Chaetognatha

From New World Encyclopedia
Revision as of 12:22, 2 August 2008 by Svemir Brkic (talk | contribs) (Fix image link)
Arrow worms
Fossil range: Cambrian-Recent
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
(unranked) Bilateria
Phylum: Chaetognatha
Leuckart, 1854
Orders
  • Phragmorphora
  • Aphragmorphora

Chaetognatha is a phylum of small, slender, marine worms, generally characterized by a largely transparent body, caudal and lateral fins, and grasping bristles or hooks on each side of the mouth that are used to capture prey. These bilaterally symmetrical, soft-bodied invertebrates are known by the common name of arrow worms and are a major component of plankton worldwide. They are generally less than an inch (2.5 centimeters) in size.

Chaetognaths, or arrow worms, provide various ecological values. They are an important part of marine food chains, consuming copepods and other small organisms and being consumed by fish and other larger carnivorous animals. For humans, they add to the diversity and mystery of nature, as well as serving as indicator species to determine the level of water moving into the North Sea from the Atlantic Ocean (Pierrot-Bults 2004).

Description

General diagram (bauplan) of a chaetognath. © (Copyright image. See source and rights.)

Arrow worms have long, narrow, soft bodies divided into a head, trunk, and tail, with a tail fin and one or two pairs of fins on the sides of the body, and with fin rays supporting all of the fins (Pierrot-Bults 2004). The head has eyes with photoreceptive cells, a mouth with one or two rows of teeth, and chitinous grasping spines or hooks on each side of their head. The spines are covered with a hood when swimming, formed by the body wall folding in the neck region, which folds over the head allowing easier swimming (Pierrot-Bults 2004). The body is transparent or translucent and covered by a cuticle, with the internal organs visible. Arrow worms living in surface waters tend to be less muscular and more transparent than species from deeper waters (Pierrot-Bults 2004). The guts of species may be yellow, orange, or red in color form consuming similarly colored prey. At least one species of chaetognath, Caecosagitta macrocephala, has bioluminescent organs on its lateral fins (Haddock and Case 2004).

Adults range in size from three to 150 millimeters (0.12 inches to 5.9 inches), with warm-water species generally smaller than cold-water species, and benthic species the smallest, with Spadella cephaloptera reaching just three millimeters at maturity (Pierrot-Bults 2004).

Arrow worms have an alimentary system composed of the mouth, esophagus, gut, and anus. There also is a nervous system with a superficial cerebral ganglion (brain), several ganglia in the head region, and two lateral ganglia on either side of the esophagus (Pierrot-Bults 2004). Although arrow worms have a mouth with tiny teeth, eyes, and a nervous system, they have no respiratory or circulatory systems. Materials are moved about the body cavity by cilia. Waste materials are simply excreted through the skin and anus.

All species are hermaphroditic, carrying both eggs and sperm, with the male reproductive organs in the tail and the female organs in the trunk (Pierrot-Bults 2004). Sperms develop before the eggs.

Distribution and habitat

Arrow worms are strictly marine, with a cosmopolitan distribution throughout the oceans. They are found from surface tropical waters and shallow tide pools to the deep sea and polar regions. About half of the known species are planktonic (Pierrot-Bults 2004), and about 20 percent are benthic and can attach to seaweed or rocks.

Despite the limited diversity of species, the number of individuals is staggering (Bone et al. 1991). They comprise about thirty percent of the biomass of copepods (Pierrot-bults 2004). The largest concentration are found in the epipelagic layer shallower than 200 meters (656 feet), with fewer individuals but more species in the mesopelagic layer, 200 to 1,000 meters (656 to 3, 280 feet) (Pierrot-Bults 2004).

Behavior, life cycle, and reproduction

Chaetognaths swim in short bursts using a dorso-ventral undulating body motion, where their tail fin assists with propulsion and the body fins for stabilization and steering (Jordan 1992). As carnivores, they swim actively to catch prey, which is usually a small copepod, but they can consume a variety of marine life of the right size, including fish larvae and other arrow worms, as well as phytoplankton (Pierrot-Bults 2004). They detect prey by sensing movement with ciliar tufts on their body and use their hooks to grab prey (Pierrot-Bults 2004). Some species are known to use the neurotoxin tetrodotoxin to subdue prey (Thuesen 1991).

Fish and larger carnivorous animals prey on arrow worms.

Observations on the reproductive behavior of Spadella cephaloptera indicates that this species cross-fertilize, with the sperm package deposited on the body of another individual of the same species, which then moves to the ovaries and is stored there to fertilize the eggs (Pierrot-Bults 2004).

Arrow worms hatch from eggs and grow without proceeding through a larval stage. In tropical waters, Sagitta tasmanica takes as little as six weeks to complete their life span, but in cold water they may take two years to mature (Pierrot-Bults 2004). Arrow worms have some developmental similarities to nematodes.

Classification

Chaetognatha typically is divided into two orders, Phragmorphora and Aphragmorphora, each consisting of three families (Pierrot-Bults 2004). The number of genera depends on the classification scheme, with the genus Sagitta split by some authors into nine to eleven genera (SERTC 2004; Pierrot-Bults 2004). Overall, there are about 120 known species, although there are likely many benthic species yet to be discovered.

Chaetognaths are traditionally classed as deuterostomes by embryologists. Lynn Margulis and K. V. Schwartz place chaetognaths in the deuterostomes in their Five Kingdom classification (Systema Naturae 2000a). Molecular phylogenists, however, consider them to be protostomes. Thomas Cavalier-Smith places them in the protostomes in his Six Kingdom classification (Systema Naturae 2000b). The similarities between chaetognaths and nematodes may support the protostome thesis; in fact, chaetognaths are sometimes regarded as a basal ecdysozoan (Matus et al. 2006).

Chaetognatha appears close to the base of the protostome tree in most studies of their molecular phylogeny (Marletaz et al. 2006). This may explain their deuterostome embryonic characters. If chaetognaths branched off from the protostomes before they evolved their distinctive protostome embryonic characters, they may have retained deuterostome characters inherited from early bilaterian ancestors. Thus, chaetognaths may be a useful model for the ancestral bilaterian (Papillon et al. 2004).

Fossil record

Due to their soft bodies, chaetognaths are considered to fossilize poorly. Even so, several fossil chaetognath species have been described (Vannier et al. 2007). Chaetognaths appear to have originated in the Cambrian. Complete body fossils have been formally described from the Lower Cambrian Maotianshan shales of Yunnan, China (Eognathacantha ercainella) (Chen and Huang 2002) and Protosagitta spinosa (Hu 2005)) and the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale of British Columbia (Oesia disjuncta Walcott (Szaniawski 2005)). A more recent chaetognath, Paucijaculum samamithion Schram, has been described from the Mazon Creek biota from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois.

Chaetognaths were thought possibly to be related to some of the animals grouped with the conodonts. The conodonts themselves, however, are thought to be related to the vertebrates. It is now thought that protoconodont elements (e.g., Protohertzina anabarica Missarzhevsky, 1973), are probably grasping spines of chaetognaths rather than teeth of conodonts. Previously chaetognaths in the Early Cambrian were only suspected from these protoconodont elements, but the more recent discoveries of body fossils have confirmed their presence then (Szaniawski 2002).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bone, Q., H. Kapp, and A. C. Pierrot-Bults. 1991. The Biology of Chaetognaths. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 019857715X.
  • Chen, J.-Y., and D.-Y. Huang. 2002. A possible Lower Cambrian chaetognath (arrow worm). Science 298:187.
  • Haddock, S. H. D., and J. F. Case. 2004. A bioluminescent chaetognath. Nature 367: 225-226.
  • Hu, S.-X. 2005. Taphonomy and palaeoecology of the Early Cambrian Chengjiang Biota from Eastern Yunnan, China. Berliner Paläobiologische Abhandlungen 7:1–197.
  • Jordan, C. E. 1992. A model of rapid-start swimming at intermediate reynolds number: Undulatory locomotion in the chaetognath Sagitta elegans. Journal of Experimental Biology 163: 119-137.
  • Marletaz, F., E . Martin, Y. Perez, et al. 2006. Chaetognath phylogenomics: a protostome with deuterostome-like development. Current Biology 16: R577-R578.
  • Matus, D. Q., R . Copley, C . Dunn, et al. 2006. Broad taxon and gene sampling indicate that chaetognaths are protostomes. Current Biology 16: R575-R576.
  • McLelland, J.A. 1989. An illustrated key to the Chaetognatha of the northern Gulf of Mexico with notes on their distribution. Gulf Research Reports. 8(2):145-172.
  • Papillon, D., et al. 2004. Identification of chaetognaths as protostomes is supported by the analysis of their mitochondrial genome. Molecular Biology & Evolution 21(11): 2122-2129.
  • Pierrot-Bults, A. C. 2004. Chaetognatha. In B. Grzimek, S. F. Craig, D. A. Thoney, N. Schlager, and M. Hutchins. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia, 2nd edition, vol. 2, Protosomes. Detroit, MI: Thomson/Gale. ISBN 0787657786.
  • Southeastern Regional Taxonomic Center (SERTC). 2004. Interactive Key to the species of Chaetognatha from the South Atlantic Bight and northern Gulf of Mexico SERTC Taxonomic Information and Educational Resources web page. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  • Systema Naturae 2000a. Taxon: Phylum Chaetognatha per Margulis and Schwartz (Select Margulis & Schwartz in "Classification by.") Systema Naturae 2000. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  • Systema Naturae 2000b. Systema Naturae 2000 Taxon: Phylum Chaetognatha per Cavalier-Smith (Select Cavalier-Smith in "Classification by.") Systema Naturae 2000. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  • Szaniawski, H. 2002. New evidence for the protoconodont origin of chaetognaths. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 47: 405-419.
  • Szaniawski, H. 2005. Cambrian chaetognaths recognized in Burgess Shale fossils. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 50: 1-8.
  • Thuesen, E. V. 1991. The tetrodotoxin venom of chaetognaths. In Q. Bone, H. Kapp, and A. C. Pierrot-Bults, The Biology of Chaetognaths. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 019857715X.
  • Vannier, J., M. Steiner, E. Renvoise, S.-X. Hu, and J.-P. Casanova. 2007. Early Cambrian origin of modern food webs: Evidence from predator arrow worms. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 274: 627–633.

External links

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.