Authors
Stephen A Smith, Nerida G Wilson, Freya E Goetz, Caitlin Feehery, Sónia CS Andrade, Greg W Rouse, Gonzalo Giribet, Casey W Dunn
Publication date
2011/12/15
Journal
Nature
Volume
480
Issue
7377
Pages
364-367
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Molluscs (snails, octopuses, clams and their relatives) have a great disparity of body plans and, among the animals, only arthropods surpass them in species number. This diversity has made Mollusca one of the best-studied groups of animals, yet their evolutionary relationships remain poorly resolved. Open questions have important implications for the origin of Mollusca and for morphological evolution within the group. These questions include whether the shell-less, vermiform aplacophoran molluscs diverged before the origin of the shelled molluscs (Conchifera),, or lost their shells secondarily. Monoplacophorans were not included in molecular studies until recently,, when it was proposed that they constitute a clade named Serialia together with Polyplacophora (chitons), reflecting the serial repetition of body organs in both groups. Attempts to understand the early evolution of molluscs become even more complex …
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