Parental care is considered crucial for the enhanced survival of offspring and evolutionary success of many metazoan groups. Most bryozoans incubate their young in brood chambers or intracoelomically. Based on the drastic morphological differences in incubation chambers across members of the order Cheilostomatida (class Gymnolaemata), multiple origins of incubation were predicted in this group. This hypothesis was tested by constructing a molecular phylogeny based on mitogenome data and nuclear rRNA genes 18S and 28S with the most complete sampling of taxa with various incubation devices to date. Ancestral character estimation suggested that distinct types of brood chambers evolved at least 10 times in Cheilostomatida. In and spp. brooding evolved unambiguously from a zygote-spawning ancestral state, as it probably did in , Neocheilostomata, and . In two further instances, brooders with different incubation chamber types, skeletal and non-skeletal, formed clades ( spp., ) and ( ( spp. ( spp., ))), each also probably evolved from a zygote-spawning ancestral state. The modular nature of bryozoans probably contributed to the evolution of such a diverse array of embryonic incubation chambers, which included complex constructions made of polymorphic heterozooids, and maternal zooidal invaginations and outgrowths.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10618858PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.1458DOI Listing

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