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Polychaeta source details

Radashevsky, Vasily I.; Pankova, Victoria V.; Malyar, Vasily V.; Carlton, James T. (2023). Boring can get you far: shell-boring Dipolydora from Temperate Northern Pacific, with emphasis on the global history of Dipolydora giardi (Mesnil, 1893) (Annelida: Spionidae). Biological Invasions. 25:741–772.
439683
10.1007/s10530-022-02941-0 [view]
Radashevsky, Vasily I.; Pankova, Victoria V.; Malyar, Vasily V.; Carlton, James T.
2023
Boring can get you far: shell-boring Dipolydora from Temperate Northern Pacific, with emphasis on the global history of Dipolydora giardi (Mesnil, 1893) (Annelida: Spionidae)
Biological Invasions
25:741–772
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyD). [Efirst: 30 October, 2022, no ZooBank registration, print volume March 2023]
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
Two well-known and long-standing global vectors for the dispersal of marine species are international shipping and international trade in edible seafood. Far less well known is the impact of these interoceanic movements on the biogeography of species boring into the calcareous substrata (barnacles and tubeworms in vessel biofouling and mollusc shells, such as oysters, in the aquaculture trade) that often characterize these vectors. We review shell-boring polychaete worms in the genus Dipolydora from the Temperate Northern Pacific, seeking to elucidate the possible consequences of anthropogenic dispersal on selected species. An emphasis is placed on D. giardi (Mesnil in Cr Hebd Séances Acad Sci Paris 117:643–645, 1893) which was originally described from northern France and later reported worldwide. This species is an opportunistic borer of shells of various molluscs and other calcareous biogenic substrata. The Bayesian inference analysis of sequence data of four gene fragments (2468 bp in total) of the mitochondrial 16S rDNA, nuclear 18S, 28S rDNA, and Histone 3 shows that individuals from northern and Mediterranean France, Argentina, Australia, Italy, Japan, South Africa, South Korea, and the Pacific coasts of Canada and the USA are genetically similar and can be considered conspecific. Polydora trilobata Radashevsky, 1993 described from the Sea of Japan, Russia, is synonymized with D. giardi. We suggest that international shipping and the movement of commercial oysters, previously overlooked as key processes in creating its global distribution, may have dispersed D. giardi to far-flung corners of the world. An identification key to nine shell-boring Dipolydora species from the Temperate Northern Pacific is provided
Europe
Sea of Japan
Invasions, introduction of alien species
Molecular systematics, Molecular biology
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Date
action
by
2022-11-01 09:01:55Z
created
2023-03-28 22:42:17Z
changed

Nontype no type known, geounit English Channel, identified as Polydora giardi Mesnil, 1893
 Distribution

restricted to the Pacific coast of North America [details]

 New combination

Radashevsky et al (2022) have the first usage of Dipolydora carunculata as a new combination attributed to ... [details]

 Publication date

Radashevsky et al (2022) confirm the publication date for P. concharum is November 1879 as already determined here ... [details]

 Status

Insufficiently known. Not reported subsequent to original occurrence of two specimens at Tomales Point, Marin ... [details]

 Status

Re-validated by Radashevsky et al (2022) after Radashevsky (1993) had placed it as a synonym of Dipolydora bidentata [details]

 Type designation

Radashevsky et al (2022) present a photo of type specimens, discussion of tracing of type specimens, and designate ... [details]

 Type locality

"the type locality of P. concharum is herein fixed as off Race Point Light, Provincetown, Cape Cod, Gulf of Maine, ... [details]

 Type locality

Intertidal, boring galleries perpendicular to the surface in Lithothamnion coralline algae on permanently wet ... [details]

 Type material

Type material not located. Radashevsky & Petersen (2005) reported finding at University of Copenhagen (ZMUC) ... [details]