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|   Invertebrate
  Zoology   Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Brachiopoda (Contact)   
      
  CLICK on underlined file names and
  included illustrations to enlarge:             The Brachiopoda
  are entirely marine
  organisms that were very
  abundant during the Paleozoic Era but which today constitute a relatively
  small group.  They are bivalve shells,
  the dorsal and ventral shells being unequal in size and shape.  This differs from clam shells that are
  lateral.  There is a stalk at the
  posterior end called the peduncle and
  which serves for attachment.  A lophophore
  occupies the whole anterior half of the shell and serves as a feeding
  mechanism similar to that found in the Bryozoa.  There is a U-shaped digestive tract and a true coelom.  But there are no special respiratory
  organs.  Nephridia are
  present that serve for excretion. 
  These are a pair of ciliated tubes, which open into the coelom on one
  side and to the outside of the organism on the other side.               Circulation.--
  There is a heart with several vessels.             Musculature.--
  There is a well developed musculature, especially in the stalk and for the
  two valves.             Nervous System.-- A nerve
  string and ganglia are present             Sense
  Organs.-- Various sense
  organs occur on the area of the lophophore.             Reproduction.--
  Gonads lie on the mantle, which is a thin flap
  of the body wall.  Most species are
  hermaphroditic.  Cavities of the
  coelom extend into the mantle and these then hold the gonads.  Gametes leave the body by way of the
  nephridia.  Fertilization is
  external.  Ciliated larvae are formed,
  which swim out, settle down, and develop into a new individual.     ------------------------------------   Please see
  following plate for Example Structures of the Brachiopoda:   Plate 62 = Phylum: Brachiopoda:  Lingula
  sp., Laqueus sp. & fossil   ==============     |