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1.
The linguloid brachiopod shell family has been the focus of several studies because of the similarity in the composition of the mineral phase of these shells to that of human bone. However, ultrastructural features of Lingula shells have not yet been fully demonstrated at high magnification using Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and Electron Diffraction. Ultrastructural characterization of the mineral phase in Lingula shells will improve our understanding of the biomineralization processes and mineral/organic interaction in more complex systems such as in bone or in other human mineralized tissues. In this study, the mineral phase of Lingula adamsi was characterized using a combination of ultrastructural and crystallographic techniques. The results showed that L. adamsi shells consist of apatite crystals of varying size, shape, and orientation in different areas of the shell. The c-axis of apatite was parallel to the shell surface and crystals were organized in different laminae. Compared to trabecular bovine bone, L. adamsi shells demonstrated a higher crystallinity and a lower amount of carbonate and organic compounds. This study therefore demonstrated how dissimilar organic matrix between L. adamsi shell and trabecular bone can modify the ultrastructural characteristics of apatite crystals in these two biomineralized tissues.  相似文献   

2.
Log-probability curves of grain-size distribution have been analysed of sediments collected in three previously described localities occupied by either Lingula anatina or L. reevei (Brachiopoda, Inarticulata). The grain-size population transported by saltation (average about 92–223 μm), generally associated with traction load population, determines Lingula distribution. The two preferential substrates of both studied species (density > 100 individuals/m-2) are compact and stable sediments under moderate water currents: either coarse sands and gravels clogged by fine and very fine sands, or fine, very fine and clay sands (saltation populations more than 60%). As soon as the suspension population and/or traction increase in the sediment to the detriment of the saltation population, the density of Lingula decreases rapidly. Nevertheless, if grain-size distribution and populations have a primordial function for Lingula , other ecological features (i.e. the environmental fauna, high occurrence of digging species, the available nutrients) will affect the distribution and sometimes become prevailing. The absence of important changes in the shell shape of Lingula since its origin suggests that the grain-size requirements remained about the same.  相似文献   

3.
A fine hexagonal network of microscopic ridges has been discovered on the internal shell surface of the cosmopolitan Lower Palaeozoic inarticulate genus Lingulella. The micro-ornamentation has been recognised on all well-preserved specimens examined, from Cambrian and Ordovician successions in Ireland, North America, Gt. Britain, Spitzbergen, and China. Examination of the mantle of the related Recent genus Lingula revealed that the outer epithelial cells are arranged in a hexagonal close-packed pattern comparable in size and form to the micro-ornamentation in the fossil shells. This fact, along with the discovery of a polygonal pattern on some organic layers in the Lingula shell, suggests that the micro-ornamentation in fossil Lingulella is the mould of the outer epithelium responsible for shell secretion. No trace of epithelial moulds has yet been found in specimens of Lingula from younger Palaeozoic successions. This difference may prove to be a useful diagnostic feature in distinguishing linguloid inarticulates from one another. Epithelial moulds , Lingulella, Palaeoglossa, Lingula, Cambrian, Ordovician, Recent.  相似文献   

4.
Cherns. Lesley 1979 01 15: The environmental significance of Lingula in the Ludlow Series of the Welsh Borderland and Wales. Lethaia . Vol. 12. pp. 35–46, Oslo. ISSN 0024–1164.
The inarticulate brachiopod Lingula is commonly regarded as an indicator of very nearshore environments, particularly when found in monospecific assemblages. However, neither of the two common species in the Lower Leintwardine Beds, L. lewisii and L. lata . which occur commonly in such associations, have distributions indicative of such an environment. Their Occurrence correlates closely with the Leintwardinian palaeogeography. The former species is concentrated in shelf areas, the latter is confined to the basin; the two distributions overlap little. Individuals of both species are found articulated and perpendicular to the bedding, apparently in situ . Hence, the species may be inferred to have equivalent, infaunal modes of life comparable to living representatives of the family. The basinal distribution of L. lara is an original feature. The depth of the actively subsiding basin was relatively great, judging from sedimentological and palaeogeographical evidence. Therefore, L. lata was a species adapted to 'deep-water' environments. The lingulid distributions, reviewed against the concept of brachiopod depth-related communities previously defined for the Ludlow show the latter to be inapplicable in the Leintwardinian. The depth significance postulated for the recurrent species associations typical of the shelf sequences cannot be accepted.  相似文献   

5.
Living lingulid brachiopods are ubiquitous in low-latitude, marine infaunas. Lingula occurs throughout the Pacific and Indian oceans with the only Atlantic species, L. parva, confined to West Africa. Glottidia is restricted to offshore America from Virginia to California and Peru, and is assumed to have descended from a Pacific Lingula during the early Tertiary. Lingulid organophosphatic shells differ structurally. That of Glottidia is characterizedby trellised rods (baculate); that of Indo-Pacific species of Lingula by spheroidal and rod-like microstructures (virgose); and that of L. parva by apatitic rods arranged as spherulites. A spherulitic fabric is unknown in fossil lingulids, but the distinction between GlottidiaLingula can be traced back to the Carboniferous, which accords with the deep molecular divergence between the two genera. The common occurrence of lingulids with baculate shells in European post-Palaeozoic sediments suggests that ancestral Glottidia entered the Atlantic by the Tethyan Current during the Late Cretaceous/early Cenozoic, and migrated into the Pacific before the formation of the Panama Isthmus. Penecontemporaneously, antecedents of L. parva possibly migrated from east Tethys along the trans-Saharan seaway.  相似文献   

6.
An electrophoretic survey of enzyme variation demonstrates that the genomes of three populations of the inarticulate brachiopod Lingula contain a higher level of variability than the average for marine, tropical invertebrates, and for other brachiopods. Genetic distances between populations from localities up to 1200 km apart were very small, indicating that the populations belong to a single species, L. anatina Lamarck. These data suggest that larval dispersal is capable of maintaining a homogeneous gene pool over this range. It is predicted that the dispersal mechanism is sufficiently efficacious to ensure gene-flow throughout most of the Indo-West Pacific distribution of Lingula. Further investigations of genetic distance should support the hypothesis, based on studies of adult and larval morphology, that many presently recognized species should be reassigned to L. anatina.  相似文献   

7.
Size-frequency data collected in large samples from five populations of Lingula anatina from North Queensland intertidal sandflats conformed to previously known brachiopod size-frequency distributions. Probability paper analysis of the samples and constituent sub-samples confirmed that all the distributions had a hidden poly-modality resulting from a long but defined breeding season. Two patterns of annual recruitment were revealed; the first is the periodic failure of the populations to gain recruits and the second is one of patchy distribution of settlement cohorts. These patterns introduce sampling bias into the derivation of lingulid size frequency curves unless compensated by more extensive sampling methods than have previously been considered adequate. The interpretation of year classes has enabled a growth curve to be derived. The populations inhabited predominantly sandy sub-strates and displayed aggregated distributions. Littoral distribution of the species is regarded as optimal rather than marginal.  相似文献   

8.
Russian Journal of Marine Biology - The reproduction, growth, and variability of the shape of the shell in the gastropod Boreotrophon candelabrum (Reeve, 1848) from Peter the Great Bay (Sea of...  相似文献   

9.
Species of the gastropod genus Larochea Finlay, 1927 are shownto be scissurellids without an anal shell slit or foramen. TheNew Zealand species, L. miranda Finlay, 1927 and L. secundaPowell, 1937, brood their young in the right subpallial cavityagainst a modified inner lip that is set well behind the aperturalplane. Larochea scitula n.sp. is based on shells from WanganellaBank, southern Norfolk Ridge. Larocheopsis n. gen. is introducedfor a minute species from off northern New Zealand that lacksa shell brood chamber. Larochea miranda and Larocheopsis amplexan.sp. are either gonochoristic with smaller males or consecutivehermaphrodites, while Larochea secunda and L. scitula are evidentlygonochoristic, having mature males and females of similar size. (Received 23 July 1992; accepted 10 December 1992)  相似文献   

10.
A venerid bivalve Phacosoma japonicum (Reeve) occurring commonly in the Japanese coastal area preserves periodic growth lines in the shell cross-section. Long-term shell growth patterns of this species have been traced for many individuals on the intertidal flat of the Seto Inland Sea, west Japan. Sclerochronological analysis of these individuals and specimens collected monthly shows that several growth cessation marks within their shells are formed during the winter of each year prior to spawning. Hence the marks were used for age and growth rate determinations. As large individuals showed little shell growth for more than two years after the formation of 7 or 8 annual increments, this species probably has a lifespan of more than ten years. Shell growth patterns of this species based on annual increments can be accurately approximated by a von Bertalanffy curve. The number of microgrowth increments formed during a year tends to decrease with age, although it varies markedly among specimens of the same age. Furthermore, even in summer during rapid shell growth, the microgrowth increments do not represent daily and/or sub-daily tidal rhythms in many specimens. The results of this study and those by several authors strongly suggest that the annual increments are the key for age and growth rate determinations of both living and fossil bivalve species.  相似文献   

11.
12.
We investigated variation in shell size and shape of marinesnail species of the Littorina saxatilis complex (L. saxatilis,L. compressa and L. arcana) using geometric morphometric methods.These morphologically similar periwinkle species that are commonin the European intertidal have presented many problems fordiagnosis based on morphology alone. A discriminant analysisdemonstrated that geometric morphometrics is very efficientfor diagnosing individuals to species among sympatric populations.We successfully diagnosed an average of 96% of the specimens(with 85.7–100% correct diagnosis for specific comparisons).The diagnosis capability of this method is absolute at the populationlevel. This makes the technique potentially useful for the designof manipulative field or laboratory experiments. Moreover, ageometric-morphometric analysis was also accomplished in twosnail ecotypes (H and M) of L. saxatilis from rocky shores ofNE England which are apparently adapted to different degreesof wave exposure. We found that the H (exposed) ecotype hasa relatively rounded shell shape with a bigger aperture, whereasthe M (protected) ecotype has a smaller aperture. (Received 23 March 2006; accepted 25 January 2007)  相似文献   

13.
There are over 10,000 species of venomous marine molluscs, the vast majority of these, which are generally referred to as "turrids", are traditionally assigned to a single family, Turridae (Powell 1966). Here, we provide an initial molecular analysis of the type genus of the family, Turris R?ding, 1798, thought to be among the most well characterized groups in the family. We show that the type genus is not monophyletic. We analyzed specimens conventionally assigned to 9 different Turris species using molecular markers, combined with the shell morphology and radular anatomy whenever feasible. The results suggest that species assigned to the genus Turris, provisionally assigned to two different subgenera are not monophyletic. Five previously described species belong to the subgenus Turris (s.s.) R?ding 1798: Turris babylonia, (Linne, 1758), Turris grandis, (J. E. Gray, 1834), Turris dollyae, (Olivera, 1999), Turris normandavidsoni (Olivera, 1999) and Turris spectabilis (Reeve, 1843). With a change in species designation, Turris assyria (formerly T. babylonia1010) is added to a well-defined clade, which is in turn more closely related to Lophiotoma and Gemmula species than to the other five Turris species. We show that these five species conventionally assigned to Turris do not belong in the same subgenus, and form a clade provisionally designated as AnnulaturrisPowell, 1966: Turris annulata, (Reeve, 1843), Turris undosa, (Lamarck, 1816), Turris cristata, (Vera-Peláez, Vega-Luz, and Lozano-Francisco 2000) Turris cryptorrhaphe (G. B. Sowerby, 1825) and Turris nadaensis (Azuma, 1973). Implications of the molecular phylogenetic results and its correlation with radular morphology are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
This paper deals with the ecology, settlement age structure, and shell variability of the gastropodCeratostoma burnetti (Adams et Reeve) (Muricidae) from Pos’eta Bay (Sea of Japan). A change in the shell structure occurs between the open and inner bights of the bay: the shell sculpture smoothes, the ratio of body whorl diameter to height grows, the mass and degree of borer invasion of the shell increase, and lastly, the relative mollusk size decreases. The given changes are hypothesized to result from borer influence as well as from differences in salinity and oxygen concentration in the studied regions.  相似文献   

15.
We describe a new species of carcinoecium-forming sea anemone, Stylobates birtlesisp. n., from sites 590-964 m deep in the Coral Sea, off the coast of Queensland, Australia. An anemone of this genus settles on a gastropod shell inhabited by a hermit crab, then covers and extends the shell to produce a chitinous structure termed a carcinoecium. Stylobates birtlesisp. n. is symbiotic with the hermit crab Sympagurus trispinosus (Balss, 1911). The nature of marginal sphincter muscle and nematocyst size and distribution distinguish Stylobates birtlesi sp. n. from other species in the genus. The four known species of Stylobates are allopatric, each inhabiting a separate ocean basin of the Indo-West Pacific. We also extend the known range of Stylobates loisetteae in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Western Australia.  相似文献   

16.
17.
C. R. Fletcher 《Hydrobiologia》1995,309(1-3):73-87
The strength of molluscan shells has been shown to vary in adaptive ways in a number of species and one of the main factors thought to be involved is shell-crushing by predators. A recent study found that the sibling species of flat periwinkle Littorina obtusata and Littorina mariae showed significant differences in the rates at which shell strength increased with shell length in specimens which had been collected from the same location, where the species were sympatric. This paper describes differences between the shells of the two species from a number of localities around Milford Haven in Dyfed, Wales, and local geographical variation in the shells. Littorina mariae, which is normally found at lower tidal levels than L. obtusata, matures at a smaller shell length. Both species reinforce the shell as they grow since shell strength, determined as the maximum force applied by a hydraulic tensile testing machine before the shell cracked, is strongly positively allometric; it increases at a rate close to the cube of shell length whilst isometric growth would result in strength increasing in proportion to the square of shell length. Because L. mariae matures earlier and reinforces the shell at a smaller size, the mature shell of L. mariae is substantially stronger on average than that of a similar sized but immature L. obtusata. At maturity the shell strengths of the two species are not very different despite the substantial difference in mean shell length. Strength varies significantly from shore to shore, and with the level of the shore from which the animals were collected. Strength increases down the shore in both species. Shell strength decreases with exposure to wave action in L. mariae but increases with exposure in L. obtusata; there is also substantial shore-to-shore variation which is not explained by exposure. Path analysis was used to explore the relationship between shell strength and other measured shell parameters (mass, length, height, thickness). The best predictor of shell strength in both species is a parameter which is heavily positively loaded on LN (shell mass) and strongly offset by negative loadings on LN (shell length) and LN (shell height). This is logical because for a given shell length a heavier shell will be thicker and stronger, whilst for a given shell mass a bigger shell will be thinner and therefore weaker. Such differential variation of shell mass and shell length explains most of the geographical variation observed in shell strength; shells are stronger in snails collected from one place than from another because, for the same shell length they are heavier or, to put it the other way, because at the same shell mass, they are smaller.  相似文献   

18.
Catesby  Simon M.  McKillup  Stephen C. 《Hydrobiologia》1998,367(1-3):131-138
The intertidal gastropod, Littoraria articulata (Philippi), is common on the trunks of mangroves at Coorooman Creek, Central Queensland. Individuals of shell length less than 3 mm were only found in empty tests of the barnacle Hexaminius popeiana (Foster). Larger snails were exposed on the trunk or occasionally in crevices such as knot holes. The relationship between shell length and shell strength differed between barnacle dwelling and larger L. articulata: in both cases it was linear, but the rate of increase of strength with increasing length was significantly greater for barnacle dwelling snails than for exposed ones. In contrast, there was an exponential relationship between shell strength and length for the weaker shelled Littoraria filosa (Sowerby), which occurs higher on the tree and does not inhabit barnacles. The survival of L. articulata was affected by the presence of crevices: significantly fewer disappeared from posts with artificial crivices than from those which lacked them, and some snails testhered to posts appeared to have been eaten by fish. The importance of crevices is discussed in relation to predation pressure, growth and habitat selection by larval L. articulata. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
田螺科五种螺的核型研究   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
以早期胚胎细胞为材料,用火焰干燥法制片,对分布于我国湖北省武汉市近郊的常见田螺科(Viviparidae)五种螺的核型进行了分析。结果:两种圆田螺的染色体数和国外报道的同一属的种类的一致。而三种环棱螺的染色体数,则较国外报道的另两种的少得多。在铜锈环棱螺的核型中,其m组的第一对和sm组的第四对染色体上,具有明显的随体,出现频率甚高。  相似文献   

20.
Many species of amphibians in the wet tropics of Australia have experienced population declines linked with the emergence of a skin-invasive chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis. An innate defense, antimicrobial peptides produced by granular glands in the skin, may protect some species from disease. Here we present evidence that supports this hypothesis. We tested ten synthesized peptides produced by Australian species, and natural peptide mixtures from five Queensland rainforest species. Natural mixtures and most peptides tested in isolation inhibited growth of B. dendrobatidis in vitro. The three most active peptides (caerin 1.9, maculatin 1.1, and caerin 1.1) were found in the secretions of non-declining species (Litoria chloris, L. caerulea, and L. genimaculata). Although the possession of a potent isolated antimicrobial peptide does not guarantee protection from infection, non-declining species (L. lesueuri and L. genimaculata) inhabiting the rainforest of Queensland possess mixtures of peptides that may be more protective than those of the species occurring in the same habitat that have recently experienced population declines associated with chytridiomycosis (L. nannotis, L. rheocola, and Nyctimystes dayi). This study demonstrates that in vitro effectiveness of skin peptides correlates with the degree of decline in the face of an emerging pathogen. Further research is needed to assess whether this non-specific immune defense may be useful in predicting disease susceptibility in other species.  相似文献   

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