Image: Samuel Chow |
Acoels are several hundred species of small, flattened worms, usually under 1.5 cm (0.5 in) long. They're found across much of the world in marine environments; some use their cilia to crawl between grains of sand on the sea floor, others infest the surface of corals and feast on whatever goodies they find on the mucus there, some live in the brackish waters of mangroves and there are even a few who travel through the tiny channels found in polar ice, seeking out algae to feed on.
Image: Bernard DUPONT Lots of Acoels hanging out on a Bubble Coral |
However, molecular studies show that Acoels aren't flatworms at all. They're rather more simple than that. Yup. They're MORE SIMPLE than flatworms!
Image: Stevie Smith Symsagittifera roscoffensis are packed full of symbiotic green algae |
They also lack what's known as a protonephridium. Humans and other vertebrates have kidneys which get rid of waste products from the blood. Invertebrates have a completely different organ for the same purpose, called the nephridium. The protonephridium is just right for flatworms and several other simple, wormy creatures. Apparently Acoels eschew such internal housekeeping.
Speaking of bad housekeeping, while Acoels are hermaphrodite, they don't have gonads. The cells that produce eggs and sperm are simply scattered about the body. It's like going to someone's house and finding a sock on the kitchen counter and a plant pot full of gardening tools in the bathroom. What a mess!
Another strange thing about Acoels are their nerve cords. Animals can be divided into two enormous groups; deuterostomes, like us humans, other chordates and echinoderms, with our dorsal nerves cords. That means we have that thick bundle of nerves running down our backs in the spinal column. The other lot are the protostomes, they include annelids, arthropods, molluscs, AND flatworms, and their nerve cord runs along the belly.
Acoels? They have nerve cords along the belly, along the back and several more in between. This sets them apart from pretty well every other animal in the world!
When Acoels were considered to be a bunch of unusual flatworms it was quite easy to ignore all these peculiar characteristics, or at least brush over them. Now that Acoela is recognised as a distinct group of its own, these peculiarities have taken on a whole new significance. These humble worms may bear characteristics dating back to early animal life, when even flatworms were a mere twinkle in the eyespot.
Image: Christopher Laumer Bright white statocyst on the right |
That isn't the only organ they have, though. You might think a simple, marine worm like this would dump their eggs and sperm around the place and leave them to it, but no. While there are some who reproduce asexually by simply splitting in two, Acoels usually engage in real copulation and internal fertilisation.
Image: Wikipedia |
So after all that simplicity and missing body parts, things suddenly get very complicated when it comes to sex. At least we can see where their interests lie. Acoels clearly play their music on a one-stringed guitar.
Acoels take 'bag of random body parts' to the extreeeeme.
ReplyDeleteAre they parasectic to the corals, or they just chilling on them?
I guess when your life consists of eating and sex, it's good to know which way's up.
ReplyDeletelaughed at the gardening tools. :)
ReplyDelete@Esther: Haha! Yeah, they're scarcely "parts" at all, just bits and bobs all over the place! They're not really parasitic. They just eat whatever they find on the coral rather than the actual coral, so I don't think it causes any harm. Although maybe it's a problem when there's way too many of them.
ReplyDelete@Crunchy: So true! That's the kind of wisdom we can attain from nature.
@TexWisGirl: It'll be fashionable decor in a few years, just you wait!
GLad to know that they have their priories straight concerning reproduction. However, if they get any simpler, they'd be over-sized bacteria!
ReplyDeleteYeah! They'll become almost entirely sexual organs!
ReplyDeleteOh! I just noticed that tiny, little annoying thing!
ReplyDeleteThat was Euplotes, it's a single-celled organism with feets!
Ah! Interesting. I didn't check that out!
ReplyDeleteI like how the video now says exactly what it's doing. It's trolling the poor acoela!
ReplyDelete