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Side view of two Bigelow’s amphipod seen down a microscope

(Photo: Huntsman Marine Science Centre)

Passamaquoddy Bay Pockmarks

Bigelow's Amphipod

Casco bigelowi

Amphipod 10 to 20 millimetres long. It has distinctive red and white stripes. The body is dorsolaterally flattened (thinnest when viewed from above). The front angle of the head and first side plate are strongly produced into pointed flanges.

Authority

Blake, 1929

Classification Details

Phylum: Arthropoda (arthropods); Subphylum: Crustacea (crustaceans); Order: Amphipoda (amphipods).

Habitat

This burrow-dwelling amphipod is found on the Atlantic coast of North America. It lives in muddy sediments in low intertidal to subtidal waters, in depths less than 150 metres. Not very abundant: densities do not usually exceed 100 individuals per metre². Species considered rare throughout its range.

Diet

A deposit feeder. It excavates, processes, and immediately redeposits subsurface sediments within its burrow system.

Reproduction

Females expand their homes to accommodate growing families. As juveniles increase in size, females will increase burrow systems to accommodate their growing young.

Fun Facts

This species was described just over the border in Casco Bay, Maine. It was named after Dr. Robert P. Bigelow of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

References

Procter W, Johnson CW and Blake CH (1927) Biological survey of the Mount Desert Region. Philadelphia: The Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology.

Thiel M (1998) Reproductive biology of a deposit–feeding amphipod, Casco bigelowi, with extended parental care. Marine Biology 132, 107–116.

Thiel M and Watling L (2015) The Natural History of the Crustacea: Vol.2: Lifestyles and feeding biology. New York: Oxford University Press.

Van Guelpen L, Pohle G, Vanden Berghe E and Costello MJ (2005) Marine Species Registers for the North Atlantic Ocean. World Wide Web electronic publication. http://www.vliz.be/vmdcdata/narms/

Side view of two Bigelow’s amphipod seen down a microscope