Pteropoda

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Pteropoda (common name pteropods, from the Greek meaning "wing-foot") is a term applied to what are now considered to be two separate taxonomic groups of specialized free-swimming pelagic sea snails and sea slugs, marine opisthobranch gastropods. The word "Pteropoda" no longer has a scientifically precise use, but the vernacular name "pteropods" is still used sometimes as a convenience.

The word is applied both to the sea butterflies in the clade Thecosomata and also to the sea angels in the clade Gymnosomata. The Thecosomata have a shell, while the Gymnosomata do not. The two clades are in reality not very closely related, despite a superficial similarity, in that they are both pelagic, small, and transparent, and both groups swim using wing-like flaps (parapodia) which protrude from their bodies.

Taxonomy

The group Pteropoda was established by Georges Cuvier as "ptéropodes"in 1804.[1] François Péron and Charles Alexandre Lesueur thought the group to be larger and so they also included the opisthobranch taxa (Phyllirhoë and Glaucus), the heteropoda taxa (Carinaria and Firola), and even the Ctenophora (Callianira). In 1810 these authors divided the whole group in two separate groups: those with a shell and those without a shell.

In 1824 Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville named these two groups Gymnosomata and Thecosomata and named the combining order Aporobranchia instead of Pteropoda.[2] He rejected the additional genera, except Phyllirhoë which he upgraded to a third group that he called Psilosomata. Only much later was Phyllirhoë classified within the order Nudibranchia.

Other attempts were made to describe the Pteropoda. John Edward Gray divided the Pteropoda into Dactylobranchia (with just the genus Cavolinia ) and Pterobranchia (including all the other genera).[3] Cuvier (and his followers) did not accept the classification by de Blainville; they preferred the original classification as described in Le Règne Animal.

In 1829 Paul Rang followed the Cuvierian classification, but tried to include the character of having a distinct head or not.[4] The German naturalist Lorenz Oken went one step further and, for the sake of symmetry, wanted each order to contain four families and each family to contain four genera.[5] Pierre André Latreille divided the Pteropoda according to the size of their fins: "Macroptérygiens" (including only Pneumonoderma) and "Microptérygiens" (including all the others). In 1851 William Bullock Clark treated the Pteropoda as a family and emended the spelling to Pteropodidae (a name now used for a family of fruit bats)

Finally all these attempts were abandoned and, as more and more species were described as a result of several scientific expeditions, the classification of the Pteropoda into Thecosomata and Gymnosomata was generally adopted. Many of these new species were first described by French zoologists, for example Jean René Constant Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard, Paul Rang, Alcide d'Orbigny and Louis François Auguste Souleyet.

Because the name "Pteropoda" is not based on a genus, it is no longer available as a family-group name.

2010 taxonomy

Jörger et al. (2010)[6] have moved pteropods (pteropods include two clades: Gymnosomata and Thecosomata) to Euopisthobranchia.

References

  1. Mémoire sur l'Hyale et Ie Pneumoderme; Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris., 4 p. 232)
  2. Diet. d. Sci. Nat., t. xxxii. p. 271.
  3. London Medical Repository, p. 235, 1821.
  4. Manuel de l’histoire naturelle des mollusques et leurs coquilles
  5. Description d'un genre nouveau de la classe des Ptéropodes, Ann. d. &i. Nat., ser. 1, t. V. p. 284, 1825.
  6. Jörger K. M., Stöger I., Kano Y., Fukuda H., Knebelsberger T. & Schrödl M. (2010). "On the origin of Acochlidia and other enigmatic euthyneuran gastropods, with implications for the systematics of Heterobranchia". BMC Evolutionary Biology 10: 323. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-10-323.

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