A peanut worm pulled up from the deep ocean off Australia that looks very much like a penis.
(Image credit: Museums Victoria)
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A peanut worm pulled up from the deep ocean off Australia that looks very much like a penis.
(Image credit: Museums Victoria)
Peanut worm (Golfingia vulgaris) By: Hervé Chaumeton From: Éditions Rencontre Cards 1978
Agassiz's peanut worm (Phascolosoma agassizii)
Photo by Marlin Harms
Cambrian Explosion Month #22: Phylum Annelida – Down the Wormhole
Among the various stem-polychaete worms known from the Cambrian, the existence of more modern-style annelids like Pygocirrus hint that the common ancestor of modern forms might have evolved much earlier than previously thought. But this was complicated by the fact that all the known stem-polychaetes seem to have been active crawlers or swimmers, while the oldest modern lineage of polychaetes are burrowers, mostly sedentary, and sometimes tube-dwelling.
So if "crown group" forms that lived buried in the seafloor sediment must have diverged at least as far back as the early Cambrian, where were the fossils of them?
Enter Dannychaeta tucolus!
Recently discovered in the Xiazhuang fossil deposits in Yunnan, China (~514 million years ago), this polychaete had long tentacle-like palps, a pronounced head, and a stout region at the front of its body with the rest being very long and slender. The known fossil specimens are incomplete, but it may have been around 8-10cm long (~3-4") and it was preserved inside tube-lined burrows.
It resembled modern magelonid shovelhead worms so closely that it's been classified as a member of that group, making it the oldest crown-annelid with close living relatives – and showing that early members of the phylum must have been experimenting with a much wider range of lifestyles than previous fossil evidence suggested.
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Sipunculans, or "peanut worms", are a group of unsegmented marine worms that mostly live in burrows or crevices. They were traditionally considered to be their own phylum, but more recent molecular studies have revealed them to actually be annelids – although it's not clear where exactly they fit into the group's overall evolution. They might be a very ancient branch, diverging even before the early Cambrian stem-polychaetes, or they might have originated within the polychaetes, perhaps belonging somewhere closer to earthworms and leeches or fireworms.
Fossils of this group are extremely rare, making their evolutionary origins even murkier, but there are a couple of possible examples from the Cambrian.
Known from the Chinese Chengjiang fossil deposits (~518 million years ago), Archaeogolfingia caudata and Cambrosipunculus tentaculatus were very similar in appearance to modern golfingiidan sipunculans. Both were about 4cm long (1.6"), and they probably lived buried in the seafloor sediment in burrows, extending the front part of their bodies out to feed on organic detritus.
They demonstrate that the basic sipunculan body plan already existed in the early Cambrian, and so the group must have undergone some incredibly rapid anatomical changes after they first diverged from other annelids – then proceeded to change very little over the next half a billion years.
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A Pacific peanut worm, Phascolosoma agassizii. This was my first time seeing an acorn worm and I was really puzzled. They're not uncommon animals and they are of decent size, about 8cm or 3 inches. Seeing an animal in a phylum I've never seen before is always exciting, and I was really taken in by the patterns. I originally assumed the visible parts were the whole animal, but it turns out they're concealing the more substantial portion of their bodies.
Photo source: https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phascolosoma_agassizii
(The video is mine and was edited for clarity)
What’s that critter? It’s the peanut worm, one of the most common and widespread marine organisms!
The respiratory protein in this worm contains iron, but it’s in a different form than the iron in our blood. Violet when carrying oxygen, its blood becomes colorless after it releases oxygen to the cells. The protein in its blood, hemerythrin, isn’t nearly as efficient an oxygen-carrier as hemoglobin.
Photo: Mandalorian
via: American Museum of Natural History
Peanut worm (Phascolosoma sp.) By: General Biological Supply House, Inc. From: The Science of Zoology 1966
Peanut worm (Glossobalanus sp.) By: Heather Angel From: The Complete Encyclopedia of the Animal World 1980