Tube worms of the family Serpulidae. Sea worm: types, description and breathing characteristics Crabs and shrimp

Sea worms are unusual creatures. Many of them look like fantastic flowers or bright flat ribbons, and there are species that evoke a shiver of horror with their appearance and habits. In general, the sea worm is a very interesting creature. It can be spiny-headed, polychaete, ringed, flat, hairy, and so on. The list is actually huge. In this article we will take a closer look at several types.

tubular polychaete

The sea worm, the photo of which looks like an exotic flower, is called a tubular polychaete or “Christmas tree.” This bright species belongs to the Sabellidae family. The Latin name of the animal is Spirobranchus giganteus, and the English name is Christmas tree worm.

This species of sea worm lives in the tropical zone of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Preference is given to shallow depths, coral thickets and clean water.

To feel protected, this sea worm builds a calcareous tube of calcium and carbonate ions. The animal extracts its building material directly from the water. To bind ions, the “Christmas tree” secretes a special organic component from two oral glands. As the worm grows, the tube has to be added by attaching new rings to the end of the old shelter.

The larvae of polychaete tubeworms are responsible when choosing a place for a house. They begin construction only on dead or weak corals. Sometimes they gather in entire colonies, but single houses are also found quite often. As the corals grow, they hide the tube, leaving only an elegant multi-colored “herringbone” on the surface. By the way, the color of the sea worm is really bright and rich. It comes in blue, yellow, red, white, pink, mottled and even black. There are a lot of options. Non-fast individuals combine different colors.

A beautiful external “Christmas tree” is not just a decoration, but gill rays that perform the work of the nutritional and respiratory organs. Each sea worm has two spirals of gill rays.

Polychaetes take care of their safety at the stage of building a house. The lime tube has a tight lid; at the slightest threat, the worm instantly pulls in and slams the entrance shut.

Depending on the species, Spirobranchus giganteus live from 4 to 8 years.

Polychaetes

Polychaetes belong to a type of annelids, the class Polychaetes. More than 10 thousand species live in nature. Most live in the seas and lead a bottom-dwelling lifestyle. Some families (for example, Tomopteridae) live in the perialium (open sea or ocean that does not touch the bottom). Several genera live in fresh waters, such as Lake Baikal.

Marine sandstone

One of the most common representatives of polychaetes is the ringed polychaete marine worm, whose name is the marine sandworm. In Latin it sounds like Arenicola marina. The animal is quite large, its length reaches 20 cm. This sea worm lives in arched burrows dug in the bottom sand. The food for this species is bottom sediment, which the worm passes through the intestines.

The body of an adult individual consists of three sections - thorax, abdomen and caudal. The outer integument forms secondary rings that do not correspond to segmentation. There are 11 abdominal segments in the body of the worm, and each contains paired bushy gills.

The sea sandbite strengthens the walls of its home with mucus. The length of the burrow is about 30 cm. While in the house, the worm places the front end of its body in the horizontal section of the burrow, and the rear end in the vertical section. A funnel forms on the ground above the head end of the worm as it constantly swallows bottom sediments. To defecate, the sandworm exposes its rear end from the burrow. At this moment, the sea worm can become prey for a predator.

Nereid

The Nereid is a marine ringed crawler that serves as food for many marine fish. The body of the worm consists of segments. At the front point there is a head, on which there are tentacles, a mouth, jaws and two pairs of eyes. The sides of the segments are equipped with flat processes similar to blades. Numerous long bristles are concentrated here.

In the Nereid, the entire surface of the body is involved in breathing. The ringed ones, which are familiar to everyone, breathe the same way. The Nereid moves, quickly moving its blade-like outgrowths. At the same time, the body rests on the bottom with tufts of bristles. This marine annelid's menu includes algae and small animals that it grabs with its jaws.

Breathing Features

The breathing method used by the Nereids can be considered an exception to the rule for this type of worm. How do other representatives of ringed animals breathe? What do the breathing of marine annelids have in common? Respiration of most species occurs through gills, which are located on blade-shaped outgrowths. The gills are equipped with a large number of capillaries. The enrichment of blood with oxygen comes from air, which is dissolved in water. This is where carbon dioxide is released into the water.

Marine flatworms

The marine flatworm is most often a predator. He moves by crawling or swimming. It is a bilaterally symmetrical animal. Turbellaria have a flattened body of oval or elongated shape. The sensory organs are located on the front of the body, and the mouth is on the ventral side.

The digestive tract of eyelash worms varies by species. It can be completely primitive or quite complex, with a branched intestine.

Some species of marine turbellaria are discreet and inconspicuous, but there are bright multi-colored beauties that are simply impossible not to notice.

Tube worm Escarpia laminata. On the right are representatives marked with dye to study annual growth.

American scientists studied the life cycle of a population of tube worms of the species Escarpia laminata and found out that they are one of the longest-living creatures on Earth. By tracking changes in the tubeworm's body length and simulating its growth over time, the researchers found that members of this species can live up to 250 years. Article published in the magazine The Science of Nature and is available on the publisher's website Springer.

The deep ocean is home to many long-lived organisms due to the low likelihood of death from predation and the presence of cold seeps, areas in the seafloor that release substances into the water that provide a favorable environment for autotrophic life. The nutrition of tube worms depends on autotrophic microbes living inside them, which oxidize methane and hydrogen sulfide (substances of volcanic origin that enter the water due to cold seeps), necessary for their life. The stability of life in symbiosis with bacteria and the low temperature of the deep sea are reliable sources of longevity, therefore tube worms, in particular representatives of the species Lamellibrachia luymesi And Seepiophila jonesi, can live up to two hundred years.

The authors of the new work examined a little-studied species of tube worms that live in the depths of the ocean - Escarpia laminata. Representatives of this species live at a depth of 1000 to 3300 meters on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico. To this species of tube worm, scientists applied the same method of studying annual growth that was used to study tube worms of the species L. luymesi. 356 representatives of the species E. laminata were measured in situ, labeled with a waterproof blue acid dye, and collected one year later. The uncolored area that appeared on the worm's body during this time was an indicator of the annual growth of each individual representative.


Graph of exponential distribution of annual growth (centimeters per year, Y-axis) of E. laminata versus initially measured length (centimeters, X-axis)

Durkin et al. / The Science of Nature 2017

After receiving the tubeworm's annual growth data, the researchers ran a growth simulation E. laminata. The simulation method was based on work on another tubeworm, L. luymesi. Scientists measured the average age of both an individual representative of each population and the average age within the same population.

It turned out that the average age of one tube worm with a length of 50 centimeters is 116.1 years (for comparison, with the same length, the age of representatives L. luymesi And S. jonesi estimated at 21 years and 96 years respectively). The longest (and, accordingly, longest-lived) of the collected representatives E. laminata turned out to be more than 250 years old.

Scientists suggest that the reason for the longevity of tube worms is a decrease in metabolic rate, which became possible due to the increase in the depth of the species' habitat.

With a life span of more than 250 years, the tube worm E. laminata second only to one known long-lived invertebrate, the mollusk Artica islandica, whose age may exceed 500 years. You can read about the long-lived vertebrate, the Greenland polar shark, in ours.

Elizaveta Ivtushok

New Year is coming soon, so this article will be dedicated to one animal that I completely associate with this holiday. What you see in front of you is not just another beautiful underwater plant in the form of a Christmas tree, but a real animal - a tubular polychaete marine worm of the Sabellidae family.


"New Year trees" are common in the tropical zone of the Indian and western Pacific oceans. They can be found at shallow depths among corals, in crystal clear water, poor in nutrients.



They live in a limestone tube. At the same time, the main building materials are calcium ions and carbonate ions, which the worm extracts from the water.

Their connecting link is an organic component secreted from two glands located in the mouth. During growth, new parts of the tube are added by small rings that are placed at the end of the old tube.



But before starting to build its shelter, the worm larva carefully selects corals for its house. Only weakened or dead polyps are suitable for her, because it is more convenient to build tube houses on them.


There are entire colonies of these worms

Over time, the corals grow around the tube, becoming less noticeable, and only “herringbones” remain on the surface.



What looks so much like a fir tree are gill rays that diverge into 2 separate spirals. They are simultaneously respiratory and nutritional organs ( pick up small particles of organic matter from the water).

By the way, numerous colonies of worms of the same color are very rare

Their color can be very diverse: bright blue, red and yellow, with shades from white to pink-blue and even black, etc. It may be that the gill rays of one worm have a different color scheme.



Another characteristic feature of these worms is the presence of a cap on the tube that tightly closes the entrance to the tube. At the slightest danger, the worm instantly retracts its spiral-shaped gill rays inside the tube, thereby closing with a lid.

Spirobranchus giganteus lives differently, it all depends on the species: smaller worms live for several months, and larger species live up to 4-8 years.

Description: tube worm family Serpulidae live in a limestone tube they built. They usually build colonies of individual animals, which may be due to asexual reproduction. The crown of the tentacles is usually colored red. The animals are very shy: when a large object approaches them, they hide in the tube and appear on the surface only after a few minutes.

Lifestyle: The corolla of tube worms' tentacles allows water to pass through them to catch tiny floating particles. It is important that the current be weak, otherwise the filtering apparatus of these animals will not function effectively. This means that even if there is sufficient food available, but the current is strong, the worms will most likely die.

General information: It is best to keep these tiny worms in a species aquarium. The foam separation and filtration system in such an aquarium should not be very powerful, the current should not be strong, but rather moderate and, above all, constant. A nano aquarium with a reef column ideally meets these criteria.

Under natural conditions, these tiny tube worms reproduce sexually. but no such cases have been recorded in aquariums. A possible cause of colonies is vegetative propagation by budding. Huge populations of tube worms are sometimes observed in aquariums.

Origin, source: tiny calcium tube worms with red crowned tentacles, reaching a length of 7-10 mm. belong to the clan Filogranella. From time to time they can be found in pet stores. Their tubes are woven into dense balls; several individual animals can be taken from these colonies into a nanoaquarium. Even smaller are tubeworms, which, according to Fossa and Nilsen (1996), belong to the group Vermiliopsis-infunciibulum/glandigera. Their length is only a few millimeters. they have the same red tentacles. These animals live in many aquariums, but to find them, you have to look behind the rocks.

They are often found in filter chambers, skimmers or connecting pipes. It is necessary to carefully separate their tubes without damaging them with a sharp knife. The easiest way to pick up animals is from a glass surface.

Also, small carob worms live in the filter chambers, for example, from the genus Spirorbis. They have a white limestone house, which, however, looks like a snail shell. These worms are even smaller than the previous two types and can be easily removed from the wall of the aquarium using a piece of acrylic glass or a razor blade. For all the described tube worms in a nanoaquarium, it is necessary to create good conditions, first of all, optimal flow and a shaded place. The tube with the worm should simply be placed in the recess of the stone, and large specimens should be glued with epoxy resin. If the environment is favorable, the worms form large colonies.

Feeding: tiny tube worms of the family Serpulidae only accept small particles of food. This assumes that the water is not filtered like in a nano reef column aquarium. Based on this, food consumers must live in it: their metabolism is one of the sources of food particles. Consumers are mobile invertebrates and fish. Tubeworms benefit from both the feeding of these animals, their excrement, and the larvae of microorganisms.

02/04/2013 | website

“Behold, he spreads his light over it, and covers the bottom of the sea” Job 36:30.

Deep-sea tube worms were first discovered in 1977, when two scientists sank to the ocean floor near the Galapagos Islands off the coast of South America. Scientists were looking for hot springs there. When the temperature on the thermometer located on the search instruments jumped, they boarded the Alvin submarine and dived to almost 2,700 meters. There they saw a whole living community. Tube worms and other creatures lived around the hot springs.

Deep-sea tube worms had never been seen before, and marine biologists were not even aware of their existence. This discovery gave rise to new theories and assumptions. At first they were thought to live only in this area, but since then they have been found in six or seven different areas. In March 1984, Alvin delivered a crew of two to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico. There, tube worms were found that did not live around the thermal spring. This fact has led marine researchers to believe that tube worms may be living all over the seabed.

How do they eat and live, you ask? Scientists have discovered that the nutrition of tube worms is provided by bacteria living in them. The bacteria, in turn, using certain properties of the worms’ blood, produce food for themselves from the water. In this way, tubeworms and bacteria help each other.

Just as scientists are still discovering new inhabitants of the natural world, many are discovering new truths in the Word of God. It's not that God is hiding something from us. It’s just that much in His natural and spiritual world has not yet been discovered.

Ask God to help you find and believe new truths in His Word today.

"Curiosity" - daily readings for teenagers for 2013

An electronic version of daily readings for teenagers is provided by the publishing house. You can purchase daily readings for teens at Book Centers in your area.

Views