Английская Википедия:Gigantopelta chessoia

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Italic title Шаблон:Taxobox Gigantopelta chessoia is a species of deep sea snail from hydrothermal vents, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Peltospiridae.[1]

Taxonomy

The first information about this species, under the name "Peltospiroidea n. sp." or "peltospiroid gastropod", was published on 3 January 2012.[2] Peltospiroidea is the name of a superfamily of gastropods that was used in the taxonomy of the Gastropoda (Ponder & Lindberg, 1997). It contained only the extant family Peltospiridae and some prehistoric gastropod families. However, the taxonomy of the Gastropoda (Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005) does not use the name Peltospiroidea (in that system, Peltospiridae is placed within the superfamily Neomphaloidea).

It was described as a new species within the new genus Gigantopelta in 2015, in the family Peltospiridae.[1]

Файл:East Scotia Ridge vents map.png
Location of E2 and E9 sites in the Scotia Sea showing the East Scotia Ridge (ESR) between the Scotia Plate (SCO) and South Sandwich Plate (SAN).

Distribution

This species is known from two sites near hydrothermal vents in the East Scotia Ridge of the south Atlantic Ocean: from 2,394 m depth at the E9 vent site and from the 2,608 m depth at the E2 site.[2]

Description

Файл:Gigantopelta chessoia 3.png
Dorsal view of Gigantopelta chessoia showing a mantle cavity overview. The shell and mantle tissue have been removed. Scale bar is 1 cm.
Файл:Gigantopelta chessoia 2.png
Cross section of Gigantopelta chessoia showing enlarged oesophageal gland (og).
ct – ctenidium,
si – blood sinus,
pm – pedal muscle.
The scale bar is 1 cm.

The color of the shell is dark olive.[1] The shell has three to four whorls.[1] The width of the shell is from 4.21–45.7 mm.[1] Body size of the juvenile snail is 2 mm,[3] while body size of the adult is 50 mm.[3]

It has non-papillate tentacles.[3]

The digestive system: there is one pair of radula cartilages.[3] The digestive tract is short and consist of a single loop.[3] The rectum does not penetrate the heart.[3] The radula consist of 1.4% of body volume in juveniles and radula cartilages consist of 2.6% of body volume in juveniles.[3]

The respiratory system consist of single left bipectinate ctenidium (gill).[3]

The circulatory system is hypertrophied: heart is greatly enlarged.[3] The ventricle is 0.42 mm in juvenile animal length of 2.0 mm.[3] The ventricle grows to the size 6 mm in adults.[3] There is a single left auricle.[3] Gigantopelta chessoia has symbiotic bacteria in its enlarged oesophageal gland.[4] The body of Gigantopelta chessoia has low values of carbon isotope δ13C.[5] This indicates that carbon fixation in Gigantopelta chessoia can occur via Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle by endosymbiotic Gammaproteobacteria.[5] The occurrence of endosymbiont bacteria in the oesophageal gland was confirmed by transmission electron microscopy in 2017.[3]

The oesophageal gland is fused and enlarged to fill the entire ventral side of mantle cavity.[3] It is occupying 0.6% of visceral mass volume in juveniles, while it is increasing allometrically up to 9% visceral mass volume in adults.[3] Blood sinuses are large, but few and fixed in position.[3]

The nervous system has ganglia.[3]

The sensory organs of Gigantopelta chessoia include statocysts with statolith.[3]

The reproductive system has fully developed gonads in juveniles at body size 2.0 mm.[3]

Ecology

Файл:East Scotia Ridge - Plos Biol 04.tif
This area between hydrothermal vent chimneys on the E9 site at a depth of 2,398 m is occupied by Gigantopelta chessoia. Scale bar is 1 m.

This gastropod is generally found in dense aggregations up to ~1,000 m−2.[2]

Small limpets Lepetodrilus sp. East Scotia Ridge are sometimes found on the shells of Gigantopelta chessoia.[2] Other marine fauna, such as actinostolid sea anemones (family Actinostolidae), crabs in the genus Kiwa, and the pycnogonid arthropod or "sea spider" cf. Sericosura, can be found living together with this species.[2]

Gigantopelta chessoia may be a mixotroph in juvenile life and shifting to obligate symbiotrophy as an adult.[3]

Gigantopelta chessoia is gonochoristic (they have distinct males and females).[3]

References

This article incorporates Creative Commons (CC-BY-2.5) text from the reference[2] and CC-BY-4.0 text from the reference[3] Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

  • Heywood J. L., Chen C., Pearce D. A. & Linse K. (2017). "Bacterial communities associated with the Southern Ocean vent gastropod, Gigantopelta chessoia: indication of intergenerational, horizontal symbiont transfer". Polar Biology. Шаблон:Doi.
  • Marsh L., Copley J. T., Huvenne V. A. I., Linse K., Reid W. D. K., Rogers A. D., Sweeting C. J. & Tyler P. A. (2012). "Microdistribution of faunal assemblages at deep-sea hydrothermal vents in the Southern Ocean". PLoS ONE 7: e48348. Шаблон:Doi
  • Reid W. D. K., Sweeting C. J., Wigham B. D., McGill R. A. R. & Polunin N. V. C. (2016). "Isotopic niche variability in macroconsumers of the East Scotia Ridge (Southern Ocean) hydrothermal vents: What more can we learn from an ellipse?" Marine Ecology Progress Series 542: 13-24. Шаблон:Doi

Шаблон:Taxonbar

  1. 1,0 1,1 1,2 1,3 1,4 Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок Chen 2015 не указан текст
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 2,3 2,4 2,5 Rogers A.D., Tyler P.A., Connelly D.P., Copley J.T., James R., Larter R.D., Linse K., Mills R.A., Garabato A.N., Pancost R.D., Pearce D.A., Polunin N.V., German C.R., Shank T., Boersch-Supan P.H., Alker B.J., Aquilina A., Bennett S.A., Clarke A., Dinley R.J., Graham A.G., Green D.R., Hawkes J.A., Hepburn L., Hilario A., Huvenne V.A., Marsh L., Ramirez-Llodra E., Reid W.D., Roterman C.N., Sweeting C.J., Thatje S. & Zwirglmaier K. (2012). "The Discovery of New Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Communities in the Southern Ocean and Implications for Biogeography". PLoS Biology 10(1): e1001234. Шаблон:Doi.
  3. 3,00 3,01 3,02 3,03 3,04 3,05 3,06 3,07 3,08 3,09 3,10 3,11 3,12 3,13 3,14 3,15 3,16 3,17 3,18 3,19 3,20 3,21 Шаблон:Cite journal
  4. Шаблон:Cite news
  5. 5,0 5,1 Reid W. D. K., Sweeting C. J., Wigham B. D., Zwirglmaier K., Hawkes J. A., McGill R. A. R, Linse K. & Polunin N. V. C. (2013). "Spatial Differences in East Scotia Ridge Hydrothermal Vent Food Webs: Influences of Chemistry, Microbiology and Predation on Trophodynamics". PLoS ONE 8(6): e65553. Шаблон:Doi.