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Gutless wonder: new symbiosis lets worm feed on whale bones.


Deep-sea researchers have discovered an oddball worm that uses a previously unknown type of symbiosis symbiosis (sĭmbēō`sĭs), the habitual living together of organisms of different species. The term is usually restricted to a dependent relationship that is beneficial to both participants (also called mutualism) but may be extended to  to feed on whale skeletons--even though the worms have no mouth or gut.

Some other worms from the deep have no digestive systems but depend on live in bacteria for nourishment, explains Robert Vrijenhoek of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) is a not-for-profit oceanographic research center in Moss Landing, California affiliated with the Monterey Bay Aquarium. It was founded in 1987 by David Packard of Hewlett-Packard fame.  in Moss Landing, California Moss Landing is a census-designated place (CDP) in Monterey County, California, United States. As of the 2005, the CDP population was 782. Due to its location at the head of the Monterey Canyon, the town is home to the Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, a multi-campus research . The whale bone-raiding worms, in the newly named genus Osedax, likewise rely on symbiotic bacteria. The microbes, from the order Oceanospirillales, reside in green, rootlike growths at a female worm's base. However, the symbionts in female Osedax target an unusual food source--lipids from whale bones that have fallen to the ocean floor--Vrijenhoek and his colleagues report in the July 30 Science.

"We know of no other animal symbiont symbiont /sym·bi·ont/ (sim´bi-ont) (sim´be-ont) an organism living in a state of symbiosis.

symbiont

an organism or species living in a state of symbiosis.
 able to extract lipids," says Vrijenhoek.

The males play out an entirely different nutritional tale. More than 100 tiny males can live inside the sheath that surrounds the female's elongated e·lon·gate  
tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates
To make or grow longer.

adj. or elongated
1. Made longer; extended.

2. Having more length than width; slender.
 body. The males don't appear to be parasitic and probably feed off yolk yolk (yok) the stored nutrient of an oocyte or ovum.

yolk
n.
The portion of the egg of an animal that consists of protein and fat from which the early embryo gets its main nourishment and of
 left over from early development. Vrijenhoek rates the males as "little more than larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
."

While females can grow to the size of an index finger, a robust male reaches only 0.3 millimeter in length. "It's the most dramatic sexual dimorphism among worms and may be among the most dramatic in the animal kingdom," says Vrijenhoek.

He and his colleagues discovered Osedax during a 2002 research cruise in Monterey Bay. Their remotely operated craft detected a dead gray whale in the mud at 2,800 meters underwater. "The bones were a carpet of red worms," Vrijenhoek remembers.

The red came from hemoglobin-rich plumes topping the females' stalklike bodies. The craft picked up samples, which went to worm expert Greg Rouse of the South Australian Museum The South Australian Museum is a museum in Adelaide, South Australia, founded in 1856. It occupies a complex of buildings in the cultural precinct of Adelaide in the North Parklands on North Terrace.  in Adelaide, Australia.

Rouse, a coauthor of the new paper, at first hesitated to identify the new creatures as worms. For one thing, the tubeworms known from deep-sea vents live in hard outer casings, yet the new creatures are sheathed in soft mucus. However, DNA evidence convinced Vrijenhoek that these were indeed relatives of worms from hydrothermal vents. Rouse subsequently found additional evidence for this relationship from his own morphological studies.

Even though the animals don't have mouths, their bacteria-bearing projections penetrate the whale bones. Unpublished experiments comparing the nitrogen isotopes in worms and whale bones suggest that the bacteria are indeed metabolizing lipids from the whales, says Vrijenhoek.

Whale bones are some 60 percent lipids, notes Craig Smith of the University of Hawaii (body, education) University of Hawaii - A University spread over 10 campuses on 4 islands throughout the state.

http://hawaii.edu/uhinfo.html.

See also Aloha, Aloha Net.
 in Manoa, a longtime observer of sunken whale carcasses. He has estimated that 600,000 whale skeletons lie on ocean floors, offering feeding bonanzas for a community of creatures that's barely known. "I think there are a lot of discoveries to be made," says Smith.
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Title Annotation:This Week; Osedax
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 31, 2004
Words:465
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