Ostrea

Ostrea is a genus of edible oysters, marine bivalve mollusks in the family Ostreidae, the oysters.

Fossil valves of Ostrea forskali from Pliocene of Italy

Ostrea
Temporal range: Permian - Recent
A lower valve (the attachment valve) of a shell of Ostrea edulis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Bivalvia
Order: Ostreida
Family: Ostreidae
Genus: Ostrea
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Species

See text

Fossil records

This genus is very ancient. It is known in the fossil records from the Permian to the Quaternary (age range: from 259 to 0.0 million years ago). Fossil shells of these molluscs can be found all over the world. Genus Ostrea includes about 150 extinct species.[1][2]

History

At least one species within this genus, Ostrea lurida, has been recovered in archaeological excavations along the Central California coast of the Pacific Ocean, demonstrating it was a marine taxon exploited by the Native American Chumash people as a food source.[3]

Species

Species in the genus Ostrea include:[1][4]

  • O. albertensisRussell & Landes, 1937
  • O. angasi Sowerby, 1846
  • O. angulataSowerby, 1840
  • O. angustaDeshayes, 1824
  • O. anomialisLamarck, 1819
  • O. antarcticaZinsmeister, 1984
  • O. arenicolaTate, 1886
  • O. aupouria Dinamani, 1981
  • O. beloitiLogan, 1899
  • O. bicolorHanley, 1854
  • O. blackensisStephenson, 1923
  • O. brongniartiBronn, 1856
  • O. californica Mareon, 1858
  • O. carolinensisConrad, 1832
  • O. castellobrancoiMaury 1936
  • O. chilensis Philippi, 1844
  • O. cochlearPoli, 1795
  • O. compressirostraSay, 1824
  • O. conchaphila Carpenter, 1857
  • O. costaricensisOlsson, 1922
  • O. crenulimarginataGabb, 1860
  • O. cristata Born, 1778
  • O. cubitusDeshayes, 1832
  • O. cumingiana Dunker, 1846
  • O. cynthiaeMaury, 1912
  • O. democracianaHodson et al., 1927
  • O. denselamellosa Lischke, 1869)
  • O. dorsalisAzzaroli, 1958
  • O. edulis Linnaeus, 1758- Edible oyster or Belon oyster
  • O. edwilsoniStoyanow, 1949
  • O. eorivularisOyama & Mizuno, 1958
  • O. equestris (Say, 1834)- Crested oyster
  • O. ericiHertlein, 1929
  • O. flavicans Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. forskaliChemnitz, 1785
  • O. fraasiMayer-Eymar, 1888
  • O. frondosade Serres, 1829
  • O. gajensisVredenburg, 1928
  • O. gingensisSchlotheim, 1813
  • O. glabra Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. golfotristensisMaury 1912
  • O. haleyiHertlein, 1933
  • O. hippopusTate, 1886
  • O. hyotidoideaTate, 1899
  • O. imbricataLamarck, 1819
  • O. incisaMartin, 1883
  • O. invalidaWhite, 1887
  • O. iridescens Gray, 1854
  • O. jogjacartensisMartin, 1914
  • O. khamirensisCox, 1936
  • O. latimarginataVredenburg, 1908
  • O. longirostrisLamarck, 1806
  • O. ludensisDeshayes, 1861
  • O. lurida Carpenter, 1864
  • O. lutariaHutton, 1885
  • O. maculosa Forskål, 1775
  • O. manubriataTate, 1887
  • O. marginidentataWood, 1861
  • O. materculade Verneuil, 1845
  • O. mauricensisGabb, 1860
  • O. megadon (Hanley, 1846)
  • O. mesentericaMorton, 1834
  • O. messorMaury, 1925
  • O. minbuensisCotter, 1923
  • O. minerensisRussell & Landes, 1937
  • O. minuta Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. miradorensisOlsson, 1931
  • O. monetalisMartin, 1931
  • O. negritensisOlsson, 1928
  • Ostrea neostentina L.-S. Hu, H.-Y. Wang, Z. Zhang, C. Li & X.-M. Guo, 2019
  • O. normalisGardner, 1926
  • O. obliterata Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. pangadiensisHislop, 1859
  • O. paracasensisRivera, 1957
  • O. parasiticaGmelin, 1791
  • O. paroxisLesueur, 1829
  • O. parrensisVega et al., 1999
  • O. pejerreyensisRivera, 1957
  • O. pellucens Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. pesfelis Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. petrosaFuchs, 1879
  • O. peytoniRichards, 1947
  • O. pileosimilisMartin, 1931
  • O. plicatula Gmelin, 1791
  • O. portoricoensisHubbard, 1920
  • O. princepsWoods, 1850
  • O. procyonisMaury, 1924
  • O. pronaWood, 1861
  • O. protoimbricataVredenburg, 1928
  • O. pseudocrassissimaFuchs, 1878
  • O. pseudodigitalinaFuchs, 1879
  • O. pseudorissensisVredenburg, 1928
  • O. pulaskensisHarris, 1892
  • O. radula Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. ravenelianaTuomey & Holmes, 1855
  • O. resupinataDeshayes, 1858
  • O. retusa Sowerby, 1871
  • O. russelliRussell & Landes, 1937
  • O. samanensisOlsson, 1928
  • O. sanguinea Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. saxitonianaMcLearn, 1929
  • O. seymourensisZinsmeister, 1984
  • O. soleniscusMeek, 1893
  • O. stentina Payraudeau, 1826
  • O. striatula Linnaeus, 1758
  • O. sturtianaTate, 1886
  • O. subangulatad'Orbigny, 1852
  • O. submissaDeshayes, 1864
  • O. subradiosaBohm, 1926
  • O. superficialis Forskål, 1775
  • O. tacalensisHodson et al., 1927
  • O. taylorianaGabb, 1866
  • O. thalassoklustaMaury, 1912
  • O. tridacnaeformis Cox, 1927
  • O. turkestanensisRomanovski, 1880
  • O. uncintaLamarck, 1806
  • O. ungulataNyst, 1843
  • O. ventilabrumGoldfuss, 1826
  • O. vestitaFuchs, 1883
  • O. wiedenmayeriHodson et al., 1927
  • O. wollastoniFinlay, 1927

See also

References

  1. Fossilworks
  2. J.D. Dana (1996)
  3. C.M. Hogan, 2008
  4. WoRMS
  • James Dwight Dana (1996) Manual of Geology: Treating of the Principles of the Science with Special Reference to American Geological History, American Book Co., 1088 pages
  • C.Michael Hogan (2008) Morro Creek, The Megalithic Portal, ed. by A. Burnham
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