Merz Rachel Ann
Department of Biology, Swarthmore College Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, 19081, USA.
Invertebr Biol. 2015 Mar;134(1):61-77. doi: 10.1111/ivb.12079.
By controlling the traction between its body and the tube wall, a tube-dwelling polychaete can move efficiently from one end of its tube to the other, brace its body during normal functions (e.g., ventilation and feeding), and anchor within its tube avoiding removal by predators. To examine the potential physical interaction between worms and the tubes they live in, scanning electron microscopy was used to reveal and quantify the morphology of worm bodies and the tubes they produce for species representing 13 families of tube-dwelling polychaetes. In the tubes of most species there were macroscopic or nearly macroscopic (∼10 μm-1 mm) bumps or ridges that protruded slightly into the lumen of the tube; these could provide purchase as a worm moves or anchors. At this scale (∼10 μm-1 mm), the surfaces of the chaetal heads that interact with the tube wall were typically small enough to fit within spaces between these bumps (created by the inward projection of exogenous materials incorporated into the tube wall) or ridges (made by secretions on the interior surface of the tube). At a finer scale (0.01-10 μm), there was a second overlap in size, usually between the dentition on the surfaces of chaetae that interact with the tube walls and the texture provided by the secreted strands or microscopic inclusions of the inner linings. These linings had a surprising diversity of micro-textures. The most common micro-texture was a "fabric" of secreted threads, but there were also orderly micro-ridges, wrinkles, and rugose surfaces provided by microorganisms incorporated into the inner tube lining. Understanding the fine structures of tubes in conjunction with the morphologies of the worms that build them gives insight into how tubes are constructed and how worms live within them.
通过控制其身体与管壁之间的摩擦力,管栖多毛类动物能够高效地在其管子的一端移动到另一端,在正常功能(如通风和进食)期间支撑身体,并固定在其管内以避免被捕食者移除。为了研究蠕虫与其居住的管子之间潜在的物理相互作用,使用扫描电子显微镜来揭示和量化代表13个管栖多毛类动物科的物种的蠕虫身体及其所建造的管子的形态。在大多数物种的管子中,有宏观或近乎宏观(约10μm - 1mm)的凸起或脊,它们略微突出到管腔内;这些可以在蠕虫移动或固定时提供着力点。在这个尺度(约10μm - 1mm)下,与管壁相互作用的刚毛头部表面通常足够小,能够适配这些凸起(由纳入管壁的外源物质向内突出形成)或脊(由管内表面的分泌物形成)之间的空间。在更精细的尺度(0.01 - 10μm)下,在尺寸上存在第二次重叠,通常是在与管壁相互作用的刚毛表面的齿列和由内衬砌的分泌丝或微观内含物提供的纹理之间。这些衬砌具有令人惊讶的微观纹理多样性。最常见的微观纹理是分泌丝的“织物”,但也有由纳入内管衬砌的微生物提供的有序微脊、皱纹和皱纹表面。结合建造管子的蠕虫的形态来理解管子的精细结构,有助于深入了解管子是如何构建的以及蠕虫如何在其中生活。