enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Barnacle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnacle

    Most barnacles are encrusters, attaching themselves to a hard substrate such as a rock, the shell of a mollusc, or a ship; or to an animal such as a whale (whale barnacles). The most common form, acorn barnacles, are sessile, growing their shells directly onto the substrate, whereas goose barnacles attach themselves by means of a stalk. [8]

  3. Whale barnacle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whale_barnacle

    Whale barnacles are species of acorn barnacle that belong to the family Coronulidae. They typically attach to baleen whales, and sometimes settle on toothed whales. The whale barnacles diverged from the turtle barnacles about three million years ago. Whale barnacles passively filter food, using tentacle-like cirri, as the host swims

  4. Rhizocephala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhizocephala

    Rhizocephala are derived barnacles that are parasitic castrators. Their hosts are mostly decapod crustaceans, but include Peracarida, mantis shrimps and thoracican barnacles. Their habitats range from the deep ocean to freshwater. [1] [2] Together with their sister groups Thoracica and Acrothoracica, they make up the subclass Cirripedia. [3]

  5. Goose barnacle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goose_barnacle

    "The goose-tree" from Gerard's Herbal (1597), displaying the belief that goose barnacles produced barnacle geese.. In the days before birds were known to migrate, barnacle geese, Branta leucopsis, were thought to have developed from this crustacean through spontaneous generation, since they were never seen to nest in temperate Europe, [4] hence the English names "goose barnacle" and "barnacle ...

  6. Pollicipes polymerus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollicipes_polymerus

    Examination of the animal's gut contents show that it feeds on copepods, amphipods, barnacle larvae, small clams, polychaete worms and hydrozoans as well as detritus and algae. [8] Predators on gooseneck barnacles include the glaucous-winged gull ( Larus glaucescens ), the black oystercatcher ( Haematopus bachmani ), the ochre sea star ...

  7. Dog whelk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_whelk

    The plates of barnacles can be pushed apart with the proboscis, and the entire individual is eaten in about a day, although larger animals such as mussels may take up to a week to digest. Feeding only occurs when conditions are conducive to such an activity, and during these times the dog whelk consumes large quantities of food so that the gut ...

  8. A Weird Animal May Finally Expose Where Malaysian Airlines ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/weird-animal-may-finally...

    The barnacles attached to the Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 debris offer up partial clues about where it actually crashed. A Weird Animal May Finally Expose Where Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 ...

  9. Sacculina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacculina

    Sacculina. Sacculina is a genus of barnacles that is a parasitic castrator of crabs.They belong to a group called Rhizocephala.The adults bear no resemblance to the barnacles that cover ships and piers; they are recognised as barnacles because their larval forms are like other members of the barnacle class Cirripedia.