MolluscaBase taxon details

Clavagellidae d'Orbigny, 1844

23006  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:23006)

accepted
Family
Bryopinae Tryon, 1862 · unaccepted

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  1. Genus Bryopa Gray, 1847
  2. Genus Clavagella Blainville, 1817
  3. Genus Dacosta Gray, 1858
  4. Genus Dianadema B. Morton, 2003
  5. Genus Stirpulina Stoliczka, 1870
  6. Genus Bacilia Gray, 1858 † accepted as Clavagella Blainville, 1817 (objective synonym)
  7. Genus Tiria De Gregorio, 1886 accepted as Bryopa Gray, 1847
  8. Genus Tubolana Bivona e Bernardi, 1832 † (unaccepted > unavailable name, suppressed by ICZN, 2013: Opinion 2325.)
marine
Orbigny, A. D. d'. (1844-1848). <i>Paléontologie française. Description zoologique et géologique de tous les animaux Mollusques et Rayonnés fossiles de France. Terrains crétacés</i>. Volume 3. Pelecypoda. 807 pp, Victor Masson, Paris (1-288 [1844]; 289-448 [1845]; 449-520 [1846]; 521-688 [1847]; 689-807 [1848])., available online at http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/73207
page(s): 14 [1844], 299 [1845]; note: spelled Clavagelidae [details]   
Taxonomy In his overview paper, Morton (2007) separated off a family Penicillidae for Penicillus, Brechites, Foegia, Nipponoclava,...  
Taxonomy In his overview paper, Morton (2007) separated off a family Penicillidae for Penicillus, Brechites, Foegia, Nipponoclava, Kendrickiana and Humphreyia, from the Clavagellidae containing the extinct genus Clavagella and the extant genera Dacosta, Bryopa, Dianadema and Stirpulina. The tube or "crypt" in which these taxa live in the sediment, or attached to shells, etc., is formed in quite different ways in the two families, and Morton (2007) suggested that they evolved from distinct lyonsiid ancestors. This view is disregarded by Huber (2010) who finds this splitting exaggerated and considers all the Clavagellidae sensu Morton (2007) as subgenera of Clavagella Lamarck, 1818 [details]
MolluscaBase eds. (2021). MolluscaBase. Clavagellidae d'Orbigny, 1844. Accessed at: https://molluscabase.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=23006 on 2024-03-28
Date
action
by
2004-12-21 15:54:05Z
created
db_admin
2009-02-04 10:16:53Z
changed
2010-07-10 09:41:30Z
changed
2010-09-15 04:51:39Z
changed

Creative Commons License The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License


original description Orbigny, A. D. d'. (1844-1848). <i>Paléontologie française. Description zoologique et géologique de tous les animaux Mollusques et Rayonnés fossiles de France. Terrains crétacés</i>. Volume 3. Pelecypoda. 807 pp, Victor Masson, Paris (1-288 [1844]; 289-448 [1845]; 449-520 [1846]; 521-688 [1847]; 689-807 [1848])., available online at http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/73207
page(s): 14 [1844], 299 [1845]; note: spelled Clavagelidae [details]   

basis of record Morton, B. & Machado, F.M. (2021). The origins, relationships, evolution and conservation of the weirdest marine bivalves: The watering pot shells. A review. <em>Advances in Marine Biology.</em> 88: 137-220., available online at https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.amb.2021.03.001 [details]   

additional source Bieler, R.; Carter, J. G.; Coan, E. V. (2010). Classification of Bivalve families. Pp. 113-133, in: Bouchet P. & Rocroi J.-P. (2010), Nomenclator of Bivalve Families. <em>Malacologia.</em> 52(2): 1-184. [details]   

additional source Morton B. 2007. The evolution of the watering pot shells (Bivalvia, Anomalodesmata: Clavagellidae and Penicillidae). <i>Records of the Western Australian Museum</i> 24: 19-64. [details]   
 
 Present  Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
From editor or global species database
Taxonomy In his overview paper, Morton (2007) separated off a family Penicillidae for Penicillus, Brechites, Foegia, Nipponoclava, Kendrickiana and Humphreyia, from the Clavagellidae containing the extinct genus Clavagella and the extant genera Dacosta, Bryopa, Dianadema and Stirpulina. The tube or "crypt" in which these taxa live in the sediment, or attached to shells, etc., is formed in quite different ways in the two families, and Morton (2007) suggested that they evolved from distinct lyonsiid ancestors. This view is disregarded by Huber (2010) who finds this splitting exaggerated and considers all the Clavagellidae sensu Morton (2007) as subgenera of Clavagella Lamarck, 1818 [details]

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