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1 d outer primary layer thickness in the polar brachiopod.
2 triking multiscale-patterned edge in certain brachiopods.
3 e biomineralization of shell valves in crown brachiopods.
4 ived from the isotopic composition of fossil brachiopods.
5 so reflected in other benthic faunas such as brachiopods.
6 latitudinal trend in shell thickness within brachiopods.
7 ted for the depauperate nature of modern-day brachiopods.
8 ts characteristics of slow-growing, deep sea brachiopods.
9 of chaetal microvilli found in annelids and brachiopods.
10 ith bryozoans, one of which is also found in brachiopods.
11 icae length/shell length) of shell plicae of brachiopods (36.4% and 60.0%, respectively) across the P
12 wo entoprocts, an ectoproct, an inarticulate brachiopod, a phoronid, two annelids, and a platyhelmint
14 , we investigated morphological evolution of brachiopods across the Permian-Triassic mass extinction
15 costs of calcification by more than half for brachiopods across the PTME, and by ~20-62% for foramini
16 esent quantitative size data of bivalves and brachiopods across the TOAE from oxygenated habitats in
17 uva) and a temperate ( Calloria inconspicua) brachiopod after 7 months and 3 months exposure, respect
18 eement of bulk rock [Formula: see text] with brachiopod and conodont [Formula: see text] trends throu
19 temperatures that were obtained from fossil brachiopod and mollusc shells using the 'carbonate clump
20 exhibits an unusual combination of phoronid, brachiopod and tommotiid (Cambrian problematica) charact
22 ong diversification and sampling dynamics of brachiopods and bivalves and five paleoenvironmental pro
24 tes indicated different spatial responses of brachiopods and bivalves, and of habitat specialists and
25 e rich and densely sampled fossil history of brachiopods and bivalves, while accounting for inconsist
30 e of the earliest Paleozoic apatitic-shelled brachiopods and may also be indicators of siliceous biom
34 n phyla-the annelids, nemerteans, phoronids, brachiopods and rotifers-show that at least one of these
35 on suggests that the high extinction rate of brachiopods and the limited diversification of new forms
36 r; only pb (in T. transversa), Hox3 (in both brachiopods), and Dfd (in both brachiopods) show stagger
37 tratigraphic interval has yielded trilobite, brachiopod, and hyolith fossils with preserved soft part
38 ter genes are most similar to known annelid, brachiopod, and nemertean Hox gene homeodomain sequences
40 d assemblage composition of marine bivalves, brachiopods, and gastropods over one-million-year time s
41 essed in the excretory organs of a phoronid, brachiopod, annelid, onychophoran, priapulid, and hemich
44 er supports the conjecture that molluscs and brachiopods are descended from an ancestral vermiform an
46 clades during the PTME set the stage for the brachiopod-bivalve switch, with differential responses t
47 s was attributed to competitive exclusion of brachiopods by the better adapted bivalves or simply to
48 occurred nearly in parallel across all major brachiopod clades (classes and orders) and is consistent
49 ath model shows that the extinction of major brachiopod clades during the PTME set the stage for the
50 l size increases among major, more inclusive brachiopod clades from a single habitat type is best exp
51 allowing sessile suspension feeders such as brachiopods, corals, and bryozoans to recover rapidly.
53 e report that the load-bearing shells of the brachiopod Discinisca tenuis are an exception to this pr
54 competed brachiopods evolutionarily, because brachiopod diversity declined through time while bivalve
57 ing debate over whether bivalves outcompeted brachiopods evolutionarily, because brachiopod diversity
59 ypes of risk intersect in the well-preserved brachiopod fauna of the Appalachian Foreland Basin durin
60 rocta are not sister taxa, (3) phoronids and brachiopods form a monophyletic clade, and (4) neither E
63 nction dynamics of fossil marine bivalve and brachiopod genera from the Ordovician through to the Rec
64 unique association with epibiont thecideoid brachiopods, giving insights onto the palaeoenvironment
66 adapted bivalves or simply to the fact that brachiopods had been hit especially hard by the PTME.
68 e-specific transcriptomic analyses show that brachiopod Hox genes are neither strictly temporally nor
69 n of lophotrochozoans, suggesting rooting of brachiopods into the sessile lophotrochozoans and the or
70 tages of camenellans, an early clade of stem-brachiopods, known previously only from isolated sclerit
71 e a maximum-likelihood approach to show that brachiopod (lamp shell) abundance distributions from fou
72 um channel/acid-sensing ion channel from the brachiopod (lamp shell) Novocrania anomala, at which dia
73 diversity through this interval: phosphatic brachiopods (linguliformeans) show a body size decrease
74 brates: a crustacean Paraceradocus miersi, a brachiopod Liothyrella uva, two bivalve molluscs, Latern
75 nd echiurans) with nemerteans, phoronids and brachiopods, molluscs as sister to that assemblage, and
76 ay components in chaetae and shell fields in brachiopods, mollusks, and annelids provide molecular ev
79 history of the four major Mesozoic-Cenozoic brachiopod orders (Terebratulida, Rhynchonellida, Spirif
80 bivalve extinction rates causally increased brachiopod origination rates, suggesting that bivalves h
81 indicate an affinity with the lophophorates (brachiopods, phoronids and tommotiids), substantially in
82 putative clade Lophophorata, which includes brachiopods, phoronids, and bryozoans, united by a cilia
83 lia (mollusks and entoprocts), Lophophorata (brachiopods, phoronids, and ectoprocts), and a third unn
86 on mechanisms of biominerals like corals and brachiopod shells, as well as the scale formation in des
88 characterized by abundant occurrences of the brachiopod Soaresirhynchia, which exhibits characteristi
89 arkably, expression of the Hox genes in both brachiopod species demonstrates cooption of Hox genes in
90 cluster, and expression of Hox genes in two brachiopod species, Terebratalia transversa and Novocran
91 n assigned variously to stem-group annelids, brachiopods, stem-group molluscs or stem-group aculifera
93 l fusion events shared between bryozoans and brachiopods, supporting the traditional but highly debat
94 esponse gradient, which is also stronger for brachiopods than for bivalves, while the relationship co
96 Therefore, the ecological transition from brachiopods to bivalves was more protracted and complex
97 tterns suggests that the shift from abundant brachiopods to dominant molluscs was abrupt and largely
98 rals, fossil-plant matter, and shallow-water brachiopods, we estimated atmospheric partial pressure o
99 persistent rarity of drilling suggests that brachiopods were the secondary casualties of mistaken or
100 redation indicates that attacks on Paleozoic brachiopods were very rare, especially compared to those