Ice worm

For methane ice worms, see Hesiocaeca methanicola.
Ice worm
Mesenchytraeus solifugus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Annelida
Class: Clitellata
Subclass: Oligochaeta
Order: Haplotaxida
Family: Enchytraeidae
Genus: Mesenchytraeus
Eisen, 1878[1]
Type species
Mesenchytraeus primaevus
Eisen, 1878
Species

See text

Ice worms (also written as ice-worms or iceworms) are enchytraeid annelids of the genus Mesenchytraeus. The majority of the species in the genus are abundant in gravel beds or the banks of riverine habitats,[2][3] but the most well-known members of the genus are found in glacial ice. They are the only annelid worms known to spend their entire lives in glacial ice,[4] and the largest metazoan to complete their entire life cycle at conditions below 0 °C (32 °F).[5]

The genus contains 76 species, including M. solifugus, M. harrimani, M. kuril, M. maculatus and M. obscurus.[6][7][8]

History

The earliest written records of ice worms were by the Ottoman explorer Evliya Çelebi in 1648 while he was in Uludağ (known in ancient times as "Olympus") near Bursa, Turkey. Evliyâ writes that the worms were found in the "midst of ice and snow as old as the creation." He describes them as having the usual size of very small cucumbers, having forty feet, forty black spots, and red eyes, and being composed entirely of ice that "melts quickly away." He said the that worms were very rare and were presented as gifts to kings as they were purportedly aphrodisiacs and had health benefits. He also repeats rumors of how ice worms in the Caucasus mountains were supposedly as "big as dogs".[9] Although the phenomenon had been described by many geographers and travelers since antiquity, it was dismissed by scientists as a myth until late nineteenth-century research proved that a species of dark brown or black worm (Mesenchytraeus solifugus) does indeed live in glaciers and permanent snow.

In North America, the first ice worms species were discovered in 1887 in Alaska, on the Muir Glacier. These glacier ice worms can be found on glaciers in Alaska, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia. They have not been found in other glaciated regions of the world.

Description

The specific name solifugus for the North American species, Mesenchytraeus solifugus, is Latin for "sun-avoiding," as ice worms retreat underneath the ice before dawn. Enzymes in ice worms have very low optimal temperatures, and can be denatured at even a few degrees above 0 °C (32 °F). When ice worms are exposed to temperatures as modest as 5 °C (41 °F), their membrane structures disassociate and fall apart (i.e., "melt") causing the worm itself to "liquefy." Ice worms are several centimeters long, and can be black, blue, or white. They come to the surface of the glaciers in the evening and morning. On Suiattle Glacier in the North Cascades, population counts indicated over 7 billion ice worms.

It is not known how ice worms tunnel through the ice. Some scientists believe they travel through microscopic fissures in ice sheets, while others believe they secrete some chemical which can melt ice by lowering its freezing point, like an antifreeze. They feed on snow algae.

Species

The genus contains 76 species. They are the following:[6][7]

  • Mesenchytraeus affinis Michaelsen, 1901
  • Mesenchytraeus altus Welch, 1917
  • Mesenchytraeus americanus Bell, 1942
  • Mesenchytraeus anisodiverticulus Shen, Chen & Xie, 2012
  • Mesenchytraeus antaeus Rota & Brinkhurst, 2000
  • Mesenchytraeus arcticus Bell, 1962
  • Mesenchytraeus argentatus Nurminen, 1973b
  • Mesenchytraeus armatus (Levinsen, 1884)
  • Mesenchytraeus armatus armatus (Levinsen, 1884)
  • Mesenchytraeus armatus kananaskis Dash, 1970
  • Mesenchytraeus asiaticus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus atriaphorus Altman, 1936
  • Mesenchytraeus beringensis Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus beumeri (Michaelsen, 1886b)
  • Mesenchytraeus bungei Michaelsen, 1901
  • Mesenchytraeus cejkai Cernosvitov, 1937d
  • Mesenchytraeus celticus Southern, 1909
  • Mesenchytraeus chaunus Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
  • Mesenchytraeus chromophorus Altman, 1936
  • Mesenchytraeus crenobius Timm, 1994
  • Mesenchytraeus diplobulbosus Bell, 1949
  • Mesenchytraeus diverticulatus Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
  • Mesenchytraeus eastwoodi Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus eltoni Stephenson, 1925
  • Mesenchytraeus falciformis Eisen, 1878
  • Mesenchytraeus flavidus Michaelsen, 1887
  • Mesenchytraeus flavus (Levinsen, 1884)
  • Mesenchytraeus fontinalis Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus fontinalis fontinalis Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus fontinalis gracilis Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus franciscanus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus fuscus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus fuscus fuscus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus fuscus inermis Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus gaudens Cognetti, 1903a
  • Mesenchytraeus gelidus Welch, 1916
  • Mesenchytraeus gigachaetus Xie, 2012
  • Mesenchytraeus glandulosus (Levinsen, 1884)
  • Mesenchytraeus grandis Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus grebnitzkyi Michaelsen, 1901
  • Mesenchytraeus groenlandicus Nielsen & Christensen, 1959
  • Mesenchytraeus hamiltoni Healy, 1996b
  • Mesenchytraeus harrimani Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus hydrius Welch, 1919a
  • Mesenchytraeus johanseni Welch, 1919b
  • Mesenchytraeus kincaidi Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus kontrimavichusi Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
  • Mesenchytraeus konyamensis Michaelsen, 1916
  • Mesenchytraeus kuehnelti Dózsa-Farkas, 1991a
  • Mesenchytraeus kuril Healy & Timm, 2000
  • Mesenchytraeus lusitanicus Collado, Martínez-Ansemil & Giani,1993
  • Mesenchytraeus macnabi Bell, 1942
  • Mesenchytraeus maculatus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus magnus Altman, 1936
  • Mesenchytraeus melanocephalus Christensen & Dózsa-Farkas, 1999
  • Mesenchytraeus minimus Altman, 1936
  • Mesenchytraeus mirabilis Eisen, 1878
  • Mesenchytraeus monochaetus Bretscher, 1900
  • Mesenchytraeus monothecatus Bell, 1945
  • Mesenchytraeus multispinus (Grube, 1851)
  • Mesenchytraeus nanus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus obscurus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus ogloblini Černosvitov, 1928b
  • Mesenchytraeus orcae Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus pedatus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus pelicensis Issel, 1905c
  • Mesenchytraeus penicillus Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus primaevus Eisen, 1878
  • Mesenchytraeus rhithralis Healy & Fend, 2002
  • Mesenchytraeus sanguineus Nielsen & Christensen, 1959
  • Mesenchytraeus setchelli Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus solifugus (Emery, 1898)
  • Mesenchytraeus straminicolus Rota, 1995
  • Mesenchytraeus sveni Christensen & Dózsa-Farkas, 1999
  • Mesenchytraeus svetae Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
  • Mesenchytraeus tetrapodus Timm, 1978
  • Mesenchytraeus torbeni Christensen & Dózsa-Farkas, 1999
  • Mesenchytraeus tundrus Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
  • Mesenchytraeus unalaskae Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus variabilis Cejka, 1914
  • Mesenchytraeus vegae Eisen, 1904
  • Mesenchytraeus viivi Timm, 1978
  • Mesenchytraeus vshivkovae Timm, 1994

Mesenchytraeus franzi is a junior synonym of Cognettia clarae.[6] Mesenchytraeus megachaetae Shen, Chen & Xie, 2011 has been renamed Mesenchytraeus gigachaetus Xie, 2012 due to the previous name being preoccupied by Mesenchytraeus megachaetae Bretscher, 1901, a junior synonym of Mesenchytraeus armatus.[7][10]

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. Kathryn A. Coates; Jan M. Locke; Brenda M. Healy; Mark J. Wetzel (August 26, 2008). "The aphanoneuran and clitellate Annelida occurring in the United States and Canada: families Enchytraeidae and Propappidae". University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved January 22, 2010.
  2. Paula L. Hartzell & Daniel H. Shain (2009). "Glacier Ice Worms". In Daniel H. Shain. Annelids in Modern Biology. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 305. ISBN 9780470455197.
  3. Brenda Healy & Steve Fend (2002). "The occurrence of Mesenchytraeus (Enchytraeidae: Oligochaeta) in riffle habitats of north-west American rivers, with description of a new species". Journal of Natural History. 36 (1): 1523. doi:10.1080/713833842.
  4. Shain, Daniel H.; Carter, Melissa R.; Murray, Kurt P.; Maleski, Karen A.; Smith, Nancy R.; McBride, Taresha R.; Michalewicz, Lisa A.; Saidel, William M. (2000). "Morphologic characterization of the ice worm Mesenchytraeus solifugus". Journal of Morphology. 246 (3): 192–7. doi:10.1002/1097-4687(200012)246:3<192::AID-JMOR3>3.0.CO;2-B. PMID 11077431.
  5. A.H. Farrell, K.A.Hohenstein, & D.H. Shain (2004). "Molecular adaptation in the ice worm, Mesenchytraeus solifugus: divergence of energetic-associated genes.". Journal of Molecular Evolution. 59 (5): 666673. doi:10.1007/s00239-004-2658-z.
  6. 1 2 3 Rüdiger M. Schmelz & Rut Collado (2012). "An updated checklist of currently accepted species of Enchytraeidae (Oligochaeta, Annelida)" (PDF). vTI Agriculture and Forestry Research, Special Issue. 357: 6787.
  7. 1 2 3 Rüdiger M. Schmelz & Rut Collado (2015). "Checklist of taxa of Enchytraeidae (Oligochaeta): an update" (PDF). Soil Organisms. 87 (2): 149152.
  8. Qi Shen, Jing Chen, & Zhicai Xie (2012). "Mesenchytraeus monodiverticulus sp. nov. (Annelida: Cliterllata: Enchytraeidae) from Changbai Mountain, with a key to Mesenchytraeus with enlarged chaetae". Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 125 (3): 215227.
  9. Evliyâ, Çelebi (1850). "Description of the Ice-worm". In Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. Narrative of Travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa in the Seventeenth Century by Evliya Efendi, Volume 2. Translated by Joseph von Hammer. William Nicol. p. 16.
  10. Zhicai Xie (2012). "Mesenchytraeus gigachaetus, new name, a replacement name for Mesenchytraeus megachaetus Shen et al., 2011". Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 125 (1): 18.
  11. "When the Ice Worms Nest Again". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  12. 1 2 "What Do You Know About Iceworms?". Alaska Public Lands Information Centers, National Parks Services. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  13. J. Besl (11 February 2016). "Cordova's Iceworm Festival:A small town's big day". Show Me Alaska. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  14. "Cordova Iceworm Festival". Cordova Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 3 December 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.