pteropod
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek πτερόν (pterón, “wing, feather”) + ποδός (podós), genitive singular of πούς (poús, “foot, leg”). Equivalent to ptero- + -pod.
Noun
pteropod (plural pteropods)
- Any of free-swimming pelagic sea snails and sea slugs, of the suborder Thecosomata, that have winglike lobes on the feet; a sea butterfly.
- 1998, Yvonne Herman, “5: Pteropods”, in B.U. Haq, A. Boersma, editors, Introduction to Marine Micropaleontology, page 151:
- Pteropods, also known as sea butterflies, are marine gastropods adapted to pelagic life. […] When pteropods constitute a high percentage of the ooze the deposit is called pteropod ooze.
- 2011, Ellen Prager, Sex, Drugs, and Sea Slime: The Oceans' Oddest Creatures and Why They Matter, page 33:
- For fans of the undersea sci-fi classic The Abyss, a pteropod seems a likely inspiration for the ethereal alien creatures that were the saviors at the film's end.
The muscular foot that most snails use for locomotion has been modified in the pteropods into delicate fins for swimming.
- 2013, George Karleskint, Jr, Richard Turner, James Small, Jr, Introduction to Marine Biology, 4th edition, Cengage Learning, page 446:
- Pteropods, or sea butterflies, have a foot that is modified to form a pair of winglike structures that animals use to propel themselves through the water column.
Synonyms
- (any member of Thecosomata): sea butterfly
Derived terms
- pteropod ooze
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