Any member of either
two invertebrate subphyla of the
Phylum Chordata the Tunicata
(sea squirts, salps, etc.) and the Cephalochordata
(amphioxus). Like the remaining subphylum of the chordates, the Vertebrata,
the protochordates have a hollow dorsal nerve cord, gill slits, and a stiff
supporting rod, the notochord, the forerunner of the backbone. The
protochordates differ chiefly from the vertebrates in not having a backbone.
Recent protochordates are thought to have evolved from the same ancestral stock
as that which gave rise to the vertebrates.
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