Literature DB >> 24909326

On the origin of a novel parasitic-feeding mode within suspension-feeding barnacles.

David John Rees1, Christoph Noever1, Jens Thorvald Høeg2, Anders Ommundsen1, Henrik Glenner3.   

Abstract

In his monograph on Cirripedia from 1851, Darwin pointed to a highly unusual, plateless, and most likely parasitic barnacle of uncertain phylogenetic affinity. Darwin's barnacle was Anelasma squalicola, found on deep-water sharks of the family Etmopteridae, or lantern sharks. The barnacle is uncommon and is therefore rarely studied. Recent observations by us have shown that they occur at an unusually high prevalence on the velvet belly lantern shark, Etmopterus spinax, in restricted fjord areas of western Norway. A phylogenetic analysis based on ribosomal DNA data (16S, 18S, and 28S) from 99 selected barnacle species, including all available pedunculate barnacle sequences from GenBank, shows that A. squalicola is most closely related (sister taxon) to the pedunculate barnacle Capitulum mitella. Both C. mitella and species of Pollicipes, situated one node higher in the tree, are conventional suspension feeders from the rocky intertidal. Our phylogenetic analysis now makes it possible to establish morphological homologies between A. squalicola and its sister taxon and provides the evolutionary framework to explain the unprecedented transition from a filter-feeding barnacle to a parasitic mode of life.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24909326     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.05.030

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  9 in total

1.  Megadenus atrae n. sp., an endoparasitic eulimid gastropod (Mollusca) from the black sea cucumber Holothuria atra Jaeger (Aspidochirotida: Holothuriidae) in the Indo-West Pacific.

Authors:  Tsuyoshi Takano; Anders Warén; Yasunori Kano
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2017-05-28       Impact factor: 1.431

2.  Tiny individuals attached to a new Silurian arthropod suggest a unique mode of brood care.

Authors:  Derek E G Briggs; Derek J Siveter; David J Siveter; Mark D Sutton; David Legg
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-04-04       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Genomic Characterization of the Barnacle Balanus improvisus Reveals Extreme Nucleotide Diversity in Coding Regions.

Authors:  Magnus Alm Rosenblad; Anna Abramova; Ulrika Lind; Páll Ólason; Stefania Giacomello; Björn Nystedt; Anders Blomberg
Journal:  Mar Biotechnol (NY)       Date:  2021-05-01       Impact factor: 3.619

4.  Caught in the act: phenotypic consequences of a recent shift in feeding strategy of the shark barnacle Anelasma squalicola (Lovén, 1844).

Authors:  Anders Ommundsen; Christoph Noever; Henrik Glenner
Journal:  Zoomorphology       Date:  2016-01-08       Impact factor: 1.326

5.  Characterization of longitudinal canal tissue in the acorn barnacle Amphibalanus amphitrite.

Authors:  Chenyue Wang; Janna N Schultzhaus; Chris R Taitt; Dagmar H Leary; Lisa C Shriver-Lake; Daniel Snellings; Samantha Sturiale; Stella H North; Beatriz Orihuela; Daniel Rittschof; Kathryn J Wahl; Christopher M Spillmann
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-12-10       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Towards a barnacle tree of life: integrating diverse phylogenetic efforts into a comprehensive hypothesis of thecostracan evolution.

Authors:  Christine Ewers-Saucedo; Christopher L Owen; Marcos Pérez-Losada; Jens T Høeg; Henrik Glenner; Benny K K Chan; Keith A Crandall
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2019-08-16       Impact factor: 2.984

7.  Shift of Feeding Mode in an Epizoic Stalked Barnacle Inducing Gall Formation of Host Sea Urchin.

Authors:  Luna Yamamori; Makoto Kato
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2020-02-26

8.  Metazoan parasite communities of two deep-sea elasmobranchs: the southern lanternshark, Etmopterus granulosus, and the largenose catshark, Apristurus nasutus, in the Southeastern Pacific Ocean.

Authors:  Juan F Espínola-Novelo; Rubén Escribano; Marcelo E Oliva
Journal:  Parasite       Date:  2018-11-20       Impact factor: 3.000

9.  Chromosome-level genome assembly, annotation, and phylogenomics of the gooseneck barnacle Pollicipes pollicipes.

Authors:  James P Bernot; Pavel Avdeyev; Anton Zamyatin; Niklas Dreyer; Nikita Alexeev; Marcos Pérez-Losada; Keith A Crandall
Journal:  Gigascience       Date:  2022-03-12       Impact factor: 6.524

  9 in total

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