About: Malacostraca is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 186 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3179 citations. The topic is also known as: malacostracans.
TL;DR: The present analysis supports the basal position of the Stomatopoda, and suggests a sister-group relationship is suggested between Euphausiacea and Peracarida (including Thermosbaenacea), with the Syncarida as the sister group to both taxa.
Abstract: The Malacostraca comprises about 28 000 species with a broad disparity in morphology, anatomy, embryology, behaviour and ecology. The phylogenetic relationships of the major taxa are still under debate. Is the Leptostraca the sister group of the remaining Malacostraca, or is this taxon more closely related to other Crustacea? Does the Stomatopoda or the Bathynellacea represent the most basal taxon within the remaining taxa? Is the Peracarida monophyletic or are some peracarid taxa more closely related to other ‘caridoid’ taxa? Is the Thermosbaenacea part of the Peracarida or its sister group, and how much support is there for a taxon Amphipoda + Isopoda? To answer these questions a phylogenetic analysis of the Malacostraca combining different phylogenetic approaches was undertaken. In a first step, the monophyly of the Malacostraca including the Leptostraca is shown using the ‘Hennigian approach’. A computer cladistic analysis of the Malacostraca was carried out with NONA and PEE-WEE, based on 93 characters from morphology, anatomy and embryology. Nineteen higher malacostracan taxa are included in our analysis. Taxa whose representatives are exclusively fossils were not included. The Leptostraca was used as an operational out-group. The present analysis supports the basal position of the Stomatopoda. Syncarida and Peracarida (including Thermosbaenacea) are supported as monophyletic, the Eucarida is not. Instead a sister-group relationship is suggested between Euphausiacea and Peracarida (including Thermosbaenacea), with the Syncarida as the sister group to both taxa. Certain embryonic characters are interpreted as support for the monophyly of the Peracarida (without Thermosbaenacea) because convergences or reversals of these characters seem implausible. Within the Peracarida, the Mysidacea (Lophogastrida + Mysida) represents the sister group to the remaining taxa. A sister-group relationship between Amphipoda and Isopoda is not supported.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the evolutionary differences between Marine and Freshwater Invertebrates, and present an overview of the Freshwater Fauna and its relationships with the rest of the world.
Abstract: Introduction. Magnitude of the Freshwater Environment. The Chemical Divergence. Origins of the Freshwater Fauna. Freshwater Emigrants to the Sea. Major Distinctions Between Marine and Freshwater Invertebrates. Evolutionary Shortcomings in Freshwaters. Atypical Freshwater Habitats. Dispersal and Barriers. The Epidemic of Exotics. Food Webs. Collecting Ethics. Comment Porifera. Cnidaria. Platyhelminthes. Nemertea. Gastrotricha. Rotifera. Nematoda. Nematomorpha. Tardigrada. Entoprocta. Ectoprocta. Annelida. Mollusca. Arachnida. Introduction to the Crustacea. Phyllopodous Branchiopoda. Cladoceran Branchiopoda. Copepoda. Branchiura. Ostracoda. Minor Malacostraca. Isopoda. Amphipoda. Decapoda. Appendix: Reagents, Solutions, and Laboratory Items. Index.
TL;DR: The results indicate that the shape of the developing larval brain in A. salina closely resembles that in malacostracan embryos and the organization of the central complex as well as the tritocerebral innervation pattern of the labrum is homologous in this species and in Malacstraca.