Malacobdella | |
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Malacobdella sp. | |
Scientific classification
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Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Nemertea |
Class: | Hoplonemertea |
Order: | Monostilifera |
Family: |
Malacobdellidae Blanchard, 1847 |
Genus: |
Malacobdella Blainville, 1827 |
Malacobdellidae is a monogeneric family within the phylum Nemertea. It is included with the order Hoplonemertea within the class Enopla (formerly in monotypic order Bdellonemertea of the same class). [1]
The family, as well as its sole genus Malacobdella, is characterized by a posterior ventral sucker and a proboscis lacking a stylet. [2] As in other Hoplonemertea, the lateral longitudinal nerve cord is located internal to the body wall muscles, in the mesenchyme. [3]
Members of Bdellonemertea are all commensal, living in the mantle cavities of bivalves. [4] The only non-marine and non-bivalve hosted species, Malacobdella auriculae, is doubtful. It was described in 1847 by Émile Blanchard on the basis of a single drawing of his colleague and probably wasn't even a nemertean. [5] Malacobdella feed on small food particles that are brought into the mollusk's ctenidia.
Malacobdella | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Malacobdella sp. | |
Scientific classification
![]() | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Nemertea |
Class: | Hoplonemertea |
Order: | Monostilifera |
Family: |
Malacobdellidae Blanchard, 1847 |
Genus: |
Malacobdella Blainville, 1827 |
Malacobdellidae is a monogeneric family within the phylum Nemertea. It is included with the order Hoplonemertea within the class Enopla (formerly in monotypic order Bdellonemertea of the same class). [1]
The family, as well as its sole genus Malacobdella, is characterized by a posterior ventral sucker and a proboscis lacking a stylet. [2] As in other Hoplonemertea, the lateral longitudinal nerve cord is located internal to the body wall muscles, in the mesenchyme. [3]
Members of Bdellonemertea are all commensal, living in the mantle cavities of bivalves. [4] The only non-marine and non-bivalve hosted species, Malacobdella auriculae, is doubtful. It was described in 1847 by Émile Blanchard on the basis of a single drawing of his colleague and probably wasn't even a nemertean. [5] Malacobdella feed on small food particles that are brought into the mollusk's ctenidia.