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  1. Coronula diadema - Wikipedia

  2. Coronula diadema (Linnaeus, 1767) - World Register of …

    WebTo NMNH Extant Collection (Coronula diadema USNM 48081, unrecorded catalog number) Hosted externally To Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History (YPM IZ 006510.CR)

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    Coronula diadema is a species of whale barnacle that lives on the skin of humpback whales and certain other species of whale. This species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in the 1767 12th edition of his Systema Naturae.
    The life history of Coronula diadema starts from a short window of larval settlement and recruitment during several winter months when whales gather in the warm-water breeding grounds. Barnacles grow up to adults when whales traveling to the polar feeding grounds in summer.
    Mating group in Coronula diadema (blue circle) and Conchoderma auritum (Red circle) on dried whale skin from ventral groove and on tail fluke of a humpback whale. S3 Figure. Setal morphology and cirral setation of the whale barnacle Coronula diadema and the coral-associated barnacle Cantellius arcuatus.
    As its name suggests, Coronula diadema resembles a crown in appearance, but as it grows it becomes more cylindrical; large specimens may be 5 cm (2 in) tall and 6 cm (2.4 in) in diameter. There are six broad wall plates surrounding a hexagonal orifice at the top, which is protected by a pair of opercular valves.
  4. Coronula diadema (Linnaeus 1767) articles - Encyclopedia of Life

  5. How do whale barnacles live on their hosts? Functional …

  6. How do whale barnacles live on their hosts? Functional

  7. Coronula diadema Linnaeus, 1767 - Walla Walla University

  8. Larval development and settlement of a whale barnacle - PMC

  9. Coronula diadema (Linnaeus, 1767) - GBIF

  10. Coronula diadema (Linnaeus 1767) - Encyclopedia of Life

    WebKnown occurrences, collected specimens and observations of Coronula diadema (Linnaeus 1767). View this species on GBIF