2021
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2021.766290
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Annelid Borings on Brachiopod Shells From the Upper Ordovician of Peru. A Long-Distance Co-migration of Biotic Partners

Abstract: The Recent planktonic larvae of the polychaete spionids are some of the most widespread and abundant group of coastal meroplankton worldwide. To study the possible co-migration of biotic partners and determine whether they were host-specific, the type of biotic relationship between hosts and borers of an Upper Ordovician Peruvian brachiopod collection from the Proto-Andean margin of Gondwana was re-exanimated and compared with material from Wales (Avalonia). The species list studied is composed of Colaptomena … Show more

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“…Their glandular pouches produce mucus that cements sand grains and detritus for building their tubes. These worms are capable of chemical and mechanical boring into different calcareous substrates, including corals, mollusk shells, coralline algae, barnacles, and brachiopods (e.g., Abe et al, 2019;Blake et al, 2019;Abe and Sato-Okoshi, 2020;Malan et al, 2020;Demircan et al, 2021;Villas et al, 2021;Rouse et al, 2022). Shell boring ability is considered species-specific (Sato-Okoshi, 1999;Sato-Okoshi and Okoshi, 2000), albeit some exceptions are mentioned in Radashevsky and Pankova (2013).…”
Section: Maeandropolydoramentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their glandular pouches produce mucus that cements sand grains and detritus for building their tubes. These worms are capable of chemical and mechanical boring into different calcareous substrates, including corals, mollusk shells, coralline algae, barnacles, and brachiopods (e.g., Abe et al, 2019;Blake et al, 2019;Abe and Sato-Okoshi, 2020;Malan et al, 2020;Demircan et al, 2021;Villas et al, 2021;Rouse et al, 2022). Shell boring ability is considered species-specific (Sato-Okoshi, 1999;Sato-Okoshi and Okoshi, 2000), albeit some exceptions are mentioned in Radashevsky and Pankova (2013).…”
Section: Maeandropolydoramentioning
confidence: 99%