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Mouthpart and digestive tract structure in four talitrid amphipods from a translittoral series in Tasmania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2004

Matthew D. Johnston
Affiliation:
School of Aquaculture, University of Tasmania, Locked Bag 1-370 Launceston, TAS. 7250, Australia
Danielle J. Johnston
Affiliation:
Department of Fisheries, Western Australian Marine Research Laboratories, GPO Box 20 North Beach, WA. 6020, Australia
Alastair M.M. Richardson
Affiliation:
School of Zoology, University of Tasmania, GPO Box 252C Hobart, TAS. 7001, Australia

Abstract

Structural adaptations of the mouthparts and digestive tract of four talitrid amphipods were examined in relation to diet, habitat and phylogeny. The species differed in their habitat relative to the shoreline and also in their diet: a 5-dentate ‘sandrunner’, Talorchestia species II (a mid to low shore intertidal diatom feeder), a 5-dentate sandhopper, Talorchestia marmorata (a strandline kelp feeder); a 4-dentate sandhopper, Talorchestia species I (extreme high shore, feeding on spinifex grasses), and a 4-dentate landhopper, Keratroides vulgaris (forest leaf litter, litter feeding). Gross structural characteristics of the mouthparts were similar among all three Talorchestia species reflecting their phylogenetic relatedness. Increased setation and minor structural differences among the Talorchestia species could be attributed to dietary differences, reflecting the zones across the shoreline that they inhabit. Mouthparts of K. vulgaris were elongate, with markedly different setation to the Talorchestia species, reflecting its more distant phylogenetic position and its diet of decaying leaf litter. Digestive tract structure was more conserved among all species due to their phylogenetic relatedness. The gross digestive structure conformed to the general plan exhibited by most gammaridean amphipods. However, an additional pair of lateral pyloric caeca was evident in all species, the function of which is uncertain.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

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