Kantharella
Genus of worms
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kantharellidae is a family of worms belonging to the class Rhombozoa, order unassigned. The family consists of only one genus: Kantharella Czaker, 1994.[1] The only species in the genus is Kantharella antarctica.[2] This species is most closely related to other species of the order Dicyemida, which only has one other family, Dicyemidae.[3]
| Kantharella | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Dicyemida |
| Class: | Rhombozoa |
| Family: | Kantharellidae Czaker, 1994 |
| Genus: | Kantharella Czaker, 1994 |
Kantharella is characterized by species that are parasitic endosymbiotes[4] and live within renal sacs of species of cephalopods.[5] They consist of only about 30 cells and they feed off of nutrients in the urine of cephalopods.[5]
Taxonomy
Structure and Behavior
Evolution
The parasitic nature of Kantharella is a trait that evolved significantly long ago as all species within the class Rhomobozoa, also known as Dicyemida, are parasites.[8] There is debate to which species are closest living relatives to Kantharella as there is molecular phylogenies supporting differing species.[8] They have been found to share genetic similarities with roundworms as well as species in the phylum Orthonectida.[8]