Humpback and Barnacle, linocut, 8" x 8" by Ele Willoughby, 2024 |
This month is parasite month for #InsertAnInvert2024, so I have been kind of dancing around the prompts and choosing somewhat different species than those suggested, cause, to be quite honest, some of these inverts give me the creeps. For the first two prompts I chose plant rather than animal parasites and reposted art I had previously made: the Dropsophila (fruit fly) and carmine prints. For the third week a shark barnacle was a suggested species, but I decided to look at the whale barnacles.
This hand-printed lino block print with gel plate printed
areas is about Coronula diadema, a barnacle which specializes in
humpback and some other baleen whales. Each print is 20.3 cm x 20.3 cm
(8" x 8") on lovely Japanese mulberry paper and shows the humpback whale
swimming above and a close up of the whale below with six barnacles.
The
Coronula diadema name comes from its barrel and crown-like shape, which
can grow to 5 cm (2") tall and 6 cm (2.4") in diameter. They are common
to abundant on humpback whales. Barnacles are actually crustaceans, and
C. diadema has 6 plates and a hexagonal opening on top, protected with a
pair of opercular valves. The hermaphrodite parasites cluster together
in order to breed. The barnacles use the whales as host, and the whales
may in turn use the barnacles as a sort of armour and to inflict more
damage when fighting in mating battles or against predators. So theirs
is a likely a mutually beneficial relationship and are considered
commensals.
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