A sclerite (Greek language σκληρός]], sklēros, meaning "hardness") is a hardened body part. In various branches of biology the term is applied to various structures, but not as a rule to vertebrate anatomical features such as bones and teeth. Instead it refers most commonly to the hardened parts of arthropod and the internal of invertebrates such as certain sponges and Alcyonacea. In paleontology, a scleritome is the complete set of sclerites of an organism, often all that is known from fossil invertebrates.
When sclerites are organised into an unarticulated structure, that structure may be referred to as a scleritome, a term largely used in paleontology.
Dorsal sclerites of a body segment, often plate-like, are known as Tergum. Similarly the ventral sclerites of a body segment are referred to as sternites. Separate sclerites on the lateral aspects of body segments, the pleura, are called pleurites.
Many other invertebrates grow a few hard parts, largely mineralised, as Statocyst and similar structures, but those are not generally referred to as sclerites.
Clamps, the main attachment structure of the parasitic polyopisthocotylean flatworms,Bychowsky, B. E. (1961). Monogenetic Trematodes their systematics and phylogeny. English translation edited by W. J. Hargis Jr. Washington: American Institute of Biological Sciences.Kearn, G. C. (2004). Leeches, Lice and Lampreys. A natural history of skin and gill parasites of fishes. Dordrecht: Springer. are composed of various sclerites and associated musculature, located on a posterior organ called the haptor. Clamps are specialized structures attached to the host fish, generally to its gill.
Although sclerites are of considerable importance in the study of extant animals, in palaeontology they are of far greater relative importance because they often are the only parts of an animal that fossilize at all, let alone well or clearly. Many extinct groups are known only from sclerites, leaving moot the question of what their gross anatomy might have looked like.
An example of the use of the term in paleontology is to describe hollow calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate or calcium phosphate plates grown as body armor by a number of Early Cambrian animals. Unlike Porifera spicules, Early Cambrian sclerites appear to be external armor rather than internal structural elements. Sclerites are found on a curious collection of early animals including a common spongelike animal called Chancelloria; an armored slug-like form Wiwaxia; an armored worm with a pair of brachiopoda-like shells Halkieria; and another armored worm Microdictyon that is generally considered to be a lobopodia/onychophora.
It has been suggested that the sclerites of the Cambrian Wiwaxia are homologous with the bristles of annelida. At least one modern gastropoda mollusc living near deep sea hydrothermal vents has structures made of iron sulfides similar to some Cambrian sclerites.
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