ARTÍCULO
TITULO

How Do Prostomial Sensory Organs Affect Brain Anatomy? Phylogenetic Implications in Eunicida (Annelida)

Sabrina Kuhl    
Thomas Bartolomaeus and Patrick Beckers    

Resumen

Eunicida is a taxon of marine annelids currently comprising the taxa Eunicidae, Onuphidae, Dorvilleidae, Oenonidae, Lumbrineridae, Histriobdellidae and Hartmaniella. Most representatives are highly mobile hunters sharing the presence of a sophisticated nervous system but differ in the number and shape of prostomial sensory organs (0?3 antennae; 0 or 2 palps; 0, 2 or 4 (+2) buccal lips; 0, 2 or 4 eyes; single-grooved or paired nuchal organs). This makes Eunicida an ideal model to study the following questions: Is the brain morphology affected by different specificities of prostomial sensory organs? Do similar numbers and shapes of prostomial sensory organs hint at close phylogenetic relationships among different eunicidan taxa? How can antennae, palps and buccal lips be differentiated? For the investigation of sensory organs and the nervous system, we performed immunohistochemistry, µCT, TEM, SEM, paraffin histology and semi-thin sectioning. Our results show that brain anatomy is mostly affected on a microanatomical level by sensory organs and that similar specificities of sensory organs support the latest phylogenetic relationships of Eunicida. Further, a reduction of antennae in Eunicida can be suggested and hypotheses about the presence of sensory organs in the stem species of Eunicida are made.

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