New worm species, that looks like the rear of a pig!08/12/2007 00:00:00 It sounds like a junior high school riddle—’What lives 3,000 feet below the ocean surface, is about the size of a marble, and looks like the back side of a pig?’ MBARI marine biologists have pondering this riddle for years, having seen a number of these strange, round organisms during deep dives in Monterey Canyon. MBARI biologist Karen Osborn and her co-workers recently came up with an answer to this riddle by combining modern DNA analysis with traditional methods of scientific observation. What they discovered was a new species of deep-sea worm, but a worm like no other. In a recent scientific paper, they gave this little creature a Latin name: Chaetopterus pugaporcinus.At this point, the researchers began to suspect that they might have an adult worm. However, all known adult chaetopterid worms have elongated, segmented bodies, and spend their lives inside parchment-like tubes attached to the seafloor. Looking closely at specimens of the new worm, the researchers found that although the worms had segmented bodies, one of their middle segments was inflated like a balloon, giving the animals a distinctive gum-ball shape. All the other segments were compressed up against the front and back of the inflated segment, like a cartoon character whose nose and hind-parts have been flattened in an unfortunate accident. Given the twisted chaetopterid family tree, Osborn and her coauthors decided to use modern DNA analysis to figure out who was related to whom. After analyzing the DNA from dozens of worms, the researchers created the first family tree that shows the relationships between 12 species of chaetopterid worms (including their new species)—a significant scientific feat in its own right. To understand more about the new worms, the researchers combined these modern analytical techniques with the time-honored biological approach of making direct, meticulous observation of live animals in their native environment and of dissected animals in the laboratory. One thing they noticed was that all the worms were drifting at depths of about 900 to 1,200 meters (3,000 to 4,000 feet) below the ocean surface. Furthermore, the worms seemed to hang out in this particular depth range even when the seafloor itself was thousands of meters deeper. The researchers still aren't sure if the worms they have been studying are larvae or adults. None of the individuals they collected had any identifiable sex organs, eggs, or sperm. Thus, they could be, as the authors put it, ‘wayward larvae, swept off the continental shelf and unable to settle [to the seafloor], thus growing to unusual size and developing adult features.’ To test this hypothesis, the researchers placed one of the captured animals in a salt-water aquarium with deep-sea sediment and rocks on the bottom. But the creature seemed content with its drifting lifestyle and showed no signs of settling down to the bottom of the tank. Another possible scenario (and one favoured by the researchers) is that this species of worm is in the process of making an evolutionary ‘leap’—giving up a life on the seafloor and taking up a new life floating in the water column. This would be a spectacular achievement for a creature whose (newly assigned) Latin name translates to ‘Chaetopterid worm that looks like the rump of a pig.’
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