If ever a species got the disgusting name it deserved, bone-eating worms would be the one. Robert Vrijenhoek's team discovered them five years ago eating the bones of a dead gray whale off California, and since then they've shown up in whalebones around the world. The worms don't have mouths or anuses—instead, they rely on their bacteria to handle nutrient uptake and waste disposal. And according to a new study by Vrijenhoek in BMC Biology, there's more to these strange sea-dwelling scavengers: They might have been around since before whales even existed, and are probably more numerous than we thought. Back in 2004, Vrijenhoek's first analysis of the bone-eating worms, which carry the scientific name Osedax, found five different species. However, according to the genetic analysis he carried out in the new study, there could be as many as 17 distinct evolutionary lineages. Osedax is old, too. Using a molecular ...
Are Gross, Whalebone-Eating Worms Actually Older than Whales?
Discover the fascinating world of bone-eating worms and their surprising evolutionary history with ancient whales.
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