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Zooid
Single animal that is part of a colonial animal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A zooid or zoöid /ˈzoʊ.ɔɪd/ is an animal that is part of a colonial animal. This lifestyle has been adopted by animals from separate unrelated taxa. Zooids are multicellular; their structure is similar to that of other solitary animals. The zooids can either be directly connected by tissue (e.g. corals, Catenulida, Siphonophorae, Pyrosome or Ectoprocta) or share a common exoskeleton (e.g. Bryozoa or Pterobranchia).[1] The colonial organism as a whole is alternatively called a zoon /ˈzoʊ.ɒn/, plural zoa (from Ancient Greek zôion ζῷον meaning 'animal'; plural zôia, ζῷα) or compound animal.[2]
Zooids can exhibit polymorphism. For instance, extant bryozoans may have zooids adapted for different functions, such as feeding, anchoring the colony to the substratum and for brooding embryos.[3] However, fossil bryozoans are only known by the colony structures that the zooids formed during life.[4]
There are correlations between the size of some zooids and temperature.[5] Variations in zooid size within colonies of fossils can be used as an indicator of the temperature and the seasonality of seas in the geological past.[6][7]
The term zooid has historically also been used for an organic cell or organized body that has independent movement within a living organism, especially a motile gamete such as a spermatozoon (in the case of algae now zoid), or an independent animal-like organism produced asexually, as by budding or fission.
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See also
- Siphonophorae for colonial Hydrozoa which superficially resemble the other Cnidaria colloquially referred to as "jellyfish"
- Pyrosome for colonial chordates in Tunicata
References
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