Sunken wood in marine environments supports a diverse community, the stars of the show being the wood-boring bivalves. Shallow versus deep-sea woodfalls tend to only attract bivalves from one of two clades; Teredinidae and Xylophagaidae respectively. A recent deployment of experimental wood substrates returned a new form of boring bivalve that has morphological characteristics (mesoplax and lack of viscera in the siphons) indicating it as a xylophagaid, yet has hard pallet-like structures that had previously only been observed in the shallow water teredinids. This study sought to understand the phylogenetic placement of this new taxon (Xylophagaid A) with consideration of the various siphon-associated hard parts that have been described acr...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
Wood sinking into the deep sea is often colonized by species of the bivalve subfamily Xylophagaidae;...
The ability to consume wood as food (xylotrophy) is unusual among animals. In terrestrial environmen...
Wood sinking into the deep sea is often colonized by species of the bivalve subfamily Xylophagaidae;...
Wood falls represent a rare and ephemeral, yet important source of food in the deep-sea. Wood-boring...
Wood falls represent a rare and ephemeral, yet important source of food in the deep-sea. Wood-boring...
Wood falls represent a rare and ephemeral, yet important source of food in the deep-sea. Wood-boring...
Abstract The bivalve families Teredinidae and Xylophagaidae include voracious consume...
Abstract The bivalve families Teredinidae and Xylophagaidae include voracious consume...
A grant has been awarded to Dr. Daniel L. Distel of the University of Maine to investigate the evolu...
Here we describe an anatomically divergent wood-boring bivalve belonging to the family Teredinidae. ...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
Wood sinking into the deep sea is often colonized by species of the bivalve subfamily Xylophagaidae;...
The ability to consume wood as food (xylotrophy) is unusual among animals. In terrestrial environmen...
Wood sinking into the deep sea is often colonized by species of the bivalve subfamily Xylophagaidae;...
Wood falls represent a rare and ephemeral, yet important source of food in the deep-sea. Wood-boring...
Wood falls represent a rare and ephemeral, yet important source of food in the deep-sea. Wood-boring...
Wood falls represent a rare and ephemeral, yet important source of food in the deep-sea. Wood-boring...
Abstract The bivalve families Teredinidae and Xylophagaidae include voracious consume...
Abstract The bivalve families Teredinidae and Xylophagaidae include voracious consume...
A grant has been awarded to Dr. Daniel L. Distel of the University of Maine to investigate the evolu...
Here we describe an anatomically divergent wood-boring bivalve belonging to the family Teredinidae. ...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...
International audienceHigh densities of the wood-boring bivalve Xylophaga atlantica colonized pine w...