Publication | Closed Access
<i>Rubyspira</i>, New Genus and Two New Species of Bone-Eating Deep-Sea Snails With Ancient Habits
69
Citations
38
References
2010
Year
BiologyMorphological EvidencePhylogeneticsLiving FossilNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyEvolutionary LongevityDeep-sea SnailsBone-eating Deep-sea SnailsTerrestrial CrustaceanNew SpeciesMarine BiologyDeep SeaNew GenusPhylogenetic Analysis
Rubyspira, a new genus of deep-sea snails (Gastropoda: Abyssochrysoidea) with two living species, derives its nutrition from decomposing whalebones. Molecular phylogenetic and morphological evidence places the new genus in an exclusively deep-sea assemblage that includes several close relatives previously known as fossils associated with Cretaceous cold seeps, plesiosaur bones, and Eocene whalebones. The ability to exploit a variety of marine reducing environments may have contributed to the evolutionary longevity of this gastropod lineage.
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