• Title/Summary/Keyword: malacology

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First report of an aeolid nudibranch Flabellina athadona and an identification key for the genus Flabellina from Korea

  • Jung, Daewui;Park, Joong-Ki
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.31 no.3
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    • pp.249-252
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    • 2015
  • An aeolid nudibranch species Flabellina athadona (Bergh, 1875) is newly recorded from Korean waters. This species is distinguished from other congeneric species by the following characteristics: translucent white body, deep orange colored digestive glands, plenty of white specks, and a reversed Y-shaped marking on the head between rhinophores and oral tentacles. In this report, we also provide an identification key for the genus Flabellina in Korea, photographs, and diagnostic characteristics of F. athadona. Molecular identification using mtDNA cox1 partial sequences is also provided to help differentiate F. athadona from some of its closely related congeneric species.

A New Record of Amalda rubiginosa (Olividae: Gastropoda) from Korea

  • Lee, Sang-Hwa;Park, Tae Seo;Park, Joong-Ki
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.31 no.3
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    • pp.253-255
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    • 2015
  • The family Olividae includes predatory species with medium-sized, glossy, elongated oval-shaped shell. As sand-dwellers, they are broadly distributed in tropical and subtropical oceans. They feed mostly on other mollusks and carrions including sea snails and bivalves. To date, two species in the genus Amalda (subfamily Ancillinae) have been reported in Korean waters. In this study, Amalda rubiginosa (Swainson, 1823) was collected from Korean waters and morphologically described in details as a first record.

Observations on seaweed attachment to bivalve shells in Peter the Great Bay (East Sea) and their taphonomic implications

  • Lutaenko, Konstantin A.;Levenets, Irina R.
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.31 no.3
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    • pp.221-232
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    • 2015
  • Observations in beach, intertidal and upper subtidal environments in Peter the Great Bay (north-western East Sea) have shown that attached algae were found on empty shells of 13 species of epifaunal and infaunal bivalve mollusks. Thirteen algae species were identified on empty dislodged shells but more than 50 species are known to be epibiotic on living bivalves. The dislodgement of shells with attached algae takes place in semi-enclosed, low-energy areas, as well as those which are open and affected by strong wave action, indicating the large scale of this phenomenon. The significance of seaweed transportation of living mollusks and their empty shells in the coastal zone, involving both taphonomic and ecological processes, is stressed. Algae appear to be a taphonomic agent and play a similar role as compared to birds or hermit crabs, but they act passively and contribute to environmental mixing in death assemblages in coastal environments.

Prismatic shell repairs by hemoctyes in the extrapallial fluid of the Pacific Oyster, Crassostrea gigas

  • Cho, Sang-Man;Jeong, Woo-Geon
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.27 no.3
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    • pp.223-228
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    • 2011
  • To understand the role of hemocytes in the shell repair process, a hole was drilled in the right valves of the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, and the repair process was observed. Histological observations suggested that the exterior surface of the shell was repaired by aggregated hemocytes. The nuclei of the hemocytes were cleary stained in the regenerated shell while appearing fragmented after calcification at the $7^{th}$ day. Globular calcium granules were genegenerated from the hemocytic monolyer after 6 days of incubation which were morphologically and chemically identical with those from prismatic shell. Our finding suggested that the repaired prismatic shell was composed by aggregated hemocytes and that their endogenous calcium component might support the nucleation of calcium biomineralization during shell repair.

Gonadal Development and Reproduction in the Trumpet Shell, Charonia sauliae

  • Kang, Kyoung-Ho;Kim, Jae-Min;Seon, Seung-Cheon;Zhuo, Liang Liang;Lim, Sang-Min;Kim, Hyeon-Jeong
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.29-33
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    • 2009
  • This study devised and tested a histological staging system for gonadal development in the trumpet shell, Charonia sauliae, which was collected along the south coast of Jeju Island, South Korea. This paper details for the first time the gonadal development characteristics of C. sauliae. Ovary and testis development in C. sauliae can be roughly divided into five stages: growing, mature, spent, degenerative, and resting. The trumpet shelll has multiple fecundation and fertilization during the spawning season for out-of-step gonadal development in high-temperature and low-salinity environments. Female trumpet shell tended to have larger shells and were more abundant than males (64.26% of all animals collected were female).

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Review of the Shell-bearing Gastropods in the Russian Waters of the East Sea (Sea of Japan). IV. Heterobranchia

  • Gulbin, Vladimir V.;Chaban, Elena M.
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.71-79
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    • 2009
  • Based on investigation of archive collections of A.V. Zhirmunsky Institute of Marine Biology of the Far-Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Vladivostok) and O.A. Scarlato Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Saint Petersburg), as well as on the analysis of published data, the species composition of shell-bearing gastropod mollusks of the Russian waters of the East Sea (Sea of Japan), consisting of 331 species and subspecies, has been identified. The fourth part of the Review includes 46 species of Heterobranchia (Allogastropoda, Opistobranchia, and Pulmonata). Each species is assigned to a biogeographic grouping in the study area. Its type locality and habitat (depth and substrate) are also documented.

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Review of the Shell-bearing Gastropods in the Russian Waters of the East Sea (Sea of Japan). III. Caenogastropoda: Neogastropoda

  • Gulbin, Vladimir V.
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.51-70
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    • 2009
  • Based on investigation of collections at the A.V. Zhirmunsky Institute of Marine Biology of the Far-Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Vladivostok) and Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Saint Petersburg), as well as on the analysis of published data, the species composition of shell-bearing gastropod mollusks of the Russian waters of the East Sea (Sea of Japan), consisting of 331 species and subspecies, has been identified. Each species is assigned to a biogeographic grouping in the study area. Its type locality and habitat (depth and substrate) are also documented. The third part of this review includes 129 species in Neogastropoda (Caenogastropoda).

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Bivalve mollusks in Ulsan Bay (Korea)

  • Lutaenko, Konstantin A.
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.57-77
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    • 2014
  • The bivalve molluscan fauna of Ulsan Bay, East Sea coast of Korea, is summarized, based on original and literature data. The fauna consists of 61 species belonging to 20 families. Seven species are identified only to genus level. Two species (Carditellopsis toneana (Yokoyama, 1922), Carditidae and Fulvia hungerfordi (G.B. Sowerby III, 1901), Cardiidae) are new records for the East Sea coast of Korea, and one species (Crenella decussata (Montagu, 1808), Mytilidae) is a new record for Korea. Biogeographically, Ulsan Bay's bivalve fauna is subtropical with a predominance of tropical-subtropical species, 21 species, or 39% of the total species number, subtropical, 14 species, or 26%, and subtropical-boreal (mostly subtropical-lowboreal), 11 species, 21%, totalling 86%. A remarkable feature of the Ulsan Bay fauna is the presence of tropical-subtropical species not found in Yeongil Bay but common in tidal flats and shallow waters of the Yellow Sea and the southern part of Korea. A cold water mass appearing off the southeast coast of Korea near Ulsan in summer seems responsible for the presence of boreal-arctic species in this area.

Classification and Description of Genus Nordotis (Gastropoda: Vestigastropoda) from Korea (한국산 둥근전복속 (고복족상목: 전복과) 의 분류 및 기재)

  • Lee, Jun-Sang;Won, Seung-Hwan;Kim, Soo-Kang;Lim, Han Kyu;Lee, Jung Sick
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.79-86
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    • 2014
  • These studies describe about genus Nordotis (Nordotis madaka, N. gigantea, N. discus discus, N. discus hannai) and suggest the taxonomic key. Also, adjustment and suggestion that confused Korean names in the Nordotis species from Korea.

Chromosomal Study of Seven Species of Unionidae ( Bivalvia : Palaeoheterodonta ) in Korea (한국산 석패와 7종의 염색체 연구)

  • 박갑만;권오길
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.12-29
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    • 1991
  • The chromosome numbers and the karyotypes of seven species in Unionidae are reported, using air drying in gonad. In seven species, the chromosome number of 38(2n) was counted. The mitotic chormosomes of A. arcaeformis flavotincta, A. woodiana and L. gottschei hd 7 pairs of metacentric and 12 pairs of submetacenrtic chromosomes, U. douglasiae had 6 pairs of metacentrics, 13 pairs of submetacentrics, U. douglasiae sinuolatus had 4 metacentric pairs and 15 submetacentric pairs, L. acrorhyncha had 5 metacentric pairs and 14 submetaacentric pairs, and S. triangularis had 5 mdtacenrtric pairs, 13 submetacentric pairs and 1 pair of subtelocentric chromosomes. The size of chromosomes of A. woodiana was the longest in length and L. gottschei was the shortest. The sexual difference of chromosomes was not observed.

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