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Short communication, Note

https://doi.org/10.32582/aa.62.1.6

The occurrence of the coronuloid barnacle Chelonibia Leach, 1817 as an encruster on mammalian bone in the central Mediterranean Sea

Alberto Collareta orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-6513-8882 ; Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Pisa, via S. Maria 53, Pisa 56126, Italy
Giovanni Bianucci ; Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Pisa, via S. Maria 53, Pisa 56126, Italy


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Abstract

Among the turtle and whale barnacles (Coronuloidea: Chelonibiidae, Coronulidae, †Emersoni-idae and Platylepadidae), the members of the chelonibiid species Chelonibia testudinaria (Linnaeus, 1758) are known as epizoic barnacles that can attach to a rather wide spectrum of substrates (pri-marily sea turtles, crabs and sirenians). At present, three living morphs of C. testudinaria have been recognised; of these, the less host-specific is the patula morph, which also displays a remarkably simple, unspecialised shell architecture. Here we report on several chelonibiid shells, referred to the patula morph of C. testudinaria, encrusting a cetacean scapula collected from the floor of the Adriatic Sea facing Salento (Apulia Region, southeastern Italy) and tentatively referred to Tursiops truncatus (Montagu, 1821). This is one of the few records worldwide of a coronuloid barnacle from an inanimate substrate, as well as the second as an encruster on mammalian bone. Such an unusual occurrence is then briefly discussed in the broader framework of the coronuloid commensalism and substrate habits.

Keywords

Cirripedia; Chelonibiidae; epibiosis; host preferences; symbiosis; turtle barnacle

Hrčak ID:

260967

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/260967

Publication date:

26.7.2021.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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