1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910831064103321

Autore

Taylor Paul D.

Titolo

Bryozoan paleobiology / / Paul D. Taylor

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Hoboken, N.J., : Wiley Blackwell, 2020

Hoboken, N.J. : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2020

ISBN

1-118-45498-7

1-118-45499-5

1-118-45496-0

Descrizione fisica

オンライン資料1件

Collana

Topics in paleobiology

Classificazione

457

Disciplina

564/.67

Soggetti

Bryozoa, Fossil

Bryozoa -- Biology

Bryozoa -- Ecology

Lingua di pubblicazione

Non definito

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes bibliographical references and index

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Introduction -- Biomineralization and geochemistry -- Zooid morphology and function -- Colony morphology and function -- Biotic interactions -- Ecology and palaeoecology -- Biogeography -- Phylogeny -- Evolution and fossil history -- Prospective future research.

Sommario/riassunto

"Until the early 19th century, natural historians were puzzled by organisms at the time known as zoophytes: were they animals (zoo-), plants (-phyte), or something in-between? Perhaps they were even the common ancestors of animals and plants? Zoophytes as then conceived included sponges, corals and coralline algae, as well bryozoans, the subject of this book. The so-called 'zoophyte problem' greatly engaged Charles Darwin when he set sail from Plymouth Sound on board HMS Beagle in December 1831. Indeed, Darwin's first scientific paper, which was read by his mentor Robert Grant before both the Wernerian and Plinian societies when Darwin was a medical student at the University of Edinburgh, had concerned species of zoophytes we now know to be the bryozoans Flustra and Carbasea. And he made detailed observations of the intriguing behaviour of the peculiar 'bird-head' structures in bryozoans dredged off Patagonia during the Beagle voyage (Keynes



2003)"--