Today's worm is Myrianida pachycera, looking like a gummy dragon.
Photo by Siobhan O'Neill

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Iraq
seen from China
seen from Switzerland
seen from Türkiye

seen from Jamaica

seen from Argentina
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Saudi Arabia
Today's worm is Myrianida pachycera, looking like a gummy dragon.
Photo by Siobhan O'Neill
The Japanese green syllid Megasyllis nipponica, is a bristle worm native from the coast of Japan, but now is know to live in coastal parts of California where is stablished. This little dance seen in the GIF have a reproductive reason, and researchers now explaing better what is happening, and you may not be prepared to this.
The brown and dancing body segment is called the stolon, which detaches from the worm in a unique reproductive process called stolonisation or schizogamy. When gonads are matured, the stolon developed a head, which even posses eyes, antennae and bristles, then the stolon can break off and swim away, to break apart to release eggs or sperm. This bizarre process continues before the stolon detaches when it develops nerves and a ‘brain’, allowing it to swim independently from the original body.
Video and figure by Nakamura et al 2023
Reference (Open Access): Nakamura et al. 2023 Morphological, histological and gene-expression analyses on stolonization in the Japanese Green Syllid, Megasyllis nipponica (Annelida, Syllidae). Sci Rep
14/09/23 - Syllidae sp.
14/09/23 - Annelida sp.
14/09/23 - Unidentified
14/09/23 - Annelida sp.
14/09/23 - Unidentified
14/09/23 - Annelida sp.
Marine worms collected from tidepools
14/09/23
QLD:CQC - Yeppoon, tidepools
we found it, the silly worm
Reproduction by gemmiparity in Syllidae
Polychaete worm (Myrianida pachycera)
Photo by Damon Tighe
Today's worm, Ramisyllis kingghidorahi is one of a few rare branching annelids! Yes, its body actually branches and it has multiple butts! The worm itself lives inside sponges, but the branching parts can grow eyes, detach and swim away to reproduce. This species was only described in 2022.
Photo from Aguado, M.T., Ponz-Segrelles, G., Glasby, C.J. et al.
Polychaete of today is the citrus-y Epigamia magna.
Photo by JA Fields