It is possible that the common ancestor of all bilaterals looked similar to:
Colonial-Pennatulacean hypothesis: (Colonialy fusion of cnidarian-like) The proposal that bilaterals arose from the fusion between pennatulacean-like cnidarian zooids was granted by Dewel, implies that the body plans of bilaterals originated from a colonial ancestor. This proposal has little or no support in the existing data, and has been commonly used as a justification against the sedentary/semi-sedentary models of urbilaterians as a whole.
Larval Hypothesis (Pelagic larvae and adult ancestor) Panarticulata hypothesis: (Segmentated annelid-like ancestor) Cloudinomorpha hypothesis: (Biphasic Sedentary sessile adult and Pelagic larvae) (embryonic dome) in
Cloudinidae and
Pterobranchia, this structure along with other characteristics could have been present in the common ancestor of the bilaterals. The recent model by
Alexander V. Martynov and
Tatiana A. Korshunova revives the idea of a sessile sedentary biphasic ancestor.). It also considers various phylogenetic, paleontological and molecular data, relates the adult and ancestral form of anthozoans (from which
jellyfish,
placozoans,
nephrozoans, and perhaps
proarticulates are derived), in turn derived from an ancestral organization shared between
choanoflagellates,
sponges and
parahoxozoans. This argues that theories involving a mobile urbilaterian cause problems with palaeontological and morphological data in relation to groups within and outside Bilateria. So members of Proarticulata are an evolutionary dead end rather
Conotubus and
Multiconotubus) are basal (and therefore bilateral) nephrozoans, because they have considerable similarity with the
tubariums of sedentary
pterobranchs, as well as with the
shells of semi-mobile
hyoliths and mobile
mollusks, this taking into account the ontogeny of the cloudinids. but rather is a paraphyletic grade from which several taxa derive that may or may not conserve the ancestral clonality of basal metazoans, but instead of cloudinids having an annelid-type gut, it would instead be a U-shaped digestive tube, in fact the relationship between
Cloudina and
annelids is denied. The hypothesis of annelid-like ancestor is rejected, due to the independent evolution of segmentation and complete metamerism of several groups of bilaterians (
annelids,
panarthropods,
chordates and
proarticulates); On the other hand, the urbilaterian would be an animal with a U-shaped gut, with
deuterostomic characteristics that hemichordates and
lophophorates among other groups conserve, a stolon that holds the organism inside a tube secreted from the embryonic form as a
dome or
protoconch, a semi-metamerism derived from the formation of mesoderm from the gastrovascular cavity of an anthozoan-like animal. This form of urbilaterian: • Smooths the transition between anthozoan-like polypoids and various groups of bilaterians. • Takes into account the paraphyly of
Cycloneuralia,
Lophophorata and potentially
Deuterostomia. • The basal location of priapulids among ecdysozoans. Followed by the zero similarity between the priapulids with the
cephalozoans that at the time were pointed out as ancestors of the arthropods. • The hastily rejected possible homology of
ambulacrarian,
bryozoan and
brachiozoan tentacles. • The qualities of the common ancestor of mollusks as an animal with a single shell rather than a qiton-like animal. • The location of basal polychaetes such as
Oweniidae with still conserved deuterostome characteristics. • The similarities between
hyoliths and mollusks. • The derived and non-ancestral position of the annelids,
flatworms and perhaps the
xenacoelomorphs. The common ancestor of modern bilaterals would then be more similar to modern pterobranchs, although they would not be completely identical to them. The location of Ctenophora (
Myriazoa hypothesis) should not change the hypothesis since it has been left aside taking only into account the molecular and morphological development of
Choanoflagellatea, Porifera and Cnidaria. ==See also==