Barnacle
A barnacle is a cirripede, a kind of crustacean. It is covered with hard plates of calcium carbonate, and lives stuck to hard surfaces.
Barnacles | |
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Barnacles under water, showing the 'feet' in action | |
Scientific classification | |
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Infraclass: | Cirripedia
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It does not look like a crustacean, and for many centuries it was thought to be a mollusc. In the 1830s, J.V. Thompson found their larvae, and followed their development through to their adult form. They have a nauplius larva, typical of crustaeans.[1][2] Later Charles Darwin, who spent eight years working on barnacles, found that Thompson had been right.[3]
Barnacles grow on hard surfaces like piers, boats, rocks, and on other animals such as turtles and whales. Barnacles are a different group from crabs and shrimps. They are considered a nuisance to the shipping industry and private boat owners.
Life-style
changeBarnacles are suspension feeders, sweeping small food into their mouth with their curved 'feet'. They are cemented to rock (usually), and covered with hard calcareous plates, which they shut firmly when the tide goes out. The barnacles reproduce sexually, and produce little nauplius larvae which disperse in the plankton. Eventually, the larvae change into cypris form, and attach on other hard surfaces to form new barnacles. Their comparative anatomy was worked out in detail by Charles Darwin.
Reproduction
changeBarnacles have the largest penis to body size ratio of the animal kingdom.[4] A few forms have become fully parasitic on larger crustacea.
Barnacles are by far the commonest animals on rocky sea shores. Their numbers on a shore in the Isle of Man have been estimated as a thousand million (109), and they produce body material of 12 hundrededweight (~600 kg) of tissue, weighed after drying. Each year they let go a huge number of larvae, estimated as a million million (1012).[5]p110
Darwin's work
changeDarwin set his work out in four parts: There were the barnacles on stalks (pedunculated), and those that sat on hard substrate (the sessile barnacles). Each of these was divided into living and fossil barnacles.
- 1851: A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Lepadidae; or, Pedunculated Cirripedes. Living barnacles.
- 1851: A Monograph on the Fossil Lepadidae, or, Pedunculated Cirripedes of Great Britain. Fossil barnacles.
- 1854: A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Balanidae (or Sessile Cirripedes); the Verrucidae, etc.
- 1854: A Monograph on the Fossil Balanidæ and Verrucidæ of Great Britain
Gallery
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Barnacles on the seashore
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Closeup of a barnacle
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A Chthamalus stellatus barnacle colony
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Barnacle on a boat propeller.
References
change- ↑ Thompson J.V. 1830. On the cirripedes or barnacles; demonstrating their deceptive character; the extraordinary metamorphoses they undergo, and the class of animals to which they indisputably belong. Zoological Researches, memoir 4, Riding, Cork.
- ↑ Thompson J.V. 1835. Discovery of the metamorphoses in the second type of cirripedes, viz., the Lepades, completing the natural history of these singular animals, and confirming their affinity with the Crustacea. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 335–9
- ↑ Darwin, Charles. 1851: A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Lepadidae; or, Pedunculated Cirripedes. Living barnacles. 1854: A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Balanidae (or Sessile Cirripedes); the Verrucidae, etc. 1851: A Monograph on the Fossil Lepadidae, or, Pedunculated Cirripedes of Great Britain. Fossil barnacles. 1854: A Monograph on the Fossil Balanidæ and Verrucidæ of Great Britain.
- ↑ "Biology of Barnacles". Museum Victoria. 1996. Archived from the original on 2007-02-17. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ↑ Yonge C.M. 1948. The sea shore. New Naturalist series, Collins, London.