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Rhabdopleurida
Order of hemichordates in the pterobranchian class From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rhabdopleurida is one of three orders in the class Pterobranchia, which are small, worm-shaped animals, and the only surviving graptolites.[2][3] Members belong to the hemichordates.[4][5] Species in this order are sessile, colonial, connected with a stolon, living in clear water and secrete tubes called tubarium. They have a single gonad, the gill slits are absent and the collar has two tentaculated arms.[6] Rhabdopleura is the best studied pterobranch in developmental biology.[7]
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Taxonomy
This small order is monotypic. It has only a single extant genus, containing four to six living species.
Order Rhabdopleurida Fowler, 1892
- Family Rhabdopleuridae Harmer, 1905
- Genus Rhabdopleura Allman, 1869
- Rhabdopleura annulata Norman, 1921 — Indo-Pacific region
- Rhabdopleura compacta Hincks, 1880 — Atlantic
- Rhabdopleura normani Allmann, 1869 — Atlantic and parts of the Pacific
- Rhabdopleura recondita Beli, Cameron and Piraino, 2018 — Mediterranean
- Rhabdopleura striata Schepotieff, 1909 — Indo-Pacific (Sri Lanka)
- Genus Rhabdopleura Allman, 1869
- Rhabdopleura grimaldi Julien, 1890
- Rhabdopleura manubialis Jullien & Calvet, 1903
Extinct species:
- †Rhabdopleura delmari Mortelmans 1955
- †Rhabdopleura graysoni Chapman, Durman & Rickards, 1995
- †Rhabdopleura hollandi Rickards, Chapman & Temple, 1984
- †Rhabdopleura kozlowskii Kulicki, 1969
- †Rhabdopleura obuti Durman & Sennikov, 1993
- †Rhabdopleura sinica Chapman, Durman & Rickards, 1995
- †Rhabdopleura vistulae Kozlowski, 1956
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References
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