A cnidarian colony can be idealized as a group of feeding polyps connected by tube-like stolons. Morphological variation ranges from runner-like forms with sparse polyp and stolon development to sheet-like forms with dense polyp and stolon development. These forms have typically been considered in a foraging context, consistent with a focus on rates of polyp development relative to stolon elongation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany colonial organisms encrust surfaces with feeding and reproductive polyps connected by vascular stolons. Such colonies often show a dichotomy between runner-like forms, with widely spaced polyps and long stolon connections, and sheet-like forms, with closely spaced polyps and short stolon connections. Generative processes, such as rates of polyp initiation relative to rates of stolon elongation, are typically thought to underlie this dichotomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs with many colonial animals, hydractiniid hydroids display a range of morphological variation. Sheet-like forms exhibit feeding polyps close together with short connecting stolons, whereas runner-like forms have more distant polyps and longer connecting stolons. These morphological patterns are thought to derive from rates of stolon growth and polyp formation.
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