Phoronis ovalis is a species of marine horseshoe worm in the phylum . It is found in shallow waters in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, the southeastern Atlantic Ocean, Argentina, and other scattered locations worldwide. These worms secrete a tube into which they can retreat, and burrow into the shells of Mollusca.
Description
Phoronis ovalis is the smallest known species of horseshoe worms,
[ Homology of the lophophore and its evolution within lophophorates] growing to an extended length of and a diameter of . It exhibits many primitive traits. The
lophophore is simple and oval in shape, with 11 to 28 tentacles. The giant nerve fibre typical of the genus is not present. The animal is transparent, sometimes with a brownish lophophore.
The haemal, excretory and nervous systems are bilaterally symmetrical, which is not the case with other members of the genus.
Ecology
Phoronis ovalis is believed to be a
hermaphrodite, and the
are brooded in the tube. Asexual reproduction can also take place, either by
budding or by transverse fission.
[ The lophophore is used for feeding and for gas exchange. Under adverse conditions, the lophophore is readily autotomy; the animal can regenerate its lophophore and the shed lophophore can grow a new body.][
]
In 2010 it was reported that Phoronis ovalis was present in beds of molluscs off the coast of Namibia, it having not previously been recorded in Africa. The brown mussel ( Perna perna) was the mollusc most frequently found acting as a host, and in one mussel bed, 99% of the mussels exhibited the boreholes made by the horseshoe worm. Other hosts included three other species of Bivalvia, four species of Gastropoda and one barnacle species.