Catomerus

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Catomerus
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Thecostraca
Subclass: Cirripedia
Order: Balanomorpha
Family: Catophragmidae
Genus: Catomerus
Pilsbry, 1916
Species:
C. polymerus
Binomial name
Catomerus polymerus
(Darwin, 1854)
Synonyms

Catophragmus polymerus Darwin, 1854

Catomerus is a monotypic genus of intertidal/shallow water acorn barnacle that is found in warm temperate waters of Australia. The genus and species is very easily identified by whorls of small plates surrounding the base of the primary shell wall; no other shoreline barnacle species in the Southern Hemisphere has that feature. This species is considered to be a relic, as these plates are found only in primitive living lineages of acorn barnacles or in older fossil species. The fact that this is an intertidal species is unusual, because living primitive relic species are often found in more isolated habitats such as deep ocean basins and abyssal hydrothermal vents.

Catomeris polymerus small cluster, not crowded. Picture is very clear, showing operculars, shell plates, and whorls of imbricating basal plates.

Diagnosis and discussion[]

Catomerus is characterized by eight primary shell wall plates, with the entering the sheath, a membraneous basis, and up to eight whorls of basal . The imbricating plates are strongly carinate medially, and are reduced in height, extending only partly up the shell wall. The scutum has a well defined lateral depressor muscle depression.[1]: 82 

The and soft part morphology were re-described in detail by Poltarukha, 2006.[2]: 58  A full synonymy of C. polymerus as at 1976 is provided by Newman & Ross, 1976[3]40

Unlike all other known Balanomorpha, Catomerus has both and . This is a plesiomorphic condition, as ovigerous frenae are a characteristic of barnacles. This structure is not reported in the structurally less derived Chionelasmatidae or Pachylasmatidae.[1]: 82  The ovigerous structures, as folds (branchiae) or finger-like projections (frenae) are tissues to which fertilized eggs adhere to incubate.

Nomenclature[]

  • Type species: Catophragmus polymerus (Darwin, 1854):487[4]
  • Type locality: Living, Twofold Bay, New South Wales, Australia (37°30′S 149°55′E / 37.500°S 149.917°E / -37.500; 149.917, approximately)[1]: 82 
  • Holotype: British Museum[5]: 335 

Habitat and geography[]

The maximum observed geographic range of Catomerus is from New South Wales to Western Australia, and Tasmania, where it mostly inhabits the northern coast. Within this range, occurrences are not continuous, and apparently constrained by temperature, substrate preference, and wave action. Catomerus will not grow around abundant mussels.[6]: 20 [1]: 82 

Catomerus prefers warm temperate seas, and breeds mainly during the austral winter, at temperatures ranging from 14 °C to 17 °C, and sublittoral to lower water depths.[1]: 83 

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e Ross, A.; W. A. Newman (2001). "The Catophragmidae: members of the basal balanomprph radiation". Sessile Organisms. 18 (2): 77–91.
  2. ^ Poltarukha, O. P. (2006). Identification Atlas of the Superfamily Chthamaloidea barnacles (Cirripedia Thoracica) in the World Ocean. Moscow: KMK Scientific Press, Ltd. pp. 1–198.
  3. ^ Newman, W. A.; A. Ross (1976). "Revision of the Balanomorph Barnacles including a catalog of the species". Memoirs of San Diego Society of Natural History. 9: 1–108.
  4. ^ Darwin, Charles (1854). A monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia with figures of all species. The Balanidae, the Verrucidae, etc. London: Ray Society. pp. 1–684.
  5. ^ a b Pilsbry, H. A. (1916). "The sessile Barnacles (Cirripedia) contained in the collections of the U.S. National Museum; including a monograph of the American species". Smithsonian Institution United States National Museum Bulletin. 93: 1–366.
  6. ^ Pope, E. (1965). "A review of Australian and some Indomalayan Chthamalidae (Crustacea: Cirripedia)". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 90 (1): 9–77.

External links[]

Data related to Catomerus at Wikispecies

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