Saccostrea mordax (Gould, 1850)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13244740 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13244877 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F01A8782-930D-F60D-FEF0-52AFB551FC94 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Saccostrea mordax (Gould, 1850) |
status |
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Saccostrea mordax (Gould, 1850) View in CoL
Common name: Crenulate rock oyster ( Figs. 4 View Fig G-I)
Ostrea cucullata Lamarck,1819: 200 View in CoL .
Ostraea mordax Gould, 1850: 346 ; Sowerby, 1871, Pl. 15, Figs. 31a, b.
Ostrea forskali var. mordax Lamy, 1929: 159 View in CoL .
Ostrea amasa Iredale, 1939: 399 View in CoL , Pl. 17, Fig. 8.
Crassostrea amasa Thomson, 1954: 154 View in CoL , Pl. 7, Figs. 1 View Fig , 2 View Fig .
Crassostrea tuberculata Thomson, 1954: 157 , Pl. 8, Fig. 3 View Fig .
Saccostrea mordax Torigoe, 1981: 328 View in CoL , Pl. 17; Qi & Choe, 2000: 138-139, Figs. 3 View Fig C-E; Lam, 2003: 112-113, Pl. 13.
Saccostrea cucullata View in CoL - Morris, 1985: 125-128, Pl. 3, Figs. A, B, C, D.
Material examined. – Syntypes – three dry shells ( NMNH 5958 View Materials ), ‘‘ Feejee Islands’ ’( Fiji), coll. United States Exploring Expedition, no date .
Description. – Shell medium, up to 60 mm in length, 40 mm in width. Outline triangular or an elongate D-shape depending upon substratum and space. The left valve is flat and completely attached. It is very thin and easily broken with a hard hit when a specimen is collected. The margin of the left valve is built up steeply along the anterior and posterior sides. The margins are thick, with packed layers of growth squamae running along the margin and perpendicular to these are closely and evenly spaced ribs ending as marginal crenulations. In most cases, where the oyster is growing on unlimited flat rock surfaces, the anterior margin is reduced so that the right valve is in touch with the substratum. When viewed along the mouth-anus axis, the shape of the oyster is almost a right-angled triangle with its height given by the height of the posterior margin and its base by the left valve. The hinge line is straight and short. The ligament area is elongated to form an obvious left beak. The left valve of juveniles is a thin white calcite pad attached completely to the substratum.
The right valve is convex and white with purple patches on the less eroded ventral area. It is usually eroded with exposed conchiolin scales near the dorsal end. Parallel grooves extend from half way along the dorso-ventral axis to the ventral shell margin. These grooves reveal uneroded growth lines on the right valve. They are also present on juveniles which have a fan-like, triangular shell. Evenly-spaced crenulations around the shell margin are more obvious anteriorly and posteriorly.
The interior of the shell is white with a shiny, pearly appearance. A band of dark green conchiolin usually occurs near the ventral margin of the right valve. This band may be absent in some specimens. It appears that the conchiolin and prismatic calcite layers are deposited alternatively at the right, inner, ventral shell margin. The adductor muscle scar is relatively large and positioned in the posterior ventral half of the pallial area. It is circular to elongate-oval according to the growth form of the shell and mostly white, slightly stained with growth bands or purple. The chomata are white, short and rod-shaped and arranged in a single line around the inner margin. These are more prominent dorsally and fade out as they extend towards the ventral shell margin.
Distribution. – Saccostrea mordax occurs only on oceanic, exposed rocky shores such as Cape d’Aguilar and Big Wave Bay. At Big Wave Bay, it occurs as individuals among the Septifer and Tetraclita zone on rocky slopes. At Cape d’Aguilar, it occurs in rock pools frequently refreshed by strong waves. This species is widely distributed in the Indo-West Pacific, e.g. Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, South China Sea, Peninsula Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, New Hebrides and Australia.
Remarks. – Saccostrea mordax has been identified previously as S. amasa and S. tuberculata (Thompson, 1954) . This species is often confused with S. cucullata because of similar shell characters. Like S. cucullata , S. mordax is probably a superspecies. Two genetic lineages of this species from the Indo-West Pacific have been differentiated by mitochondrial DNA sequences (authors’ unpublished data).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Saccostrea mordax (Gould, 1850)
Lam, Katherine & Morton, Brian 2004 |
Saccostrea cucullata
Morris, S 1985: 125 |
Saccostrea mordax
Torigoe, K 1981: 328 |
Crassostrea amasa
Thomson, J 1954: 154 |
Crassostrea tuberculata
Thomson, J 1954: 157 |
Ostrea forskali var. mordax
Lamy, E 1929: 159 |
Ostrea cucullata
Lamarck, J 1819: 200 |