Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia

Freshwater mussels (Unionoida) are a very old group of bivalve molluscs found in rivers, lakes and other wetlands on all continents but Antarctica, which includes 854 species in two superfamilies (Unionoidea and Etherioidea) that are distinguished by larval forms. Larvae of Unionoids (Hyriidae, Marg...

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Main Authors: Klunzinger, M.W., Walker, K., Lymbery, A., Thomson, G.J.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Chulalongkorn University Museum of Natural History 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biology.sc.chula.ac.th/TNH/index.html
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/conferencePresentation/Glochidia-tooth-morphology-of-the-freshwater/991005540968807891
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spelling ftmurdochunivall:oai:alma.61MUN_INST:11135278990007891 2024-09-15T17:46:28+00:00 Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia Klunzinger, M.W. Walker, K. Lymbery, A. Thomson, G.J. 2010 http://www.biology.sc.chula.ac.th/TNH/index.html https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/conferencePresentation/Glochidia-tooth-morphology-of-the-freshwater/991005540968807891 eng eng Chulalongkorn University Museum of Natural History http://www.biology.sc.chula.ac.th/TNH/index.html 991005540968807891 https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/conferencePresentation/Glochidia-tooth-morphology-of-the-freshwater/991005540968807891 alma:61MUN_INST/bibs/991005540968807891 2010 Chulalongkorn University event Conference or Workshop Item 2010 ftmurdochunivall 2024-08-15T00:52:49Z Freshwater mussels (Unionoida) are a very old group of bivalve molluscs found in rivers, lakes and other wetlands on all continents but Antarctica, which includes 854 species in two superfamilies (Unionoidea and Etherioidea) that are distinguished by larval forms. Larvae of Unionoids (Hyriidae, Margaritiferidae and Unionidae) are glochidia, distinct from the lasidia or haustoria of etherioids (Etheriidae, Iridinidae, Mycetopodidae). Unionoids are dioecious and reproduce sexually. Males release sperm into the water, which are then drawn into gills (ctenidia), of the females, where the eggs are fertilized within modified brood chambers (marsupia). The embryos then develop to become mature glochidia, and are brooded in the marsupia. They then attach to a suitable host, generally a fish, on the gills or body surface (often the fins or mouth) where they are encapsulated by epithelial tissue and, as obligate parasites, begin a metamorphosis and emerge as juvenile mussels. The host-glochidia relationship is an obligatory stage in the life cycle of mussels, and also provides a means of dispersal. Glochidial attachment is facilitated by specialized structures on the ventral margin of shells, known as larval teeth, which vary in morphology, but are generally hooked. In Australia, freshwater mussels are represented by 18 species (eight genera) of Hyriidae. Glochidia tooth morphology of Australian Hyriidae has been described for several species and implicated as a useful taxonomic tool to distinguish species. In this poster, we present the first images (Scanning Electron Microscopy) of Westralunio carteri Iredale, 1934 larval teeth, which appear to be unique and may have taxonomic value. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctica Murdoch University Research Portal
institution Open Polar
collection Murdoch University Research Portal
op_collection_id ftmurdochunivall
language English
description Freshwater mussels (Unionoida) are a very old group of bivalve molluscs found in rivers, lakes and other wetlands on all continents but Antarctica, which includes 854 species in two superfamilies (Unionoidea and Etherioidea) that are distinguished by larval forms. Larvae of Unionoids (Hyriidae, Margaritiferidae and Unionidae) are glochidia, distinct from the lasidia or haustoria of etherioids (Etheriidae, Iridinidae, Mycetopodidae). Unionoids are dioecious and reproduce sexually. Males release sperm into the water, which are then drawn into gills (ctenidia), of the females, where the eggs are fertilized within modified brood chambers (marsupia). The embryos then develop to become mature glochidia, and are brooded in the marsupia. They then attach to a suitable host, generally a fish, on the gills or body surface (often the fins or mouth) where they are encapsulated by epithelial tissue and, as obligate parasites, begin a metamorphosis and emerge as juvenile mussels. The host-glochidia relationship is an obligatory stage in the life cycle of mussels, and also provides a means of dispersal. Glochidial attachment is facilitated by specialized structures on the ventral margin of shells, known as larval teeth, which vary in morphology, but are generally hooked. In Australia, freshwater mussels are represented by 18 species (eight genera) of Hyriidae. Glochidia tooth morphology of Australian Hyriidae has been described for several species and implicated as a useful taxonomic tool to distinguish species. In this poster, we present the first images (Scanning Electron Microscopy) of Westralunio carteri Iredale, 1934 larval teeth, which appear to be unique and may have taxonomic value.
format Conference Object
author Klunzinger, M.W.
Walker, K.
Lymbery, A.
Thomson, G.J.
spellingShingle Klunzinger, M.W.
Walker, K.
Lymbery, A.
Thomson, G.J.
Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia
author_facet Klunzinger, M.W.
Walker, K.
Lymbery, A.
Thomson, G.J.
author_sort Klunzinger, M.W.
title Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia
title_short Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia
title_full Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia
title_fullStr Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselWestralunio Carteri (iredale, 1934) OF south-west,Western Australia
title_sort glochidia tooth morphology of the freshwater musselwestralunio carteri (iredale, 1934) of south-west,western australia
publisher Chulalongkorn University Museum of Natural History
publishDate 2010
url http://www.biology.sc.chula.ac.th/TNH/index.html
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/conferencePresentation/Glochidia-tooth-morphology-of-the-freshwater/991005540968807891
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation http://www.biology.sc.chula.ac.th/TNH/index.html
991005540968807891
https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/conferencePresentation/Glochidia-tooth-morphology-of-the-freshwater/991005540968807891
alma:61MUN_INST/bibs/991005540968807891
op_rights 2010 Chulalongkorn University
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