Invasion History
First Non-native Panama (Pacific) Tidal Record: 1929Panama Invasion History:
Invasion history elsewhere in the world:
Invasion history for Elsewhere in the World has not been summarized for this species at this time.
Description
Bankia gouldi (Cupped Shipworm) belongs to the family Teredinidae (shipworms), which are highly modified mollusks, hardly recognizable as bivalves, adapted for boring into wood. The shell is reduced to two small, ridged valves, which cover the head and are used for grinding and tearing wood fibers. The shell of Bankia gouldi, like those of other shipworm species, has three subglobular lobes. The smallest of these is the auricle, which is semicircular and subtriangular. The interior of the shell has a long, curved process (styloid apophysis). The body is naked and elongated, and ends with two siphons, protected by elaborate calcareous structures called 'pallets'. The pallets are elaborate plume-like structures, consisting of nested cones at the end of a long stalk. The cones are funnel-shaped, shallow-cupped, with blunt, smooth edges. The cups are crowded at the tip of the pallet and covered with a cap of periostracum. The pallets are ~0.8 mm in length (Description from: Turner 1966; Turner 1971; Abbott 1974; Coan et al. 2000). Identification of shipworms to species requires a specialist.
Potentially misidentified species – The diversity of shipworms in tropical waters is very great but decreases at higher latitudes. Most of the species listed below have been reported in Florida, Caribbean, West Coast, or Hawaiian waters. However, in temperate waters, many collectors historically identified all or most shipworms as T. navalis.
Taxonomy
Taxonomic Tree
Kingdom: | Animalia | |
Phylum: | Mollusca | |
Class: | Bivalvia | |
Subclass: | Heterodonta | |
Order: | Myoida | |
Superfamily: | Pholadoidea | |
Family: | Teredinidae | |
Genus: | Bankia | |
Species: | gouldi |
Synonyms
Bankia schrencki (Moll, 1935)
Potentially Misidentified Species
Cosmopolitan
Bankia cieba
Native to southern Caribbean
Bankia destructa
Native to southern Caribbean
Bankia fimbriatula
Native to southern Caribbean and southwest Atlantic
Bankia zeteki
Eastern Pacific species, introduced to Caribbean Panama
Ecology
General:
Shipworms dig long burrows in submerged wood in marine environments. They burrow by rocking and abrading the wood fibers. The mantle covers most of the length of their body and secretes a calcareous lining along the interior of the burrow. They normally have their anterior end with head and shells inside the burrow, and their siphons protruding outwards. The pallets plug the burrow when the siphons are retracted (Barnes 1983).
Shipworms are protandrous hermaphrodites, beginning life as male and transforming to female, but they have no capacity for self-fertilization. Both males and females release their gametes into the water column, where fertilization occurs. The female’s eggs are small, ~45 um. The eggs develop into bivalve veligers, which settle after about 25 to 30 days (Sigerfoos 1907; Culliney 1975). Breeding occurs at temperatures of 16–32 C and 17.5 PSU (Scheltema and Truitt 1954; Culliney 1975).
Bankia gouldi is known from driftwood, pilings, vessels, and other wooden structures (Bartsch 1908; Bartsch 1922). Adults tolerate water temperatures from near zero to 33°C and salinities of 9 to 35 PSU (Scheltema and Truitt 1954; Richards et al. 1984). Bankia gouldi tolerates high concentrations of humic substances in the water derived from soil and vegetation while for Teredo navalis larvae humic substances may cause premature settlement and interfere with site selection. This may be one factor accounting for the scarcity of T. navalis in southeastern US estuaries, and the dominance of the more tolerant Bankia gouldi (Culliney 1975). If their piece of wood is intact, shipworms have few predators, but when the riddled wood disintegrates, they are rapidly eaten by fishes, crabs, and other predators (Sigerfoos 1907).
Food:
Phytoplankton; Wood
Trophic Status:
Suspension Feeder
SusFedHabitats
General Habitat | Coarse Woody Debris | None |
General Habitat | Marinas & Docks | None |
General Habitat | Mangroves | None |
General Habitat | Vessel Hull | None |
Salinity Range | Mesohaline | 5-18 PSU |
Salinity Range | Polyhaline | 18-30 PSU |
Salinity Range | Euhaline | 30-40 PSU |
Tidal Range | Subtidal | None |
Vertical Habitat | Epibenthic | None |
Life History
Tolerances and Life History Parameters
Minimum Depth (m) | 305 | 1 feet (crowded, Sigerfoos 1907 |
Minimum Temperature (ºC) | 5 | Richards et al. 1984; Schelterm and Truitt 1954 |
Maximum Temperature (ºC) | 33 | Richards et al. 1984; Schelterm and Truitt 1954 |
Minimum Salinity (‰) | 9 | Schelterm and Truitt 1954; Richards et al. 1984; |
Maximum Salinity (‰) | 35 | Schelterm and Truitt 1954; Richards et al. 1984; |
Minimum Reproductive Temperature | 16 | Culliney 1975 |
Maximum Reproductive Temperature | 32 | Culliney 1975 |
Minimum Reproductive Salinity | 17.5 | Culliney 1975 |
Maximum Reproductive Salinity | 30 | Culliney 1975 |
Minimum Duration | 25 | Culliney 1975, Lab, |
Maximum Duration | 30 | Sigerfoos 1908, Field, 25 C, 30 PSU |
Maximum Length (mm) | 610 | 2 feet (Sigerfoos 1907 |
Broad Temperature Range | None | Warm temperate-Tropical |
Broad Salinity Range | None | Mesohaline-Euhaline |
General Impacts
Bankia gouldi is a major woodborer on the Atlantic Coast of the US from New Jersey to the Gulf of Mexico, damaging wooden boats, docks, and pilings (Sigerfoos 1907; Atwood 1920; Richards et al. 1984). Improving water quality in harbors is likely to increase damage by borers in US harbors (Abood et al. 1995). In Barnegat Bay, New Jersey,thermal effluents increased the breeding seasons of Bankia gouldi, Teredo navalis, and exotic shipworms. Climate change is likely to favor northward range expansion of B. gouldi.
Occurrence Map
OCC_ID | Author | Year | Date | Locality | Status | Latitude | Longitude |
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References
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