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Acanthopleura echinata (Barnes 1824)

Acanthopleura echinata

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Acanthopleura echinata is a Southeast Pacific species of edible chiton, a marine polyplacophoran mollusc in the family Chitonidae, the typical chitons.[1]

Description

Acanthopleura echinata is a very large chiton, with specimen confirmed at length of up to 23 cm (9.1 in). In Chile, the largest individuals are in the north and the smallest in the south.[2] The species is very dark reddish-brown. The plated shell, which often is covered in epibionts like algae, Scurria limpets and Mytilus mussels, has many spines. These spines are generally up to 0.8 mm (0.03 in) long in large individuals, but can be even longer if not broken, which however is unusual. The similar-sized Enoplochiton niger of the same region lacks the spines.[3]

Distribution, habitat and behavior

The distribution of Chiton magnificus ranges along the Pacific coast of South America from Concepción Province (Punta Tumbes) in Chile to Talara in Peru.[3] Although there are old claimed records of this species from the Galápagos Islands, these are considered incorrect.[2]

It lives at depths of 0–4 m (0–13 ft) in the intertidal and shallow subtidal zones,[3] with the vast majority of individuals found in the lower intertidal zone.[2] It inhabits rocky coasts in areas that often have heavy surf. Its habitat often has giant kelp Lessonia nigrescens.[3] It is generally quite common, with average densities in appropriate habitat typically being from about 1.5 individuals per square meter to 2.5 per square meter.[2]

The species is omnivorous, feeding on a wide range of algae and invertebrates. It has radular teeth that are quite large, allowing it to eat heavily incrusted things like coralline algae.[2]

Human use

Acanthopleura echinata is edible and is one of the few commercially important chitons in its range, others being the somewhat smaller, up to 17.4 cm (6.9 in), dark bluish-gray Chiton magnificus and the much smaller, up to 4.5 cm (1.8 in), brownish Chiton granosus. Neither of these have large spines.[3]

References

  1. ^ WoRMS
  2. ^ a b c d e Camus, P.A.; A.H. Navarrete; A.G. Sanhueza; L.F. Opaza (2012). "Trophic ecology of the chiton Acanthopleura echinata on Chilean rocky shores". Revista chilena de historia natural. 85 (1): 123–135. doi:10.4067/S0716-078X2012000100010.
  3. ^ a b c d e Araya, J.F.; M.E. Araya (2015). "The shallow-water chitons (Mollusca, Polyplacophora) of Caldera, Region of Atacama, northern Chile". Zoosyst. Evol. 91 (1): 45–58. doi:10.3897/zse.91.8536.
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Acanthopleura echinata: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Acanthopleura echinata is a Southeast Pacific species of edible chiton, a marine polyplacophoran mollusc in the family Chitonidae, the typical chitons.

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copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
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wikipedia EN

Description

provided by Zoosystematics and Evolution
Animal of very large size, up to 158 mm in examined specimens. Tegmentum smooth to shiny (but often eroded), dark reddish-brown, with occasional small blue spots. Lateral areas hardly raised, smooth except for two radial rows, one of 5–9 round granules indenting sutural edge. Anterior valve with some 10 radial rows of round granules; space between rows smooth. Central areas with raised, well-defined, smooth jugal band bordered by shallow, longitudinal grooves with short, wavy, longitudinally oriented riblets on pleural areas. Girdle upper surface with erect, strong, spike-like spines, round in cross section, up to 8 mm long in large specimens (longer if not broken), often encrusted. Girdle bridges empty (After Ferreira 1986). According to Osorio (2002) this is a dioecious species, which can reach a maximum length of 200 mm.
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cc-by-3.0
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Juan Francisco Araya, Marta Esther Araya
bibliographic citation
Araya J, Araya M (2015) The shallow-water chitons (Mollusca, Polyplacophora) of Caldera, Region of Atacama, northern Chile Zoosystematics and Evolution 91(1): 45–58
author
Juan Francisco Araya
author
Marta Esther Araya

Distribution

provided by Zoosystematics and Evolution
According to Ferreira (1986) this species is found from Talara, Peru (04°34’S; 81°16’W) to Punta Tumbes, Bahía de Concepción, Chile (36°49’S; 73°03’W), and is limited to the intertidal zone and shallow subtidal, 0–4 m depth, on rocks often exposed to heavy surf.
license
cc-by-3.0
copyright
Juan Francisco Araya, Marta Esther Araya
bibliographic citation
Araya J, Araya M (2015) The shallow-water chitons (Mollusca, Polyplacophora) of Caldera, Region of Atacama, northern Chile Zoosystematics and Evolution 91(1): 45–58
author
Juan Francisco Araya
author
Marta Esther Araya