Desmopteridae

Family of gastropods From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Desmopteridae is a family of pelagic sea snails or "sea butterflies", marine gastropod mollusks in the superfamily Cymbulioidea.[1]

Quick facts Scientific classification ...
Desmopteridae
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Clade: Euopisthobranchia
Order: Pteropoda
Superfamily: Cymbulioidea
Family: Desmopteridae
Chun, 1889
Close

This family has no subfamilies (according to the taxonomy of the Gastropoda by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005).

Desmopterus Chun, 1889 is the type genus of the family Desmopteridae.

The species are protandric hermaphrodites. There is no shell, no protoconch and no longer any supporting tissue. The body consists almost completely of the two big parapodia (winglike flaps).

Species

Species within the genus Desmopterus include:

  • Desmopterus cirropterus Gegenbaur, 1855[2]
  • Desmopterus gardineri Tesch, 1910[3] - Distribution: Indian Ocean.
  • Desmopterus pacificus Essenberg, 1919[citation needed] - Distribution: California, Oceanic. Description: shorter wing plate tentacles.[citation needed]
  • Desmopterus papilio Chun, 1889[4] Distribution: Seychelles, Florida, Bermuda, Venezuela, Brazil, Adriatic Sea, tropical and subtropical oceanic waters. Length: body length between 0.5 – 2.0 mm, swimming wings between 2.0- 4.0 mm. Description: There is no shell. The animal has wings that are disc-shaped and transparent. The body is large and situated centrally between the lateral wings. These can unite to form a plate with on each side long, ciliated tentacles trailing behind. Most of the time, Desmopterus papilio hangs motionless, but flaps away in a loop pattern when disturbed. There are reddish-brown spots at the margin of the wings.[citation needed]

References

Further reading

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI