MARINE WORMS

2021 ◽  
pp. 43-56
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Daniel Ngabalin ◽  
Eygner Gerald Talakua

Smoked fish processing business in Wab Village still used traditional methods (fumigation open) and are household enterprises (micro-scale enterprises) can be seen from the aspect of production and management aspects. Two aspects of this raise the priority issues faced by partners namely: how the fish correct fumigation techniques? What forms fumigation appropriate tool? How to manage capital and production business properly? How do I do the recording business activities in the notebook business correctly? And how to sell or market products correctly? Through methods of participatory rural appraisal, fisheries extension method, and the method pretest-posttest control group design, the implementation of community service activities carried out as a priority the settlement solution problem by doing: 1) Initial extension of community service activities; 2) Extension of heat curing, heat curing tool making appropriate, and the use of heat curing; 3) Counseling on capital management and production; 4) Extension of book production business records; and 5) Counseling about pricing, promotion, and strategy for dealing with the business of competition. So the outcome reached was contained fish products and marine worms (increasingly) the smoke as much as 25 / week; there are two tools used fumigation partners; there were five notebooks submitted to partners and capable of recording the three notebooks (book purchases, sales, and profit/loss); and 50 fish and marine worms (increasingly) smoke marketed in Wab Village.


Diversity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 132
Author(s):  
Maël Grosse ◽  
Anna Zhadan ◽  
Joachim Langeneck ◽  
Dieter Fiege ◽  
Alejandro Martínez

Sedentarian annelids are a diverse and heterogeneous group of marine worms representing more than 8600 species gathered in ca. 43 families. The attention brought to these organisms is unevenly distributed among these families, and the knowledge about them sometimes scarce. We review here the current knowledge about the families Acrocirridae, Cirratulidae (including Ctenodrilidae), Cossuridae, Longosomatidae, Paraonidae, and Sternaspidae in terms of biodiversity as well as the evolution of the taxonomy and systematics of each group. We present the challenges faced when studying these organisms and compare methodologies across groups and perspectives in future research.


1873 ◽  
Vol 21 (139-147) ◽  
pp. 288-290 ◽  
Keyword(s):  

In this communication the author endeavours to elucidate the abundant and obscure organic remains which are found so commonly in the Palæozoic rocks, and especially in the Silurian strata of Britain, and which are generally known by the vague and convenient names of “Fueoids,” “Annelide-burrows,” and “tracks.” After expressing his opinion that the first step towards the study of these obscure fossils lies in the provisional grouping and naming of the more marked forms which are already known to exist, the author proceeds to divide the remains under consideration into two great groups. In the first of these groups are those fossils which are truly the burrows of marine worms, as distinguished from mere trails and surface-tracks.


Zootaxa ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 525 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
EDWARD B. CUTLER ◽  
ANJA SCHULZE ◽  
HARLAN K. DEAN

Fourteen species of the unsegmented marine worms known as Sipuncula are reported from sublittoral waters from recent collections of 519 specimens around New Zealand. Five are new to the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). A taxonomic key to all 26 known New Zealand species is provided. All six families and nine of the 17 genera of Sipuncula are represented.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie L. Wright ◽  
Darren Rowe ◽  
Malcolm J. Reid ◽  
Kevin V. Thomas ◽  
Tamara S. Galloway

1867 ◽  
Vol 4 (33) ◽  
pp. 107-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry Alleyne Nicholson

The Lower Silurian Rocks of the South of Scotland, below the level of the Wrae Limestone of Peeblesshire, though of great thickness, and little altered by igneous agency, have as yet yielded but few of the higher forms of animal life. Two species of a phyllopod crustacean, (Peltocaris aptychoides and P. Harknessi, Salter), were discovered by Prof. Harkness, along with the first Brachiopod found in these deposits, the Siphonotreta micula of McCoy. Another crustacean of an allied genus, described by Mr. Henry Woodward, and named by him Discinocaris Browniana, was discovered last year in the neighbourhood of Moffat, by Mr. D. J. Brown. Besides the above, there occur traces of the action of marine worms, and I have, in addition, found one, possibly two, species of Lingula, a thin-walled Orthoceras, or Pteropod, and some curious spine-like bodies, probably referable to crustaceans. With the exception of these scanty remains, the strata under consideration have yielded no fossils higher in the scale of existence than Graptolites. In no other British deposit do we, however, find a greater profusion of these beautiful and characteristic fossils, or a greater number of specific types. It is the object of this communication to describe certain new forms of Graptolites which have come under my notice, together with one remarkable genus, apparently allied to the Graptolitidœ, though probably representing a different order.


1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 765-770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph R. Pawlik ◽  
Fu-Shiang Chia

Tube-building marine worms of the polychaete family Sabellariidae exhibit a wide range of settlement strategies; the larvae of some species settle with near-absolute specificity on the sandy tubes of conspecific adults to build extensive reefs, while others are not gregarious and construct solitary or paired tubes. Sabellaria cementarium forms aggregations in some localities, but it is nongregarious throughout much of its range. Larvae of S. cementarium were competent to metamorphose in 25 days at 15 °C, much sooner than previously reported and within the range of other sabellariids cultured under the same conditions. In two of three experiments, there were no significant differences in larval settlement on conspecific tube sand versus control sand or tube sand extracted with organic solvents, suggesting that this species does not aggregate in response to a chemical cue. Settlement was not enhanced in response to free fatty acids, naturally occurring inducers of settlement for two reef-forming sabellariids, Phragmatopoma lapidosa lapidosa and P. l. californica. In reciprocal assays, larvae of S. cementarium and P. l. californica did not significantly discriminate between conspecific and heterospecific tube sand; yet, where they co-occur, the tubes of the former species are not found in aggregations of the latter. The two species were not interfertile, although one cross resulted in ~ 14% fertilization with larvae dying shortly after hatching. The processes by which larvae of S. cementarium avoid settlement on the tubes of P. l. californica (and the reverse for the latter species) remain unclear.


The swimming of long animals like snakes, eels and marine worms is idealized by considering the equilibrium of a flexible cylinder immersed in water when waves of bending of constant amplitude travel down it at constant speed. The force of each element of the cylinder is assumed to be the same as that which would act on a corresponding element of a long straight cylinder moving at the same speed and inclination to the direction of motion. Relevant aerodynamic data for smooth cylinders are first generalized to make them applicable over a wide range of speed and cylinder diameter. The formulae so obtained are applied to the idealized animal and a connexion established between B / λ , V / U and R 1 . Here B and λ are the amplitude and wave-length, V the velocity attained when the wave is propagated with velocity U , R 1 is the Reynolds number Udρ / μ , where d is the diameter of the cylinder, ρ and μ are the density and viscosity of water. The results of calculation are compared with James Gray’s photographs of a swimming snake and a leech. The amplitude of the waves which produce the greatest forward speed for a given output of energy is calculated and found, in the case of the snake, to be very close to that revealed by photographs. Similar calculations using force formulae applicable to rough cylinders yield results which differ from those for smooth ones in that when the roughness is sufficiently great and has a certain directional character propulsion can be achieved by a wave of bending which is propagated forward instead of backward. Gray’s photographs of a marine worm show that this remarkable method of propulsion does in fact occur in the animal world.


2014 ◽  
Vol 94 (7) ◽  
pp. 1429-1439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas D. Higgs ◽  
Adrian G. Glover ◽  
Thomas G. Dahlgren ◽  
Craig R. Smith ◽  
Yoshihiro Fujiwara ◽  
...  

Marine worms in the genus Osedax, have specialized ‘root’ tissues used to bore into the bones of decomposing vertebrate skeletons and obtain nutrition. We investigated the borings of nine Osedax species, using micro computed tomography to quantitatively describe the morphology of the borings and provide three-dimensional reconstructions of the space occupied by Osedax root tissues inside the bone. Each Osedax species displayed a consistent boring morphology in any given bone, but these differed between bones. In bones where multiple species coexisted there was limited evidence for spatial niche partitioning by Osedax root tissues inside the bones investigated here. The new morphological data may be applied to Osedax traces in fossil bones, showing that borings can be used to indicate minimum species richness in these bones.


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