marine science oceanography facebook marine conservation society website home news london meetings courses contacts seasearch calendar marine based activities newsletter marine science education sitemap marine life world news
spray zone tidal
 

Hydrothermal Vents
Seamounts

Barnacles

A barnacle is a type of arthropod belonging to infraclass Cirripedia in the subphylum Crustacea, and is hence related to crabs and lobsters. Barnacles are exclusively marine, and tend to live in shallow and tidal waters, typically in erosive settings. They are sessile suspension feeders, and have two nektonic larval stages. Around 1,220 barnacle species are currently known. The name "Cirripedia" is Latin, meaning "curl-footed".
Barnacles are encrusters, attaching themselves permanently to a hard substrate. The most common, "acorn barnacles" (Sessilia) are sessile, growing their shells directly onto the substrate. The orderPedunculata ("goose barnacles" and others) attach themselves by means of a stalk.

Most barnacles are suspension feeders; they dwell continually in their shell — which is usually constructed of six plates — and reach into the water column with modified legs. These feathery appendages beat rhythmically to draw plankton and detritus into the shell for consumption.

Other members of the class have quite a different mode of life. For example, members of the genusSacculina are parasitic, dwelling within crabs.

Since the intertidal zone periodically desiccates, barnacles are well adapted against water loss. Their calcite shells are impermeable, and they possess two plates which they can slide across their aperture when not feeding. These plates also protect against predation.

Free-living barnacles are attached to the substratum by cement glands that form from the base of the first pair of antennae; in effect, the animal is fixed upside down by means of its forehead. In some barnacles, the cement glands are fixed to a long muscular stalk, but in most they are part of a flat membrane or calcified plate. A ring of plates surrounds the body, homologous with the carapace of other crustaceans. In sessile barnacles, the apex of the ring of plates is covered by an operculum, which may be recessed into the carapace. The plates are held together by various means, depending on species, in some cases being solidly fused.

 
 

Marine Ecology


Supralittoral Zone

Spray Zone : Also called the Upper Littoral, the Supralittoral Fringe, the Littorina Zone (because it is often dominated by Littorina species) the Splash Zone,upper Balanoid and the upper Barnacle Belt. This area is dry much of the time, but is sprayed with salt water during high tides. It is only flooded during storms and extremely high tides. Organisms in this sparse habitat include barnacles, isopods, lichens, lice, limpets, periwinkles, and whelks. Very little vegetation grows in this area.

Splash Zone or Supralittoral?

Some literature makes the distinction between the spash zone and the supralittoral zone but its is often unclear what the distinction is so I am treating this area above the normal high tide mark as one zone.

splash zone

Conditions are extremely variable over time, making this a harsh place for organisms to survive. Frequently affected by salt spray and strong winds, most plants and animals can be found in the relative shelter of numerous nooks and crannies amongst the rocks and on cliff faces.

littoral zone

The barnacle zone is the first clearly demarcated zone at the top of the shore and this zone occurs on almost every shore in the world. Below this zone and marking the beginning of the lower intertidal zone is the clearly marked zone of brown algae.

Within the supralittoral zone, lichen grow on the rocks, as well as any plants that are capable of contending with occasional seas spray. Below this, in the supralittoral fringe, cyanobacteria blue-green algae, grow in a slippery film creating what some biologists call the "black zone", due to the dark color of the algae-covered rocks. Animals that tolerate more air than water live here.

Species Found in Supralittoral Exposed Sandy Shore

The small pieces of shell and sand particles that make up the beach are always on the move, and are constantly washed by water and blown by wind. There is little protection for anything living there, so animals burrow into the sand or live between the grains of sand. Here they are protected from waves, sand movements and predators.

No large plants grow on sandy shores but pieces of dead plants are washed in by the waves. Microscopic algae, called diatoms, are found in the water and between the sand particles. The many small animals living between the sand grains form an entire foodweb, including grazers, predators, scavengers and detritivores (animals eating tiny fragments of decaying food).

Many animals use tidal, lunar or seasonal rhythms to help them survive. Thus plough snails burrow into the sand at mid-tide to avoid stranding on the high shore. Small, white sandhoppers and ghost crabs are both nocturnal scavengers. During the day the sandhoppers bury themselves in the damp sand of the high-tide mark and the ghost crabs retreat to deep burrows. By being active at night they avoid both predators and the hot, drying sun.

Animals of the sandy shore are dependent on seawater to keep them moist, and to supply them with oxygen and food in the form of small pieces of dead plants and animals.

sandy beach

 

beach tide

Talitrus saltator : Sandhopper

Talitrus saltator is a supralittoral amphipod usually found beneath or amongst debris and decaying algae deposited at the high water mark or during the day it may be buried at depths between 10-30 cm in the substratum.

DescriptionTalitrus saltator is an active supralittoral sand-hopper, growing up to 20 mm in length. It has a typical gammaridean body-plan, dorso-laterally compressed with three main divisions, head, pereon (thorax) and pleon (abdomen), both pereon and pleon are segmented and smooth. Antennae are distinct and one is much longer and robust than the other. Eyes are round and black, the body being grey-brown in colour.

 

Scavenging amphipod

talitrus
Phylum: Crustacea
Class: Malacostraca 
Order: Amphipodidae 
Family: Talitridae

Species Found on Sheltered Muddy, Sandy Shore

Hydrobia Ulvae : Laver Spire Shell

Typically found on muddy sand, in estuaries and salt marshes. Sometimes also in lagoons and other areas of reduced salinity. Frequently associated with seagrass beds. Highest densities found mid-tidally but has been recorded down to 100 m depth.

Description: A small spiralling shell with six whorls. Up to 6 mm high but more typically around 4 mm. The shell is brown to yellow in colour. The body of the snail is a clear grey frequently with various pigment spots.

Mud feeder, feeding on Mud sediments with its radula, scaping diatoms, bacteria etc from the sediment and substrata.

 

 snail


Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda 
Order: Mesogastropoda
Family: Hydrobiidae

Species Found on Rocky Shore

Barnacles :

Although barnacles may look like mollusks with their shell-like covering, they are actually crustaceans, related to lobsters, crabs and shrimp. The barnacle secretes the calcium-hard plates which totally encase them. In larvae stage they swim and look like tiny shrimp. Upon maturing they swim the waters until they find the right place to stop. They then attached them self to this selected area head first.

The barnacle uses a brown glue like substance to attach itself firmly. The barnacle attached itself so strongly to a surface that the its cone base is still around long after the animal has died. Dentists have studied this glue like substance to learn more about its adhesive values.

 
 
Home  |   News  |   Meetings  | Courses  |  ContactsMarine Sciences  |  Things to do | Marine World News | Sitemap |