TL;DR: Six east North American odostomioid species (Gastropoda: Pyramidellidae) are shown to have spermatophores that are species-specific in structure and position, and the new genus Boonea is named, based on sperMatophore and other data, with "Odostomia" seminuda as type-species.
Abstract: 1. Six east North American odostomioid species (Gastropoda: Pyramidellidae) are shown to have spermatophores that are species-specific in structure and position. The spermatophores of Boonea seminuda, B. bisuturalis and B. impressa are stuck in the mantle cavity; those of Fargoa dianthophila, F. bushiana and F. bartschi are attached to the shell in a constant position.2. A supraspecific classification based on spermatophores does not accord with the traditional ones based on shell sculpture. By comparing all available lines of evidence, the spermatophore classification is shown to accord more closely with phyletic relationships. Shell sculpture has converged and diverged evolutionarily and is therefore unreliable in supraspecific pyramidellid systematics. With due allowances for variation it is, however, useful at the species level.3. The new genus Boonea is named, based on spermatophore and other data, with "Odostomia" seminuda as type-species.4. Reasons are given for using the name F. bartschi for "O. m...
TL;DR: Three Boonea species (occurring in sympatric species pairs) occupy different habitats and have different molluscan host preferences, and B. seminuda was attracted much more to Crepidula fornicata than to Littorina littorea, and with B. bisuturalis it was vice versa.
Abstract: 1. Three Boonea species (occurring in sympatric species pairs) occupy different habitats and have different molluscan host preferences. In the field, B. seminuda is preferentially with Crepidula fornicata or Argopecten irradians, B. bisuturalis with Littorina littorea (introduced), Hyanassa obsoleta or Crassostrea virginica, and B. impressa with C. virginica. Weights of the first two species are about 0.03 to 0.17% those of their hosts. In the laboratory, B. seminuda was attracted much more to Crepidula fornicata than to Littorina littorea. With B. bisuturalis it was vice versa.2. In the laboratory, B. seminuda fed on 22 out of the 36 gastropod and bivalve "hosts" offered; B. bisuturalis fed on 37 out of 45, and B. impressa fed on 36 out of 37. Some of these mollusks probably serve as secondary hosts in nature. Boonea definitely is not host-specific. Polychaetes, Chaetopleura and Molgula were not fed on.3. Fargoa dianthophila and F. bartschi, two much rarer species, compete with each other for space and f...
TL;DR: It is suggested that interference with the feeding behavior of oysters has a significant effect on growth and survival, and reduction in growth of parasitized oysters could not be wholly explained by the metabolic energy requirements of the ectoparasites.
TL;DR: The effect of an ectoparasitic gastropod, Boonea (= Odostomia) impressa, on the energy bidget of its host, the American oyster, was examined and a model predicted that net productivity by large oysters parasitized by 10 and 30 large snails would be reduced by 21% and 63%, respectively.
Abstract: The effect of an ectoparasitic gastropod, Boonea (= Odostomia) impressa , on the energy bidget of its host, the American oyster, Crassostrea virginica , was examined. A model was developed from laboratory and field data, as well as from equations developed by Powell and Stanton (1985) . The model predicted that net productivity by large (7 cm length) oysters parasitized by 10 and 30 large (6 mm length) snails would be reduced by 21% and 63%, respectively. In contrast, net productivity in small (3 cm length) oysters would be reduced 25% by only 3 snails. Small oysters would have a negative energy balance when parasitized by 10 snails. The predicted reduction in growth was compared with measured growth in small and large oysters parasitized at abundances typical of Texas oyster reefs. Control oysters (no parasites) gained more shell weight than parasitized oysters. In four-week experiments conducted during the spring and fall, small control oysters gained 86% and 75% more weight than highly parasitized oysters. Large control oysters had 29% and 88% more shell deposition. Snail parasitism produced 75% mortality in small, highly parasitized oysters in the summer. In typical field populations in Texas bays, a minimal estimate of 4–12% of the energy otherwise available to the oyster for growth and reproduction is consumed by Boonea impressa .
TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative and complementary method of determining season of collection of oysters that employs the measurement of a parasitic gastropod, the impressed odostome ( Boonea impressa = Odostomia impressa ) is forwarded.