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Putative hydroid symbionts recorded by bioclaustrations in fossil molluscan shells: a revision and reinterpretation of the cecidogenus .i.Rodocanalis./i.

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    SYSNO ASEP0569831
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve WOS
    TitlePutative hydroid symbionts recorded by bioclaustrations in fossil molluscan shells: a revision and reinterpretation of the cecidogenus Rodocanalis
    Author(s) Wisshak, M. (DE)
    Schneider, S. (DE)
    Mikuláš, Radek (GLU-S) RID, SAI
    Richiano, S. (AR)
    Ramil, F. (ES)
    Wilson, M. A. (US)
    Article numbere1484
    Source TitlePapers in Palaeontology. - : Wiley - ISSN 2056-2799
    Roč. 9, č. 2 (2023)
    Number of pages21 s.
    Languageeng - English
    CountryGB - United Kingdom
    Keywordsbioclaustration ; bioerosion ; symbiosis ; cecidotaxonomy ; ichnotaxonomy ; Rodocanalis
    OECD categoryPaleontology
    Method of publishingOpen access
    Institutional supportGLU-S - RVO:67985831
    UT WOS000945851900001
    EID SCOPUS85153726541
    DOI10.1002/spp2.1484
    AnnotationThe fossil record yields a peculiar phenomenon in different kinds of molluscan shells: bioclaustrations formed around (epi)symbionts during growth of the hosts' shell margin. Four morphologies, two of them formerly considered bioerosion traces, are here united in the parataxonomy of bioclaustration structures under the revised cecidogenus Rodocanalis. These are: (1) simple linear grooves (Rodocanalis linearis csp. nov.) formed below the periostracum in Pleistocene to Recent endobenthic bivalves, (2) series of distally ramifying grooves (Rodocanalis runicus) in Silurian orthoconic nautiloids, (3) irregular networks of grooves (Rodocanalis reticulatus) in Jurassic to Cretaceous bivalves and gastropods, and (4) regular reticulate networks (Rodocanalis geometricus csp. nov.) in Jurassic to Cretaceous gastropods. The linear grooves might be associated with commensal worms, while multiple lines of reasoning point towards hydrozoan symbionts in the case of the branched and anastomosing grooves. After the hydrozoan larva settles and the first polyp becomes fixed on the calcareous ostracum at the shell margin, the process of bioclaustration commences when the periostracum surrounds the base of the polyp, which moves towards the external shell surface, while the hydrorhizae develop in the only possible direction: towards the shell growth margin. This enables new polyps to originate at the shell edge by budding, while the bioclaustration of the stolonial hydrorhizae advances. We consider the nature of this symbiotic relationship as mutualism, with the hydrozoan symbiont taking advantage of the host's feeding current or food debris, and the molluscan host profiting from the defensive capability of the hydrozoan's cnidocysts.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Geology
    ContactJana Popelková, popelkova@gli.cas.cz, Sabina Janíčková, Tel.: 233 087 272
    Year of Publishing2024
    Electronic addresshttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/spp2.1484
Number of the records: 1  

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