aggregation of nerve cells on the ventral side. The excretory organs are one or two pairs of nephridia (excretory tubules) also acting as gonoducts (for the release of eggs and sperm). The circulatory system is open, with the contractile vesicle (heart) near the stomach. Considerably more than 3000 fossil species are known and about 100 are alive today; these are widely distributed and occur at all depths. Brachiopods are divided into three classes: Lingulata, Inarticulata, and Articulata.

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "Brachiopoda." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. 26 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "Brachiopoda." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. (November 26, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-Brachiopoda.html

AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "Brachiopoda." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Retrieved November 26, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-Brachiopoda.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Evaluating internal versus external characters: Phylogenetic analyses of the Echinoconchidae, Buxtoniinae, and Juresaniinae (Phylum Brachiopoda)
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 7/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...Echinoconchidae, Productidae, Buxtoniinae, and Juresaniinae (Phylum Brachiopoda. Order Productida) have been the subject of debate for...Williams, 1965) and revised (Brunton et al., 2000) Brachiopoda volumes of the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology use...
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF COMELICANIIDAE MERLA, 1930 (BRACHIOPODA: ATHYRIDIDA) FROM THE LOPINGIAN (LATE PERMIAN) OF SOUTH CHINA AND TRANSCAUCASIA IN AZERBAIJAN AND IRAN
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 9/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...xui n. sp., and R. spondomarginata n. sp. INTRODUCTION REPRESENTATIVES OF Athyridoidea Davidson, 1881 (Athyridida, Brachiopoda) are among the most abundant taxonomically diverse components of the Lopingian (Late Permian) brachiopod faunas (Grunt...
LINOLDHAMININAE, A NEW SUBFAMILY OF LYTTONIIDAE WAAGEN, 1883 (BRACHIOPODA) FROM THE GUADALUPIAN (MIDDLE PERMIAN) XIALA FORMATION IN THE XAINZA AREA, NORTHERN TIBET
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 9/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; MEMBERS OF the Lyttonudae Waagen, 1883 (Lyttonioidea Waagen, 1883, Brachiopoda) are characterized by numerous peculiarities, including their disproportionately inequivalve, rudimentary articulatory apparatus...
Nahoniella, a new name for Yukonella Shi and Waterhouse, 1996 (Spiriferida, Brachiopoda)
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 9/1/1998; ; 439 words ; ...AND Waterhouse (1996, p. 127) proposed a new genus, Yukonella, for a distinctive licharewnid species (Spiriferida, Brachiopoda) based on well-preserved material from the Lower Permian upper Jungle Creek Formation, northern Yukon Territory, Canada...
Quadriloba, new name for the genus Tetraloba Alvarez, Rong, and Boucot, 1998 (Brachiopoda, Athyridida); preoccupied by Tetraloba Lee, 1983 (Insecta, Collembola)
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 5/1/1999; ; 495 words ; ...informed us (personal commun., 16 November 1998) that the generic name Tetraloba Alvarez, Rong, and Boucot, 1998 (Brachiopoda: Athyridida) (Alvarez et al., 1998, p. 843) is preoccupied by an insect (Collembola) genus published by Lee, 1983...
BRACHIOPODA FROM THE SOOM SHALE LAGERSTÄTTE (UPPER ORDOVICIAN, SOUTH AFRICA)
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 7/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; ABSTRACT-Within the Soom Shale Lagersttte of South Africa (Upper Ordovician, Hirnantian), two brachiopod taxa preserve traces of organic tissue. In Trematis, presumed bands of periostracum are preserved on the flanks of the pedicle notch, and clay mineral casts of the pedicle are preserved in many
SILICIFIED CARBONIFEROUS (CHESTERIAN) BRACHIOPODA OF THE ARCO HILLS FORMATION, IDAHO
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 1/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; ABSTRACT- The Arco Hills Formation contains abundant lingulate, strophomenate, and rhynchonellate brachiopods, echinoderms, corals, bryozoans, and rare vertebrate and trilobite fossil fragments. Fossils are equally abundant in carbonate and siliciclastic units; however, silicified brachiopods are
Peltichia Jin and Liao, 1981 (Enteletidae, Brachiopoda) from Asia: Taxonomy, biostratigraphy, and palebiogeography
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 1/1/1999; ; 700+ words ; ABSTRACT-An enteletid brachiopod genus Peltichia Jin and Liao, 1981, is reviewed and emended based on specimens from the Permian sequences of Japan, South China, Vietnam, and Transcaucasia. New and revised taxa are Peltichia akasakensis (Ozawa), P. kwangtungensis (Zhan), P. ruzhencevi (Sokolskaja),
Geniculigypa, a new gypidulid (Brachiopoda) genus from the Middle Devonian of Michigan
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 5/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; ABSTRACT-A new genus, Geniculigypa, and a new subfamily, the Geniculigypinae, are established. Both taxa are monotypic and have as their type species, Sieberella newtonensis Imbrie, 1959, from the Newton Creek Limestone (early Givetian) of Michigan. This species dramatically differs from all other
A new species of Coenothyris (Brachiopoda) from the Triassic (Upper Anisian-Ladinian) of Israel
Magazine article from: Journal of Paleontology; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ABSTRACT-Coenothyris oweni new species is described from the Lower Member (Upper Anisian-Ladinian) of the Triassic Saharonim Formation (Upper Anisian-Lower Carnian) at Har Gevanim, Makhtesh Ramon, southern Israel. The Saharonim Formation was deposited under normal, calm, shallow marine conditions

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Brachiopoda
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Brachiopoda , phylum of shelled sessile or sedentary marine animals, commonly known as lamp shells, and characterized by a peculiar feeding...
brachidium
Book article from: A Dictionary of Earth Sciences brachidium The calcified support for the lophophore in brachiopods ( Brachiopoda ). It may be of different shapes in different groups (loops, spires, etc.). Some groups do not possess this calcified structure and the support for their lophophores is entirely hydrostatic.
spondylium
Book article from: A Dictionary of Earth Sciences spondylium Curved platform for muscle attachment in the shell beak region of some brachiopods ( Brachiopoda ).
costa
Book article from: A Dictionary of Earth Sciences ...corallite wall, forming a rib. 2. A rib-like thickening of a shell, extending from the umbo to the margins in brachiopod ( Brachiopoda ) and lamellibranch ( Bivalvia ) shells. In gastropods ( Gastropoda ) the thickening of the shell usually runs either axially...
hinge
Book article from: A Dictionary of Earth Sciences hinge 1. The surface region of a fold about a hinge line, which occupies the area of maximum curvature. 2. In Brachiopoda and lamellibranchs, the area of the commissure where the two valves of the shell are permanently in contact. In those...