14 research outputs found

    Shell form of Leiosolenus curtus boring into dead shells of Tetraclita japonica in Manazuru, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan

    Get PDF
    Leiosolenus curtus (Lischke, 1874) was collected from dead shells of Tetraclitajaponica (Pilsbry, 1916) in Manazuru, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is known that L.curtus bores into limestone, sandstone, and mudstone, however, L. curtus boring into deadshells of T. japonica has not been reported. In this study, the shell form of L. curtus boringinto dead shells was described, and compared with that of the standard L. curtus boring intocalcareous sandstone. The shell size of the former is smaller, and the shell shape is moreinflated and relatively spherical. In the letter, the calcareous encrustation, deposited onthe periostracum, forms vertical folds around the ventral margin, but in dead shell-boring L.curtus , this is smooth. In L. curtus boring into calcareous sandstone, the relative growthequation showed that the shell length grew more rapidly than the shell height, and in L.curtus boring into dead shells, the proportions do not vary regarding shell growth.Leiosolenus has been classified on the basis of the shell form and calcareous encrustation.These two parameters, however, easily change according to the properties of the substratum.Thus, information on the substratum is also necessary for the classification of Leiosolenus.Keywords: Mytilidae, boring bivalves, Leiosolenus curtus, Tetraclita japonica, morphology

    Morphological and Adaptational Evolution Caused by Interaction between Marine Invertebrates, and the Effect of Human Activity on It : Mollusks and Bottom Environment in the Shallow Water of Sagami Bay off Hiratsuka

    Get PDF
    Mollusks and bottom sediment were collected by dredging Sagami Bay off Hiratsuka at depths of 6 to 43m. Five hundred forty specimens belonging to 51 species were obtained. All were warm water species, 45 of which are known only around Japan and 6 of which are distributed from Japan to equatorial regions. Two tropical species, Barbarca tenella (Reeve) and Melanella cf. carchedon (Iredale), have not hitherto been reported in Sagami Bay ; all specimens were juvenile and they are presumably unable to survive the low water temperature in winter. The seafloor at 6 to 13m deep appears to be often turbulent and active burrowing mollusks such as Umbonium costatum (Valenciennes), Glossaulax didyma (Roding) and Olivella japonica Pilsbry live there. The bottom sediment at depths of around 20m is mainly composed of very fine- to fine-grained sand, in which Glycymeris imperialis Kuroda, Nitidotellina hokkaidoensis (Habe) and Lyonsia ventricosa Gould are dominant. The sediment also includes pebbles, on which sessile bivalves like Mytilus galloprovincialis Lamark and Barbarca tenella (Reeve) are attached, indicating a low sedimentation rate. The substrate around 40m deep is very fine-grained sand with 24% mud content, in which Episiphon subroctum Joffreys and Cardiomya gouldiana (Hinds) are dominant
    corecore