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Orthonectida
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Everything about Orthonectida totally explained

Orthonectida is a small phylum of poorly-known parasites of marine invertebrates that are among the simplest of multi-cellular organisms. Members of this phylum are known as orthonectids. Multinucleate plasmodia give rise to sexual males and females, which are free-swimming by means of cilia. They are composed of a single layer of ciliated outer cells surrounding a mass of sex cells. When a female is inseminated, the eggs develop into ciliated larvae that seek out new hosts and then break up into individual cells that become the next generation of plasmodia.
   Parasitized organisms include flatworms, polychaete worms, bivalve molluscs, and echinoderms.
   The phylum consists of about 20 known species, of which Rhopalura ophiocomae is the best-known.
   Originally described in 1880 as a class, and sometimes characterized as an order of Mesozoa, recent study shows that orthonectids are indeed quite different from rhombozoans, the other group in Mesozoa.
   Known species:
  • Family Pelmatosphaeridae

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