MBLSciShoots: Local Species (Part I)

Slipper snail. Credit Florencia Grattarola via Wikimedia Commons

One of the reasons t澳门六合彩app was built in Woods Hole is because of the stunning amount of biodiversity in the local wildlife. In our latest #MBLSciShoots digital learning lesson, Marine Resources Center Director Dave Remsen takes a look at two of those local species鈥攖he American slipper limpet聽(Crepidula fornicata)聽and the parchment worm聽(Chaetopterus).

Learn more about the Marine Resources Center.

Related Reading

| Bishop Museum, University of Hawaii

Questions from the Audience

Is it possible to see the parchment worm sleeves while snorkeling, or are they far enough down that we would need to SCUBA?

It is possible to see the chimneys (sleeves) at snorkeling depth. Elaine Seaver finds them in Florida in very shallow water. We see them in local harbors among Eel grass meadows in less than six feet of water. The problem for us is that these meadows make it difficult to collect the worms because the burrows are entangled in the roots and rhizomes of the eel grass. Our collecting locations of deeper, softer mud bottoms makes the collections much less invasive.

Are either of these species invasive or threatened by invasive species?

Crepidula fornicata聽is a known invasive species. It is native to our New England waters but is invasive in Western Europe and the Mediterranean. See聽聽from the Invasive species specialist group of the IUCN. In France, Crepidula competes with local oyster farming efforts. Crepidula locally seem to not be negatively impacted by invasive species. In fact, they appear to have increased in abundance, perhaps in response to ecological changes brought on by invasives or other human-mediated activities.

I don鈥檛 know of any direct invasive threats to聽Chaetopterus聽in our local waters but I did find some references to our local聽Chaetopterus聽species, variopedatus, being invasive in New Zealand of all places. Take a聽. Note that it isn鈥檛 absolutely verified this is聽variopedatus. There doesn鈥檛 appear to be much literature on this so this needs some more investigation. There is also an invasive聽Chaetopterus聽in Hawaii but the species is not identified.

Do you find a lot of parchment worm tubes in one place or are they generally isolated?

This varies according to habitat. They can be scattered irregularly in many locations, such as coastal eel grass meadows where there seems to be no pattern to their light distribution. In areas where we collect the in Buzzards Bay they may be relatively more dense with tubes. A dense area might have 1-2 tubes per square meter.

How do parchment worms reproduce if they're so separate from each other?

Parchment worms remain isolated in their burrows for their entire lives. To facilitate reproduction, the female releases a chemical, called a pheromone, that signal males to shed sperm into the surrounding waters. This causes the female to shed eggs, resulting in fertilization.聽!


Watch the rest of the MBLSciShoot videos on our聽.