fbpx
Wikipedia

Alvinella pompejana

Alvinella pompejana, the Pompeii worm, is a species of deep-sea polychaete worm (commonly referred to as "bristle worms"). It is an extremophile found only at hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean, discovered in the early 1980s off the Galápagos Islands by French marine biologists.

Alvinella pompejana
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Annelida
Clade: Pleistoannelida
Subclass: Sedentaria
Order: Terebellida
Family: Alvinellidae
Genus: Alvinella
Species:
A. pompejana
Binomial name
Alvinella pompejana
Desbruyères and Laubier, 1980

Introduction

In 1980 Daniel Desbruyères and Lucien Laubier, just few years after the discovery of the first hydrothermal vent system, identified one of the most heat-tolerant animals on Earth — Alvinella pompejana, the Pompeii worm.[1] It was described as a deep-sea polychaete that resides in tubes near hydrothermal vents, along the seafloor. In 1997, marine biologist Craig Cary and colleagues found the same worms in a new section of Pacific Ocean, near Costa Rica, also attached to hydrothermal vents. The new discovery and subsequent work led to important progress in the scientific knowledge of these special worms.[2]

They can reach up to 13 cm (5.1 in) in length and are pale gray, with red tentacle-like gills on their heads. Perhaps most fascinating, their tail ends are often resting in temperatures as high as 80 °C (176 °F), while their feather-like heads stick out of the tubes into water that is much cooler, 22 °C (72 °F).[3] Scientists are attempting to understand how Pompeii worms can withstand such extreme temperatures by studying the bacteria that form a "fleece-like" covering on their backs. The bacteria have also been discovered to be chemolithotrophic, contributing to the ecology of the vent community. Recent research suggests the bacteria might play an important role in the feeding of the worms.[4]

Attaching themselves to black smokers, the worms have been found to thrive at sustained temperatures of from 45 to 60 °C (113 to 140 °F) and even 105 °C (221 °F) for a short time,[3] making the Pompeii worm the most heat-tolerant complex animal known to science after the tardigrades (or water bears), which are able to survive temperatures over 150 °C.

Biology

Reaching a length of up to 13 cm (5.1 in), Pompeii worms have "hairy" backs; these "hairs" are actually colonies of bacteria such as Nautilia profundicola, which are thought to afford the worm some degree of insulation. Glands on the worm's back secrete a mucus on which the bacteria feed, a form of symbiosis. The Pompeii worms form large, aggregate colonies enclosed in long tubes.

Alvinella pompejana has relatively simple organ systems centering around its rod-like heart. Its outermost organ is the gills along its feather-shaped head, four external gills present as leaf-like structures[5] with a red colour due to their haemoglobin. The heart provides blood to these organs using contractions, pushing blood along the dorsal and ventral vessels. Beneath the heart lies the animal's stomach which connects to an oesophagus that is used to consume food. Finally, surrounding the organs is a coelom filled with coelomocytes, a type of phagocyte that acts as an immune system for the animal.[5]

The Pompeii Worm feeds upon chemosynthetic bacteria, using retractable, ciliated feeding tentacles to scoop them up or absorbing their organic matter within the hydrothermal vent fluid.[6] These tentacles are coated with 4 types of secretory cells along the entire epidermis. The tentacle’s muscle cells seem to be filled with homogenous blood cells and individual hat-shaped cells, the hat-shaped cells have a condensed nucleus and it is hypothesised that these are heavily modified sperm cells.[7]

The gills of A. pompejana are pinnate with many thin outgrowths. This organ is ultrastructurally similar to the gills of terebellidae and the epidermis is irregularly folded inwards. This gives the blood access to a space very close to the skin of A. pompejana, thus allowing more effective oxygen diffusion. Secretory cells of the goblet type have also been observed, along with hairlike receptor cells known as bipolar ciliary receptor cells. It is important to note that the Pompeii worm’s epibiotic bacteria are absent from both the gills and tentacles.[7]

Physiology

Alvinella pompejana’s blood is abnormally cool at 20-30°C. This is due to their blood's high positive cooperativity at these temperatures, thus haemoglobin is more likely to gain oxygen, an essential feature in an environment with sparse oxygen levels. Additionally, A. pompejana's gills have the highest specific surface area of any polychaete and small diffusion distances between the circulatory system and external seawater further assist in oxygenation.[8]

Alvinellidae have an exceptionally high congenital oxygen affinity and high heat is needed for oxygenation (𝚫H), to allow adequate release of oxygen within the body, the Pompeii worm has acidic blood with a pH range of 6.6-6.9. A lower pH decreases the energy required to unbind oxygen from haemoglobin by utilising the bohr effect. The effect gradually compounds as the haemoglobin’s 4 O2 binding sites are emptied, it is maximal when the haemoglobin is fully deoxygenated. As a result, they can release all possible oxygen without expending excessive energy. To further compound this, A. pompejana’s vascular haemoglobin has a lower oxygen affinity when compared to coelomic haemoglobin. When it is time to rebind oxygen to the haemoglobin, the blood must be cooled to 20-30°C to regain optimal cooperativity. However, hydrothermal vents reach much higher temperatures. This makes the low blood temperature strange and seemingly hard to maintain.[8]

The current hypothesis is that the polychaete worm somehow maintains an “external microenvironment” that does not exceed this 20-30°C limit. This is supported by evidence that A. pompejana’s mitochondrion break down when 30°C is exceeded. Despite this the worm still manages to live in vents that exceed 50°C. Furthermore, an inverse relationship is drawn between 𝚫H value and the temperature range of an environment; a higher 𝚫H means a habitat has a smaller range of temperatures with fewer fluctuations. As A. pompejana has a high 𝚫H it is reasonable to theorise that their habitable temperature range is quite small with few fluctuations.[8]

Reproduction

Alvinella pompejana are a gonochoric species with distinct differences between the male and female genital pores (located at the base of the gills).[5] Males have a pair of tentacles near the mouth that are absent in females. However, females possess a genital tract consisting of oviducts and spermathecae. The exact method of reproduction is unknown but it is believed that it is a complex multi-step process. However, it is known that the Pompeii worm's habitat rapidly changes and is extremely unstable, and thus their reproduction has adapted accordingly.

The size of the female oocytes suggests that the embryo is lecithotrophic meaning the only nutrition is within the yolk of the egg. Prior to fertilisation these oocytes are flattened spheres with an undulating membrane and a slightly off centre germinal vesicle that is less dense than the surrounding cytoplasm. Upon dilution in seawater, they become spherical and the GV disappears, at this point the whole oocyte appears homogeneous. This process does not require sperm.[9]

The current hypothesis for egg synthesis and spawning is as follows: first the yolk is formed through a long process within the animal's coelom, next, the mature eggs are stored and finally, the eggs are spawned when either an environmental or biological change occurs (eg. sperm transfer).[10] The method for transfer of spermatozoa it is likely achieved through pseudo-copulatory behaviour as the worms have been observed diving head-first into tubes in a display that may be mating.[11]

When it is deemed appropriate to fertilise the eggs they are seemingly selected based upon size and then individually passed through the spermathecae. This method of fertilisation is more efficient than having all eggs be passed through at once.[10]

Between 30 minutes and several hours after fertilisation has been achieved, the fertilisation envelope progressively elevates. This begins at a single point along the periphery of the oocyte. Then, prior to the first cleavage, a polar lobe forms thus resulting in asymmetrical cleavages. The diameter ratio between the asymmetrical blastomeres remains fairly constant (1:1.5) with "4 cell" embryos typically possessing 1 cell bigger than the other 3. This is a similar to the pattern observed in other polychaetes.[9]

Early Development

Although in situ observations are yet to be made of Alvinella pompejana’s early development, experiments have been conducted in order to hypothesise the embryonic and early stages of this polychaete's life.[9]

Embryos of the Pompeii Worm are unable to tolerate both low and high temperatures, only developing in temperatures higher than 2°C and lower than 20°C. At 2°C, the temperature of the abyssal sea, embryos enter a state of arrested development and at 20°C the embryos die. Thus, they must not develop in hydrothermal vent colonies as temperatures much higher than 20°C are achieved in this habitat.[9]

Both in vitro and in situ incubation supported the hypothesis that embryonic development within an adult colony is impossible. To test their theory, researchers placed embryos in 3 areas, (I1) at the base of the chimney, (I2) in a Riftia pachyptila colony and (I3) in an adult colony. Results are presented in the below table with the highest survival and development rate coming from the (I1) and (I2) placements. It is also important to note that although the max temperature directly next to the (I3) incubator was 17°C, temperatures as high as 27°C were recorded 20cm away.[9]

Survival (%) Embryos with cleavage after 5 days (%) Mean temp (°C) Max temp (°C) Min pH Mean pH
I1 ≤100% 70% 4±2°C 9°C 7.3 7.7
I2 ≤100% 70% 6±2°C 11°C 7.3 7.5
I3 10% 0% 13±4°C 17°C 7.1 7.2

After considering all results, as well as prior studies, it was concluded that the 3 most likely hypotheses are as follows.

  1. Embryos develop within a Riftia pachyptila colony (often near hydrothermal vents)
  2. Embryos develop at the base of hydrothermal chimneys
  3. Embryos enter a state of arrest and float in the abyssal column until a warm environment is found before resuming development (this would allow the dispersal of the species)

Tubes

The Pompeii worm is known for the tubes that it inhabits. Further research has uncovered that these tubes are unusually stable glycoprotein structures with high sulfur levels. Their construction was originally unknown but it is now hypothesised that the structure is made from a secretion from the epidermis of Alvinella pompejana. The fibril layers of the tubing are layered in a similar manner to plywood with each layer being slightly random. Within these tubes a layer of filamentous and rod-shaped bacteria are present, strangely these same bacteria can be found embedded within the walls of the tubes. It has been assumed that these are the bacteria that live in the worm's tubing, they seem to become trapped when the mucous is secreted. Additionally bacteria have been found to be a source of elemental sulfur which explains the sulfur detected within their tube walls.[12]

Name

Pompeii worms get their name from the Roman city of Pompeii that was destroyed during an eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. Its family name Alvinellidae and genus name Alvinella both derive from DSV Alvin, the three-person submersible vehicle used during the discovery of hydrothermal vents and their fauna during the late 1970s. The family Alvinellidae contains eight other species, but none matches the Pompeii worm's heat tolerance.

Symbiotic Bacteria

While it is not yet known precisely how the Pompeii worm survives these severe vent conditions, scientists suspect the answer lies in the fleece-like bacteria on the worm's back; this layer may be up to 1 cm thick. The bacteria may possess special proteins, "eurythermal enzymes", providing the bacteria—and by extension the worms—protection from a wide range of temperatures.[3] Studies are hampered by the difficulties of sampling; It is currently quite difficult for Pompeii Worms to survive decompression.

The bacteria are known to live in a mutualistic relationship with A. pompejana, making them both symbiotrophs. The main nutrition for the Pompeii worm is derived from chemosynthetic bacteria, this is why it chooses to live in such intense environments. This is due to the toxic metal levels of hydrothermal vent fluid, a factor chemosynthetic bacteria require. Unfortunately, the low pH, low oxygen levels and aforementioned metals within the fluid create an environment only fit for extremophiles; A. pompejana has physiological traits to assist in combating this but they are not enough. As a result, they have developed a strong relationship with the bacteria. The bacteria detoxify the fluid, this allows the worm to feed and live. Then, as the worm lives it respires, thus giving the bacteria a carbon source to feed upon. As an additional benefit, the bacteria gain shelter and surfaces to multiply upon due to the worm’s tubes.[1]

Study of the Pompeii worm's seemingly life-sustaining bacteria could lead to significant advances in the biochemical, pharmaceutical, textile, paper, and detergent industries.

Behavior

Pompeii worms simultaneously keep their heads (including the gills) in much cooler water while their tails are exposed to hot water. Since their internal temperature has yet to be measured, a Pompeii worm may survive exposure to hot water by dissipating heat through its head to keep its internal temperature within the realm previously known to be compatible with animal survival.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b Desbruyères, D. and Laubier, L. (1980). "Alvinella pompejana gen.sp. nov., Ampharetidae aberrant des sources hydrothermales de la ride Est-Pacifique". Oceanologica Acta. 3 (3): 267–274.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Scientists Succeed at First-Ever Attempt to Sequence DNA at Sea. NSF-OLPA. November 1, 2001
  3. ^ a b c Grime, J. Philip; Pierce, Simon (2012). The Evolutionary Strategies that Shape Ecosystems. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 121–123. ISBN 978-1-118-22327-7.
  4. ^ Grzymski, J. J.; et al. (2008). "Metagenome analysis of an extreme microbial symbiosis reveals eurythermal adaptation and metabolic flexibility". PNAS. 105 (45): 17516–17521. Bibcode:2008PNAS..10517516G. doi:10.1073/pnas.0802782105. PMC 2579889. PMID 18987310.
  5. ^ a b c Jouin-Toulmond, C.; Zal, F.; Hourdez, S. (1997). "Genital apparatus and ultrastructure of the spermatozoa in Alvinella pompejana (Annelida: Polychaeta)". Cahiers de Biologie Marine (2).
  6. ^ Gaill, Francoise; Desbruyeres, Daniel; Laubier, Lucien. "Relationships between the "Pompeii worms" and their epibiotic bacteria" (PDF). Oceanologica.
  7. ^ a b Storch, V.; Gaill, F. (1986-09-01). "Ultrastructural observations on feeding appendages and gills ofAlvinella pompejana (Annelida, Polychaeta)". Helgoländer Meeresuntersuchungen. 40 (3): 309–319. doi:10.1007/BF01983738. ISSN 1438-3888. S2CID 32663219.
  8. ^ a b c Toulmond, A.; Slitine, F. E. I.; De Frescheville, J.; Jouin, C. (December 1990). "Extracellular Hemoglobins of Hydrothermal Vent Annelids: Structural and Functional Characteristics in Three Alvinellid Species". The Biological Bulletin. 179 (3): 366–373. doi:10.2307/1542329. ISSN 1939-8697. JSTOR 1542329. PMID 29314955.
  9. ^ a b c d e journals.biologists.com https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/208/8/1551/16030/Influence-of-environmental-conditions-on-early. Retrieved 2022-11-08. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. ^ a b PRADILLON, FLORENCE; GAILL, FRANÇOISE (2003-07-01). "Oogenesis characteristics in the hydrothermal vent polychaete Alvinella pompejana". Invertebrate Reproduction & Development. 43 (3): 223–235. doi:10.1080/07924259.2003.9652541. ISSN 0792-4259. S2CID 83704748.
  11. ^ Desbruyères, D.; Chevaldonné, P.; Alayse, A. -M.; Jollivet, D.; Lallier, F. H.; Jouin-Toulmond, C.; Zal, F.; Sarradin, P. -M.; Cosson, R.; Caprais, J. -C.; Arndt, C.; O’Brien, J.; Guezennec, J.; Hourdez, S.; Riso, R. (1998-01-01). "Biology and ecology of the "Pompeii worm" (Alvinella pompejana Desbruyères and Laubier), a normal dweller of an extreme deep-sea environment: A synthesis of current knowledge and recent developments". Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography. 45 (1): 383–422. doi:10.1016/S0967-0645(97)00083-0. ISSN 0967-0645.
  12. ^ Gaill, F; Hunt, S (19 December 1986). "Tubes of deep sea hydrothermal vent worms Riftia pachyptila (Vestimentif era) and Alvinella pompejana (Annelida)" (PDF). Marine Ecology Progress Series. 34: 267–274. doi:10.3354/meps034267.

External links

  • National Geographic article about the Pompeii worm

alvinella, pompejana, pompeii, worm, species, deep, polychaete, worm, commonly, referred, bristle, worms, extremophile, found, only, hydrothermal, vents, pacific, ocean, discovered, early, 1980s, galápagos, islands, french, marine, biologists, scientific, clas. Alvinella pompejana the Pompeii worm is a species of deep sea polychaete worm commonly referred to as bristle worms It is an extremophile found only at hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean discovered in the early 1980s off the Galapagos Islands by French marine biologists Alvinella pompejanaScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum AnnelidaClade PleistoannelidaSubclass SedentariaOrder TerebellidaFamily AlvinellidaeGenus AlvinellaSpecies A pompejanaBinomial nameAlvinella pompejanaDesbruyeres and Laubier 1980 Contents 1 Introduction 2 Biology 3 Physiology 4 Reproduction 5 Early Development 6 Tubes 7 Name 8 Symbiotic Bacteria 9 Behavior 10 References 11 External linksIntroduction EditIn 1980 Daniel Desbruyeres and Lucien Laubier just few years after the discovery of the first hydrothermal vent system identified one of the most heat tolerant animals on Earth Alvinella pompejana the Pompeii worm 1 It was described as a deep sea polychaete that resides in tubes near hydrothermal vents along the seafloor In 1997 marine biologist Craig Cary and colleagues found the same worms in a new section of Pacific Ocean near Costa Rica also attached to hydrothermal vents The new discovery and subsequent work led to important progress in the scientific knowledge of these special worms 2 They can reach up to 13 cm 5 1 in in length and are pale gray with red tentacle like gills on their heads Perhaps most fascinating their tail ends are often resting in temperatures as high as 80 C 176 F while their feather like heads stick out of the tubes into water that is much cooler 22 C 72 F 3 Scientists are attempting to understand how Pompeii worms can withstand such extreme temperatures by studying the bacteria that form a fleece like covering on their backs The bacteria have also been discovered to be chemolithotrophic contributing to the ecology of the vent community Recent research suggests the bacteria might play an important role in the feeding of the worms 4 Attaching themselves to black smokers the worms have been found to thrive at sustained temperatures of from 45 to 60 C 113 to 140 F and even 105 C 221 F for a short time 3 making the Pompeii worm the most heat tolerant complex animal known to science after the tardigrades or water bears which are able to survive temperatures over 150 C Biology EditReaching a length of up to 13 cm 5 1 in Pompeii worms have hairy backs these hairs are actually colonies of bacteria such as Nautilia profundicola which are thought to afford the worm some degree of insulation Glands on the worm s back secrete a mucus on which the bacteria feed a form of symbiosis The Pompeii worms form large aggregate colonies enclosed in long tubes Alvinella pompejana has relatively simple organ systems centering around its rod like heart Its outermost organ is the gills along its feather shaped head four external gills present as leaf like structures 5 with a red colour due to their haemoglobin The heart provides blood to these organs using contractions pushing blood along the dorsal and ventral vessels Beneath the heart lies the animal s stomach which connects to an oesophagus that is used to consume food Finally surrounding the organs is a coelom filled with coelomocytes a type of phagocyte that acts as an immune system for the animal 5 The Pompeii Worm feeds upon chemosynthetic bacteria using retractable ciliated feeding tentacles to scoop them up or absorbing their organic matter within the hydrothermal vent fluid 6 These tentacles are coated with 4 types of secretory cells along the entire epidermis The tentacle s muscle cells seem to be filled with homogenous blood cells and individual hat shaped cells the hat shaped cells have a condensed nucleus and it is hypothesised that these are heavily modified sperm cells 7 The gills of A pompejana are pinnate with many thin outgrowths This organ is ultrastructurally similar to the gills of terebellidae and the epidermis is irregularly folded inwards This gives the blood access to a space very close to the skin of A pompejana thus allowing more effective oxygen diffusion Secretory cells of the goblet type have also been observed along with hairlike receptor cells known as bipolar ciliary receptor cells It is important to note that the Pompeii worm s epibiotic bacteria are absent from both the gills and tentacles 7 Physiology EditAlvinella pompejana s blood is abnormally cool at 20 30 C This is due to their blood s high positive cooperativity at these temperatures thus haemoglobin is more likely to gain oxygen an essential feature in an environment with sparse oxygen levels Additionally A pompejana s gills have the highest specific surface area of any polychaete and small diffusion distances between the circulatory system and external seawater further assist in oxygenation 8 Alvinellidae have an exceptionally high congenital oxygen affinity and high heat is needed for oxygenation 𝚫H to allow adequate release of oxygen within the body the Pompeii worm has acidic blood with a pH range of 6 6 6 9 A lower pH decreases the energy required to unbind oxygen from haemoglobin by utilising the bohr effect The effect gradually compounds as the haemoglobin s 4 O2 binding sites are emptied it is maximal when the haemoglobin is fully deoxygenated As a result they can release all possible oxygen without expending excessive energy To further compound this A pompejana s vascular haemoglobin has a lower oxygen affinity when compared to coelomic haemoglobin When it is time to rebind oxygen to the haemoglobin the blood must be cooled to 20 30 C to regain optimal cooperativity However hydrothermal vents reach much higher temperatures This makes the low blood temperature strange and seemingly hard to maintain 8 The current hypothesis is that the polychaete worm somehow maintains an external microenvironment that does not exceed this 20 30 C limit This is supported by evidence that A pompejana s mitochondrion break down when 30 C is exceeded Despite this the worm still manages to live in vents that exceed 50 C Furthermore an inverse relationship is drawn between 𝚫H value and the temperature range of an environment a higher 𝚫H means a habitat has a smaller range of temperatures with fewer fluctuations As A pompejana has a high 𝚫H it is reasonable to theorise that their habitable temperature range is quite small with few fluctuations 8 Reproduction EditAlvinella pompejana are a gonochoric species with distinct differences between the male and female genital pores located at the base of the gills 5 Males have a pair of tentacles near the mouth that are absent in females However females possess a genital tract consisting of oviducts and spermathecae The exact method of reproduction is unknown but it is believed that it is a complex multi step process However it is known that the Pompeii worm s habitat rapidly changes and is extremely unstable and thus their reproduction has adapted accordingly The size of the female oocytes suggests that the embryo is lecithotrophic meaning the only nutrition is within the yolk of the egg Prior to fertilisation these oocytes are flattened spheres with an undulating membrane and a slightly off centre germinal vesicle that is less dense than the surrounding cytoplasm Upon dilution in seawater they become spherical and the GV disappears at this point the whole oocyte appears homogeneous This process does not require sperm 9 The current hypothesis for egg synthesis and spawning is as follows first the yolk is formed through a long process within the animal s coelom next the mature eggs are stored and finally the eggs are spawned when either an environmental or biological change occurs eg sperm transfer 10 The method for transfer of spermatozoa it is likely achieved through pseudo copulatory behaviour as the worms have been observed diving head first into tubes in a display that may be mating 11 When it is deemed appropriate to fertilise the eggs they are seemingly selected based upon size and then individually passed through the spermathecae This method of fertilisation is more efficient than having all eggs be passed through at once 10 Between 30 minutes and several hours after fertilisation has been achieved the fertilisation envelope progressively elevates This begins at a single point along the periphery of the oocyte Then prior to the first cleavage a polar lobe forms thus resulting in asymmetrical cleavages The diameter ratio between the asymmetrical blastomeres remains fairly constant 1 1 5 with 4 cell embryos typically possessing 1 cell bigger than the other 3 This is a similar to the pattern observed in other polychaetes 9 Early Development EditAlthough in situ observations are yet to be made of Alvinella pompejana s early development experiments have been conducted in order to hypothesise the embryonic and early stages of this polychaete s life 9 Embryos of the Pompeii Worm are unable to tolerate both low and high temperatures only developing in temperatures higher than 2 C and lower than 20 C At 2 C the temperature of the abyssal sea embryos enter a state of arrested development and at 20 C the embryos die Thus they must not develop in hydrothermal vent colonies as temperatures much higher than 20 C are achieved in this habitat 9 Both in vitro and in situ incubation supported the hypothesis that embryonic development within an adult colony is impossible To test their theory researchers placed embryos in 3 areas I1 at the base of the chimney I2 in a Riftia pachyptila colony and I3 in an adult colony Results are presented in the below table with the highest survival and development rate coming from the I1 and I2 placements It is also important to note that although the max temperature directly next to the I3 incubator was 17 C temperatures as high as 27 C were recorded 20cm away 9 Survival Embryos with cleavage after 5 days Mean temp C Max temp C Min pH Mean pHI1 100 70 4 2 C 9 C 7 3 7 7I2 100 70 6 2 C 11 C 7 3 7 5I3 10 0 13 4 C 17 C 7 1 7 2After considering all results as well as prior studies it was concluded that the 3 most likely hypotheses are as follows Embryos develop within a Riftia pachyptila colony often near hydrothermal vents Embryos develop at the base of hydrothermal chimneys Embryos enter a state of arrest and float in the abyssal column until a warm environment is found before resuming development this would allow the dispersal of the species Tubes EditThe Pompeii worm is known for the tubes that it inhabits Further research has uncovered that these tubes are unusually stable glycoprotein structures with high sulfur levels Their construction was originally unknown but it is now hypothesised that the structure is made from a secretion from the epidermis of Alvinella pompejana The fibril layers of the tubing are layered in a similar manner to plywood with each layer being slightly random Within these tubes a layer of filamentous and rod shaped bacteria are present strangely these same bacteria can be found embedded within the walls of the tubes It has been assumed that these are the bacteria that live in the worm s tubing they seem to become trapped when the mucous is secreted Additionally bacteria have been found to be a source of elemental sulfur which explains the sulfur detected within their tube walls 12 Name EditPompeii worms get their name from the Roman city of Pompeii that was destroyed during an eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79 Its family name Alvinellidae and genus name Alvinella both derive from DSV Alvin the three person submersible vehicle used during the discovery of hydrothermal vents and their fauna during the late 1970s The family Alvinellidae contains eight other species but none matches the Pompeii worm s heat tolerance Symbiotic Bacteria EditWhile it is not yet known precisely how the Pompeii worm survives these severe vent conditions scientists suspect the answer lies in the fleece like bacteria on the worm s back this layer may be up to 1 cm thick The bacteria may possess special proteins eurythermal enzymes providing the bacteria and by extension the worms protection from a wide range of temperatures 3 Studies are hampered by the difficulties of sampling It is currently quite difficult for Pompeii Worms to survive decompression The bacteria are known to live in a mutualistic relationship with A pompejana making them both symbiotrophs The main nutrition for the Pompeii worm is derived from chemosynthetic bacteria this is why it chooses to live in such intense environments This is due to the toxic metal levels of hydrothermal vent fluid a factor chemosynthetic bacteria require Unfortunately the low pH low oxygen levels and aforementioned metals within the fluid create an environment only fit for extremophiles A pompejana has physiological traits to assist in combating this but they are not enough As a result they have developed a strong relationship with the bacteria The bacteria detoxify the fluid this allows the worm to feed and live Then as the worm lives it respires thus giving the bacteria a carbon source to feed upon As an additional benefit the bacteria gain shelter and surfaces to multiply upon due to the worm s tubes 1 Study of the Pompeii worm s seemingly life sustaining bacteria could lead to significant advances in the biochemical pharmaceutical textile paper and detergent industries Behavior EditPompeii worms simultaneously keep their heads including the gills in much cooler water while their tails are exposed to hot water Since their internal temperature has yet to be measured a Pompeii worm may survive exposure to hot water by dissipating heat through its head to keep its internal temperature within the realm previously known to be compatible with animal survival citation needed References Edit a b Desbruyeres D and Laubier L 1980 Alvinella pompejana gen sp nov Ampharetidae aberrant des sources hydrothermales de la ride Est Pacifique Oceanologica Acta 3 3 267 274 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Scientists Succeed at First Ever Attempt to Sequence DNA at Sea NSF OLPA November 1 2001 a b c Grime J Philip Pierce Simon 2012 The Evolutionary Strategies that Shape Ecosystems John Wiley amp Sons pp 121 123 ISBN 978 1 118 22327 7 Grzymski J J et al 2008 Metagenome analysis of an extreme microbial symbiosis reveals eurythermal adaptation and metabolic flexibility PNAS 105 45 17516 17521 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10517516G doi 10 1073 pnas 0802782105 PMC 2579889 PMID 18987310 a b c Jouin Toulmond C Zal F Hourdez S 1997 Genital apparatus and ultrastructure of the spermatozoa in Alvinella pompejana Annelida Polychaeta Cahiers de Biologie Marine 2 Gaill Francoise Desbruyeres Daniel Laubier Lucien Relationships between the Pompeii worms and their epibiotic bacteria PDF Oceanologica a b Storch V Gaill F 1986 09 01 Ultrastructural observations on feeding appendages and gills ofAlvinella pompejana Annelida Polychaeta Helgolander Meeresuntersuchungen 40 3 309 319 doi 10 1007 BF01983738 ISSN 1438 3888 S2CID 32663219 a b c Toulmond A Slitine F E I De Frescheville J Jouin C December 1990 Extracellular Hemoglobins of Hydrothermal Vent Annelids Structural and Functional Characteristics in Three Alvinellid Species The Biological Bulletin 179 3 366 373 doi 10 2307 1542329 ISSN 1939 8697 JSTOR 1542329 PMID 29314955 a b c d e journals biologists com https journals biologists com jeb article 208 8 1551 16030 Influence of environmental conditions on early Retrieved 2022 11 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help a b PRADILLON FLORENCE GAILL FRANCOISE 2003 07 01 Oogenesis characteristics in the hydrothermal vent polychaete Alvinella pompejana Invertebrate Reproduction amp Development 43 3 223 235 doi 10 1080 07924259 2003 9652541 ISSN 0792 4259 S2CID 83704748 Desbruyeres D Chevaldonne P Alayse A M Jollivet D Lallier F H Jouin Toulmond C Zal F Sarradin P M Cosson R Caprais J C Arndt C O Brien J Guezennec J Hourdez S Riso R 1998 01 01 Biology and ecology of the Pompeii worm Alvinella pompejana Desbruyeres and Laubier a normal dweller of an extreme deep sea environment A synthesis of current knowledge and recent developments Deep Sea Research Part II Topical Studies in Oceanography 45 1 383 422 doi 10 1016 S0967 0645 97 00083 0 ISSN 0967 0645 Gaill F Hunt S 19 December 1986 Tubes of deep sea hydrothermal vent worms Riftia pachyptila Vestimentif era and Alvinella pompejana Annelida PDF Marine Ecology Progress Series 34 267 274 doi 10 3354 meps034267 External links EditExploratorium The worm that boasts the world s hottest lifestyle Mission to the Abyss includes an interactive 3D rendering of a Pompeii worm National Geographic article about the Pompeii worm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alvinella pompejana amp oldid 1136379370, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.