Results for Pogonophora
On this page:
 
Sci-Tech Dictionary:

Pogonophora

(′pō·gə′näf·ə·rə)

(invertebrate zoology) The single class of the phylum Brachiata; the elongate body consists of three segments, each with a separate coelom; there is no mouth, anus, or digestive canal, and sexes are separate.


 
 

(Beard worms)

Phylum: Annelida

Class: Pogonophora

Number of families: 13

Thumbnail description
Tube-living marine worms nourished by internal chemoautotrophic bacteria.

Evolution and systematics

The name Pogonophora comes from the Greek pogon, meaning "beard," and phora, meaning "bearing," and refers to the fact that many species have from one to many tentacles at the anterior end. The earliest known fossil pogonophorans are from the late Cambrian period. About 130 living species of Pogonophora have been described (three subclasses, 13 families, and 29 genera). Their zoological position has been debatable for many years. Their possession of chaetae and intersegmental septa is now considered good evidence of annelid affinity, and DNA analysis supports this, but more work is needed to clarify the position of the Pogonophora within the phylum Annelida. It has been suggested that pogonophores represent a single family of polychaetes (Siboglinidae), but a more conservative classification is used in this chapter.

Pogonophora is divided into the subclasses Frenulata (families Oligobrachiidae, Siboglinidae, Polybrachiidae, Lamellisabellidae, and Spirobrachiidae) and Monilifera (family Sclerolinidae, genus Sclerolinum). Some scientists classify Vestimentifera as a subclass of Pogonophora as well, but it is treated separately in this volume. Molecular studies indicate that Frenulata is a sister clade to Vestimentifera plus Monilifera.

Physical characteristics

The tubes the worms produce and live in are unbranched, yellowish, brown, or black, sometimes ring patterned, sometimes segmented. They are made of chitin and protein.

Adult pogonophores have no digestive system. Their body consists of a short anterior region bearing one or more tentaclelike appendages (or branchial filaments), a very long trunk, and a small, segmented, opisthosoma. The body wall consists of cuticle, epidermis, and circular and longitudinal muscles. The coelom is divided into a small cephalic cavity connected to the tentacle coeloms, paired cavities running through the anterior region and trunk, and a series of cavities in the opisthosomal segments, separated by muscular septa. The pogonophoran nervous system consists of an anterior mass of nerve cells, a ventral tract of fibers, and a general network of small fibers, all within the epidermis. The trophosome, a central organ that contains specialized bacteria-containing cells, occupies much of the trunk, sharing the space with the reproductive organs. The vascular system consists of parallel dorsal and ventral vessels and various sinuses connecting them. On the body surface there are cuticular plaques and ridges. The chaetae are internally like those of other annelids, but have unusual dentate heads. They are arranged in low-lying bands rather than in projecting podia.

Frenulates have from one to 200 tentacles; a cuticular ridge, or frenulum, encircling the short, cylindrical, forepart; plaques only on the trunk; chaetae in two well-marked rings about one-third of the way down the trunk; and only four chaetae per segment on the small opisthosoma. Trophosome tissue is absent from the anterior third of the trunk, which is occupied by the reproductive organs.

Moniliferans are extremely thin. They have only two tentacles, a ring of plaques on the anterior body region, and scattered plaques on the long trunk. They have no obturaculum or frenulum. Chaetae may occur in two sparse bands at the hind of the trunk, but are more numerous on the opisthosomal segments. Trophosome tissue is restricted to the posterior half of the trunk.

Distribution

Frenulates occur on continental slopes and deep trenches in the Atlantic (including Norwegian fjords), Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Antarctic Oceans. Moniliferans occur in Norway, the Caribbean, the Southeast Pacific, and the Antarctic.

Habitat

Frenulates live in reducing sediments, with the top of the tube in the overlying oxygenated water. Moniliferans occur in decaying wood on volcanic seeps on the sea floor.

Behavior

The tentacles or branchial plume may be extended from the tube, particularly by vestimentiferans; the animals can retract quickly when disturbed by predators such as crabs. Main activities are gas exchange and tube building.

Feeding ecology and diet

An unusual type of hemoglobin in the blood binds both oxygen and sulfide and transports them to the trophosome. There, the symbiotic bacteria oxidize sulfide to produce chemical energy, which enables them to fix carbon dioxide and manufacture organic compounds. This chemosynthetic process makes pogonophorans virtually independent of light-based photosynthesis as a source of food. The bacteria produce glucose and amino acids, which can be transferred to the host cells directly, or derived from intracellular digestion of some of the bacteria. One frenulate species, Siboglinum poseidoni, lives in methane-rich conditions and utilizes methane with the aid of methanotrophic bacteria.

Reproductive biology

Frenulate males expel spermatophores that drift, become entangled on other tubes, then disintegrate to release long-headed sperm that fertilize the oocytes inside the female oviduct. Females produce either large eggs (around 400 microns) that are incubated in their tubes, or small eggs (around 150 microns) that may develop into pelagic larvae. Large eggs develop into ciliated larvae, which emerge from the maternal tube, then rapidly burrow deep into the sediment and form their own tubes. The symbiotic bacteria are acquired during the settlement stage, and the trophosome then starts to develop.

In moniliferans, Sclerolinum brattstromi males produce free sperm, and eggs are incubated by the female for a few days; later development is unknown. Asexual reproduction by fragmentation occurs.

Conservation status

No species of Pogonophora are listed by the IUCN.

Significance to humans

Pogonophorans are of great interest for scientific research.

Species accounts

Norwegian tubeworm
Black oligobrachia

Resources

Books:

Desbruyères, D., and M. Segonzac, eds. Handbook of Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Fauna. Brest, France: IFREMER, 1997.

Ivanov, A. V. Pogonophora. London: Academic Press, 1963.

Southward, E. C. "Class Pogonophora." In Polychaetes and Allies: The Southern Synthesis. Fauna of Australia. Vol. 4A, edited by P. L. Beesley, G. J. B. Ross, and C. J. Glasby. Melbourne, Australia: CSIRO Publishing, 2000. ——. "Pogonophora." In Microscopic Anatomy of Invertebrates. Vol. 12, edited by F. W. Harrison and M. E. Rice. New York: Wiley-Liss, 1993.

Van Dover, C. L. The Ecology of Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vents. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000.

Periodicals:

Halanych, K. M., R. A. Feldman, and R. C. Vrijenhoek. "Molecular Evidence that Sclerolinum brattstromi is Closely Related to Vestimentiferans, Not Frenulate Pogonophorans (Siboglinidae, Annelida)." Biological Bulletin 201 (2001): 65–75.

MacDonald, I. R., V. Tunnicliffe, and E. C. Southward. "Detection of Sperm Transfer and Synchronous Fertilization in Ridgeia piscesae at Endeavour Segment, Juan de Fuca Ridge." Cahiers de Biologie Marine 43 (2002): 395–398.

McHugh, D. "Molecular Evidence that Echiurans and Pogonophorans are Derived Annelids." Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 94 (1997): 8006–8009.

McMullin, E. R., S. Hourdez, S. W. Schaeffer, and C. R. Fisher. "Phylogeny and Biogeography of Deep Sea Vestimentiferan Tubeworms and Their Bacterial Symbionts." Symbiosis 34 (2003): 1–41.

Rouse, G. W. "A Cladistic Analysis of Siboglinidae Caullery, 1914 (Polychaeta, Annelida): Formerly the Phyla Pogonophora and Vestimentifera." Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 132 (2001): 55–80.

Shillito, B., J. P. Lechaire, and F. Gaill. "Microvilli-like Structures Secreting Chitin Crystallites." Journal of Structural Biology 111 (1993): 59–67.

Southward, E. C. "Description of a New Species of Oligobrachia, (Pogonophora) from the North Atlantic, with a Survey of the Oligobrachiidae." Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the U.K. 58 (1978): 357–365. ——. "Development of Perviata and Vestimentifera (Pogonophora)." Hydrobiologia 402 (1999): 185–202.

Webb, M. "Siboglinum fiordicum sp. nov. (Pogonophora) from the Raunefjord, Western Norway." Sarsia 13 (1963): 33–44.

[Article by: Eve C. Southward, PhD, DSc]

 

The beard worms—a phylum of sedentary marine worms living in cool waters of all the world's oceans, generally at depths between 330 and 13,200 ft (100 and 4000 m), shallower at higher latitudes and deeper in trenches. They were first dredged late in the nineteenth century but first investigated in the 1950s. Pogonophorans construct a tube, and are the only nonparasitic metazoans to have no mouth, gut, or anus in their postembryonic anatomy. These are long, slender worms, the diameter in most being less than 1 mm and the length being over 100 times the diameter. Superficially the tubes remind one of corn silk or coarse thread, but most have a characteristic banding pattern with annuli of brown or yellow pigments. The larger tubes are sometimes rigid, thicker, and darkcolored.

The evidence now suggests that these worms absorb their nutrients, such as amino acids, glucose, and fatty acids, through the pinnules and microvilli of the tentacles without the aid of digestive enzymes. This is accomplished against concentration gradients and may be supplemented by limited pinocytosis and phagocytosis by tentacular surfaces in a few species. The presence of internal symbiotic bacteria was demonstrated in several genera. These chemosynthetic organisms also play an important role in providing nutrients to these worms.

The sexes are separate, with the gonopore location being the only sexual dimorphism. Spermatophores with long tail filaments are released by the male. Fertilization has not been observed but must occur within the maternal tube, as fertilized eggs and developing larvae have been found there.

The Pogonophora consist of two orders: Athecanephria and Thecanephria. See also Athecanephria.


 
WordNet: Pogonophora
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: beard worms
  Synonym: phylum Pogonophora


 
Wikipedia: Pogonophora (disambiguation)

There are two taxa with the name Pogonophora:

  • Pogonophora - an obsolete animal phylum, now treated as part of the family Siboglinidae
  • Pogonophora - a genus in the Euphorbiaceae

 
 

Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "Pogonophora" at WikiAnswers.

 

Copyrights:

Sci-Tech Dictionary. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms. Copyright © 2003, 1994, 1989, 1984, 1978, 1976, 1974 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Animal Classification. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pogonophora" Read more

Search for answers directly from your browser with the FREE Answers.com Toolbar!  
Click here to download now. 

Get Answers your way! Check out all our free tools and products.

On this page:   E-mail   print Print  Link  

 

Keep Reading

Mentioned In:

Related Topics