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03-09-2017, 02:30 AM
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

http://www.popsci.com/sites/popsci.com/files/styles/325_1x_/public/images/2017/09/pectinatella_magnifica_bryozoan.jpg?itok=IEAtYbj-&fc=50,50


http://www.popsci.com/dragon-booger-...in-lost-lagoon (http://www.popsci.com/dragon-booger-found-in-lost-lagoon)


Look at the mysterious ‘dragon booger’ found in Vancouver's Lost Lagoon

Pond gunk has never been so fascinating.
By Sara Chodosh posted Sep 1st, 2017 at 12:35pm
pond gunk

pectinatella magnifica

A dragon booger, more scientifically known as *Pectinatella magnifica"

Jomegat

“Dragon boogers” go by many names. “Moss animals,” for one, and “bryozoans,” for another. They’re also known as “ectoprocta,” meaning “anus outside.” If you’re unfamiliar with the phylogeny of aquatic invertebrates, it might seem unnecessary to distinguish creatures with anuses outside from creatures with anuses inside. And yet, it is necessary—which is the beauty of water-dwelling blobs.

See, water allows evolution to do amazing things. Where we landlubbers have to defecate downwards, water-bound creatures are free to spread their waste (and sperm and eggs) wherever they please. Up, down—who cares? It’s all just gonna float around everywhere anyway. This means that sometimes evolution creates an animal that has a large opening, vaguely resembling a hollow anemone, holding both the mouth- and the butt-holes. These are the entoprocta, or anus-insiders.
bryozoa

Bryozoa are a lot prettier when you draw them
http://www.popsci.com/sites/popsci.com/files/styles/325_1x_/public/images/2017/09/bryozoa.jpg?itok=-8Tcmhgp&fc=50,50

Ernst Haeckel, "Kunstformen der Natur" (1904)

But we’re not here to talk about them. We’re here to talk about the glorious ectoprocta, who prefer to dispel their brown bodies (yes, that is actually the scientific term) to the side of the tentacles containing their mouth bits. Like civilized animals should.

Volunteers recently found oodles and oodles of these moss animals in Lost Lagoon, which is an entirely real (albeit man-made) lake in Stanley Park, Vancouver. They’ve been described as having the texture of “three-day-old Jello—a bit firm but gelatinous.” Yum!

These creatures are actually clumps of many individual organisms that live together, kind of like a gooey commune, which is more scientifically known as a zooid. Together they can wiggle around using tiny tentacle-y arms called cilia, which they also use to help usher food bits into their mouths. You can watch the park ecology society’s outreach manager pull one out of the murky water in this adorably scored video:

That lump of snot may have been chilling at the bottom of Lost Lagoon for years without being detected. Their lovely brownish-green hue means these creatures blend into the lake, and their vaguely lumpy texture makes them look kind of like frog spawn. More often than not, they go incognito. In fact, scientists originally thought that bryozoans didn't live west of the Mississippi, but in recent years they’ve shown up in more bodies of water. It’s possible that global warming is helping their case, since they can’t live in liquid much colder than 60 degrees Fahrenheit. But it’s also possible that they’ve just been lying in ponds (though not distributing swords) for years now without anyone noticing.

That would be in keeping with how vexing bryozoans are to biologists in general. They seem to defy classification. In phylogeny, you can usually categorize an organism by its anatomy or its embryonic development. Most animals form their gastrointestinal tract from the endoderm, which is the innermost layer of an embryo. But adult ectoprocts form their guts and all other internal organs from the epidermis and the mesoderm. And that’s only after they go through a larval stage where they destroy all of their internal tissues and create new organs. Most early embryos form a dent in the ball of cells that will become either the anus or the mouth, and are called deuterostomes or protostomes accordingly. Human are, incidentally, deuterostomes, which means we all begins as buttholes. Moss animals also develop a dent, but it then disappears, and a different pore becomes the gut.

Even biochemistry and genetics haven't entirely clarified how bryozoans are related to everything else. They seem to be close to mollusks and annelids, even though they look much more like coral or polyps.

And so the mystery of the dragon boogers continues. Where did they come from, evolutionarily speaking? Where will they pop up next? The only way to find out is to keep pulling ‘em out of lagoons.
Tags:

EVOLUTION water short science articles Animals




http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2...ure-video-spd/ (http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/08/Bryozoan-blob-creature-video-spd/)


Mysterious, Brain-Like Blob Found in Lagoon
Scientists are unsure if warming temperatures are causing the bizarre invertebrates to spread.
See a Mysterious Blob Found in Canada

A gelatinous, mucus-like creature lurks in rivers and lakes—and it's called a bryozoan. Recently, they were spotted—for the first known time—in Stanley Park in Vancouver, British Columbia, when low water levels made them more visible.

Celina Starnes from the Stanley Park Ecology Society recently examined the specimen found in the area's "Lost Lagoon," a small body of water in the southern part of the park. In video created by the Vancouver Courier, Starnes shows the brownish green mass jiggling as it's pulled from the water.

In a phone call with National Geographic, Starnes explains that the creatures have a gelatinous, firm quality, "almost like Jell-o," she said.

Bryozoan clumps like these are actually hundreds of creatures living together in a colony. A single organism, known as a zooid, is only a fraction of a millimeter. Zooids are hermaphroditic but spread thanks to statoblasts, a clump of cells found on the organism that can reproduce asexually if broken off from the colony.

Fossil records date ancient marine bryozoans as far back as 470 million years. The species found in Stanley Park is commonly called a "magnificent" bryozoan, Pectinatella magnifica, and was previously only known to exist in areas east of the Mississippi River.
Where Did They Come From?

Whether or not the creatures are an invasive species has been a subject of debate among scientists. A 2012 report from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service theorized that climate change could be helping the creatures spread. Zooids can only survive in waters warmer than roughly 60 degrees Fahrenheit, and the report states that warming temperatures allow bryozoans to spread north.

The lumps filter feed on algae in nutrient-rich waters and an increase in their numbers could upset the ecological balance of a freshwater ecosystem. They've also been found to clog pipes.

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It's possible, however, that bryozoans have simply gone unnoticed. The creatures are difficult to find, and their muddy color helps them camouflage in murky waters. Starnes says they're sometimes confused with a batch of salamander eggs or rocks.

"We doubt this is the first time they've been here," she said.

Ian Walker is a biology professor at the University of British Columbia who has studied bryozoans. He thinks there isn't enough research to conclusively state whether or not the species has moved north.

"It's something that could have been easily overlooked in the past," he said. He noted that bryozoans have been found just west of Vancouver in the Okanagan Valley.

"I think we're near the northern limit of them. With warming climate, they might migrate somewhere farther north," said Walker. "I can only really speculate how they might have spread."


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