Snake, fish or alien? Bizarre living shipworm discovered by scientists for the first time in Philippines.
Is it a snake? Is it a fish? Is it an alien? No, it’s a first living giant shipworm that has been discovered by the scientists in the Philippines. This shiny black, three-foot long creature with a fleshy limb appears like an alien from a horror movie. But don’t be scared, it’s just a giant shipworm known as 'the unicorn of mollusks'.
This
living creature, which has been found in the mud of a shallow lagoon, has never
been described before. However, it’s known for over 200 years because of the
fossils of the tubes as long as a basketball-bat inside which the creature
lives.
“Although
people have known [these animals] exist, they didn’t know the simplest things
about them,” said Dan Distel of Northeastern University’s marine science centre
and co-author of the study published in the journal PNAS. “It was a very
mysterious organism.”
Decades
ago, a description based on a museum specimen was made, said Distel, adding,
the creature was not well preserved. “We think, among living biologists,
anyway, our group are probably the only group that has seen living specimens,”
he said.
With
the Linnaean classification Kuphus polythalamia, the creature secretes a long
tube made of calcium carbonate and it lives inside it in the mud.
The
tube makes a casing for the animal, including its head. “If they want to grow,
they have to open that end of that tube, so somehow dissolve or reabsorb that
cap on the bottom, grow, extend the tube down further into the mud, and then
they seal it off again,” said Distel.
Distel
further explains that the end of the tube is Y-shaped and surrounds two
siphons. While one draws water, pushing through the creature’s gills, the other
expels it.
Though
the animal is known as a shipworm but it’s actually a type of clam. At its
head, modified version of two clam shells can be seen, while its body stretches
out behind.
“Its
body has been stretched out through evolution so that it no longer fits between
the two shells,” said Distel.
A
YouTube video of a Philippine television news report helped the team find a
clue to the whereabouts of the creature. The team members probed about the
possible locations in the region and then they spotted a crop of the tubes in a
lagoon replete with rotting wood.
Distel
says they have kept the location secret fearing shell collectors may disturb
the site.
The
tubes were found by divers sticking upwards around 10ft below the surface.
“That tube is anywhere from maybe 75%-80% buried in the mud,” said Distel. The
team shipped about half a dozen to the laboratory, where the team tentatively
opened one.
“It
was really quite amazing,’ said Distel. “I didn’t even have any idea how to
open it, but I thought: Carefully.’”
When
the shipworm slipped out of the tube, the researchers were taken by shock and
surprise because of its appearance.
“That
colour of the animal is sort of shocking,” Distel said. “Most bivalves are
greyish, tan, pink, brown, light beige colours. This thing just has this
gunmetal-black colour. It is much beefier, more muscular than any other bivalve
I had ever seen.”
Researchers
were not only stunned by the discovery of this creature but also with its mode
of survival.
“Gigantism
is usually an indication of ample nutrients,” said Distel.
Unlike
other shipworms feed on submerged wood with the aid of wood-degrading bacteria
that live in their gills, the newly discovered shipworm has a tiny digestive
system. The fact that it is enclosed in a tube points out that it doesn’t eat
mud.
The
researchers further revealed that the newly found creature relies of bacteria
in its gills that use hydrogen sulphide in the water as an energy source. That
energy turns carbon dioxide into nutrients for the shipworm.
Distel
said this discovery throws light on the evolution of symbiotic relationships
between sulphur-oxidising organisms and other creatures. It also establish a
possibility that sunken wood might have played a role in driving the species in
locations such as deep sea hydrothermal vents.
“To
me it was almost like finding a dinosaur – something that was pretty much only
known by fossils,” he said.
The
discovery of the giant shipworm has been welcomed by Simon Watt, biologist, TV
presenter and president of the Ugly Animal Preservation Society.
“It
might well be monstrous, but that does not mean that it isn’t marvellous,” he
said, pointing out that the creature has evolved to live in an environment that
is also “pretty disgusting”. “If you are down living among murky dirt, then
aesthetics are surely not your number one priority,” he added.
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