Rhizocephala

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Rhizocephala
The crab Liocarcinus holsatus parasitised by a rhizocephalan of the genus Sacculina showing the externa (circled)
The crab Liocarcinus holsatus parasitised by a rhizocephalan of the genus Sacculina showing the externa (circled)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Maxillopoda
Subclass: Thecostraca
Infraclass: Cirripedia
Superorder: Rhizocephala
Müller, 1862
Orders

Kentrogonida
Akentrogonida

Rhizocephala are peculiar barnacles, parasitic on decapod crustaceans. Their bauplan is uniquely reduced in an extreme adaptation to their peculiar lifestyle.

Contents

[edit] Morphology

Rhizocephalans are related to the more typical barnacles. This is unrecognisable from the adult forms, but can be seen by comparison of the larvae. As adults they lack appendages, segmentation, and all internal organs except gonads and the remains of the nervous system. Other than the minute naupliar stages, the only distinguishable portion of a rhizocephalan body is the externa or reproductive portion of adult females.

The name "Rhizocephala" means "root-heads" and describes the adult female, which consists of a network of threads penetrating the body of the host that resemble the root of a plant penetrating the soil.

[edit] Life cycle

A nauplus larva transforms into a cypris larva after several moltings. A female cypris settles on a host and metamorphoses and injects its internal cell mass into host animal. It then ramifies, or grows in a similar manner to a root system, through the host, centering on the digestive system. The female then protruds a sac-like externa on the abdomen of the host. The externa is immature until a male cypris injects its internal cells into female's "pouch" where cypris cells transform into sperm-producing cells. The mature female's externa produces two types of eggs: small ones, when fertilized, become female cyrpis and large ones that become male cypris. Because the externa is located in the same location as the host's egg sac would be, the host treats it as if it were its own egg sac, and never molts again (crustaceans do not molt until they release their eggs or young from the brood pouch). This behaviour even extends to male hosts, which would never have carried eggs or young in a brood pouch, but care for the externa in the same way as females.

[edit] Classification

This article follows Martin and Davis in placing Rhizocephala as a superorder of Cirripedia and in the following classification of rhizocephalans down to the level of families:[1]

Superorder Rhizocephala Müller, 1862

  • Order Kentrogonida Delage, 1884
    • Lernaeodiscidae Boschma, 1928
    • Peltogastridae Lilljeborg, 1860
    • Sacculinidae Lilljeborg, 1860, such as Sacculina
  • Order Akentrogonida Häfele, 1911
    • Chthamalophilidae Bocquet-Védrine, 1961
    • Clistosaccidae Boschma, 1928
    • Duplorbidae Høeg & Rybakov, 1992
    • Mycetomorphidae Høeg & Rybakov, 1992
    • Polysaccidae Lützen & Takahashi, 1996
    • Thompsoniidae Høeg & Rybakov, 1992, such as Thompsonia

[edit] References

  1. ^  Joel W. Martin and George E. Davis (2001). An Updated Classification of the Recent Crustacea. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.