A rock-boring and rock-ingesting freshwater bivalve (shipworm) from the Philippines

Author:

Shipway J. Reuben1ORCID,Altamia Marvin A.1,Rosenberg Gary2ORCID,Concepcion Gisela P.3,Haygood Margo G.4ORCID,Distel Daniel L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ocean Genome Legacy Center, Department of Marine and Environmental Science, Northeastern University, Nahant, MA, USA

2. Academy of Natural Sciences, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA

3. Marine Science Institute, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines

4. Department of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

Abstract

Shipworms are a group of wood-boring and wood-feeding bivalves of extraordinary economic, ecological and historical importance. Known in the literature since the fourth century BC, shipworms are both destructive pests and critical providers of ecosystem services. All previously described shipworms are obligate wood-borers, completing all or part of their life cycle in wood and most are thought to use wood as a primary source of nutrition. Here, we report and describe a new anatomically and morphologically divergent species of shipworm that bores in carbonate limestone rather than in woody substrates and lacks adaptations associated with wood-boring and wood digestion. The species is highly unusual in that it bores by ingesting rock and is among the very few known freshwater rock-boring macrobioeroders. The calcareous burrow linings of this species resemble fossil borings normally associated with bivalve bioerosion of wood substrates (ichnospecies Teredolites longissimus ) in marginal and fully marine settings. The occurrence of this newly recognized shipworm in a lithic substrate has implications for teredinid phylogeny and evolution, and interpreting palaeoenvironmental conditions based on fossil bioerosion features.

Funder

Fogarty International Center National Institutes of Health

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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