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Worm-Mollusks: a Bizarre New Reef Creature: part 1

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Epimenia sp. on Scleronepththea(?). Credit: unknown

 One of the most enigmatic and poorly known marine creatures is surely Epimenia—an animal so obscure and of such seemingly unspecialized morphology that most zoologists and aquarists would struggle mightily to correctly identify it. The larger taxonomic group to which it belongs was only discovered in 1875, and since that time, its phylogenetic relationships have stumped generations of researchers. In keeping with its obscurity, there is no real common name for these, so let’s coin one. Introducing… the amazing “worm-mollusk”! As the name suggests, despite their remarkably vermiform appearance—particularly similar to the unsegmented ribbon worms of the Phylum Nemertea—these are actually mollusks! The Phylum Mollusca is one of the largest and most morphologically diverse branches of invertebrate life, including such familiar creatures as snails & sea slugs, clams & oysters, squid & octopodes, and chitons. These groups share several morphological characters: a unique rasping mouthpart known as a radula; a mantle that produces calcified plates/shells and that forms a cavity used in excretion and respiration; paired nerve cords. Another nearly ubiquitous feature is a muscular foot that is varyingly modified within the phylum (e.g. the arms of squids, the gliding “foot” of snails, the digging “foot” of clams).
 

Epimenia sp. with tan spots. Photo by Toba Aquarium

Epimenia sp. with tan spots. Credit: Toba Aquarium

 The 300+ species of worm-mollusks are traditionally united as the Class Aplacophora. Their classification as a distinct class highlights their evolutionary novelty, being analogous to the difference between a fish and a mammal in our own phylum. Despite their unassuming external morphology, this group shares most of the important molluscan characteristics. Their most obvious difference compared to more-familiar mollusks is the worm-like (=vermiform) body, which lacks any trace of a shell or plate (Aplacophora can be roughly translated as “without a shell” in Greek). In its place are subdermal aragonite spicules of varying number and arrangement that are held within an epidermis toughened by chitin, the same protein that gives arthropods their rugged exoskeleton.The anterior end of the animal is seemingly unspecialized externally, lacking eyes and any obvious sensory organs (there are small papillae that appear to serve an olfactory role). The “mouth” is located internally within a small chamber that opens at the terminal tip.
 

Epimenia spp. Credit: unknown

Epimenia spp. Credit: unknown

 There are two distinct groups of worm-mollusk that differ markedly in size, diet, and behavior. They have traditionally been assumed to form a single monophyletic group, but it has always been uncertain if the similarities in their bodies were just a result of convergent evolution caused by similar ecological specializations.More:

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