A Brief Description of Surface Structure and Composition of the Pseudo-Snail Shell Formed by a Sea Anemone sp. Symbiotic with Hermit Crabs from the Deep-Sea Floor.

Zoolog Sci

Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, Field Science Education and Research Center, Kyoto University, Nishimuro, Wakayama 649-2211, Japan.

Published: August 2019

Sea anemones belonging to the genera and have a remarkable symbiotic relationship with hermit crabs. These symbiotic sea anemones produce a shell-like structure, called a "carcinoecium," that covers and extends over the gastropod shell of the host hermit crab as hermit crabs grow. This structure has been described as "chitinous carcinoecium" or "chitinous coating." A previous study investigated carcinoecia of , the results of which indicated that it contained at least 1.7% chitin, while the remaining components were unidentified. Moreover, the microscopic structure of a carcinoecium still remains to be detailed. We, therefore, conducted detailed observations using a stereoscopic microscope and scanning electron microscope (SEM) and the analyses of the chemical composition of carcinoecia produced by sp. (apparently conspecific with sp. "J" reported in Uchida and Soyama, 2001) associated with a pagurid hermit crab collected in the south of the Shima Peninsula, Mie, Honshu Island, Japan at a depth of 294-306 m. Our results indicate that carcinoecia of sp. contain HCl-soluble components (13%), NaOH-soluble components (38%), chitin (11%) and unidentified remnants (39%). Additionally, our observations show that sp. incorporates dark- and white-colored particles that could be sand and/or mud into the carcinoecium.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2108/zs180167DOI Listing

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