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Biology and functional morphology of the watering pot shell Brechites vaginiferus (Bivalvia: Anomalodesmata: Clavagelloidea)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2002

Brian Morton
Affiliation:
The Swire Institute of Marine Science and Department of Ecology and Biodiversity, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong. E-mail: [email protected]
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Abstract

Living individuals of the bivalve ‘watering pot’ superfamily Clavagelloidea were collected from Withnell Bay, Burrup Peninsula, Dampier Archipelago, Western Australia. Details of the anatomy suggest that, in most respects, Brechites vaginiferus is a typical filter-feeding bivalve, albeit encased in a tube of its own secretion. The true shell is tiny (≈ 4 mm long) and surrounded by a ‘saddle’ of initially-secreted adult shell. To this is fused, by an internally produced layer of calcium carbonate, the adventitious tube which comprises a single layer, confirming that it is produced only once. Posteriorly, however, it can be added to internally as ‘plaited ruffles’ creating a multi-layered structure. The anterior watering pot comprises a perforated plate fringed by tubules, with a small pedal aperture. Brechites vaginiferus pumps interstitial water into the mantle cavity via the watering pot, at least principally, not out of it as previously thought. In this way, the animal is either tapping an interstitial source of accessory food, or aerating the anterior end of its burrow (or both). It has also been demonstrated, however, that pumping interstitial water into the mantle cavity via the pedal gape results in hydraulic pressures being built up that extend the siphons. The pedal disc pump, therefore, acts in this amyarian bivalve in the same way as the adductor muscles do in more typical species. The ctenidia collect suspended material in the usual way from seawater and from interstitial water: they do not, however, possess chemoautotrophic sulphur-oxidizing bacteria, and the species is thus not using sulphur as an energy source. Pedal gape feeding is considered to be the ancestral condition not only in the earliest anomalodesmatans, e.g. the Pholadomyidae, but also the autobranchs in general. This has been refined in the Clavagelloidea to create the unique form of the adventitious tube, its watering pot and a wholly surprising lifestyle. Tube form in B. vaginiferus varies in relation to habitat occupied. Its major habitat on Withnell Bay, however, is the riffles of a high-salinity stream draining down the mangrove-fringed shore from the semi-arid land behind. Although much more is now known about B. vaginiferus and ‘watering pot’ shells, no pre-tube juvenile is known and awaits discovery to confirm hypothesized life-history details.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2002 The Zoological Society of London

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