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The anti-settling effect against the barnacle has been shown in vitro: [9] When the barnacle cyprid larva encounters a surface containing medetomidine the molecule interacts with the octopamine receptor in the larva. This causes the settling larva to increase its kicking to more than 100 kicks per minute, which makes becoming sessile nearly ...
The bay barnacle, Balanus improvisus, described by Charles Darwin, on a shell of the sand gaper clam Mya arenaria. This is a list of taxa described by Charles Darwin. [1] Many of them are barnacles from his study of that group. [2] [3] [4] Balanus improvisus, bay barnacle; Colorhamphus parvirostris, Patagonian tyrant; Acasta cyathus, sponge ...
Balanus nubilus, commonly called the giant acorn barnacle, is the world's largest barnacle, reaching a diameter of 15 cm (6 in) and a height of up to 30 cm (12 in), [3] and containing the largest known muscle fibres. [4] [5] Balanus nubilus is a northeast Pacific species that ranges from southern Alaska to Baja California. [6]
Barnacle adults are sessile; most are suspension feeders with hard calcareous shells, but the Rhizocephala are specialized parasites of other crustaceans, with reduced bodies. Barnacles have existed since at least the mid-Carboniferous, some 325 million years ago. In folklore, barnacle geese were once held to emerge fully formed from goose ...
Acasta Leach, 1817; Actinobalanus Moroni, 1967; Amphibalanus Pitombo, 2004; Archiacasta Kolbasov, 1993; Armatobalanus Hoek, 1913; Arossia Newman, 1982 ...
This list of prehistoric barnacles is an incomplete, and ongoing listing of all barnacle genera known from the fossil record: Acasta; Actinobalanus; Aporolepas;
A. amphitrite is a medium-sized, cone-shaped sessile barnacle with distinctive narrow vertical purple or brown stripes. The surface of the test has vertical ribbing. It has a diamond-shaped operculum protected by a movable lid formed from two triangular plates. It grows to about twenty millimetres in diameter.
Paraconcavus pacificus, the red-striped acorn barnacle, [2] is a species of balanid barnacle known from subtidal sandy habitats of the outer northeastern Pacific coast, from Baja California north to Monterey Bay. [3]