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You are here:   animal list > Reteterebella queenslandia

 

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Reteterebella queenslandia Hartman 1863

Spaghetti worm




Lachlan Gleeson (2011)

 

 

Fact Sheet

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Overview

Brief Summary


Comprehensive Description


Physical Description

Size and Defining Characteristics


Identification


Ecology

Distribution and Habitats


Micro-habitats and Associations


Crypsis


Life History & Behaviour

Behaviour


Focus Section


Evolution & Systematics

Phylogenetics


Systematics


Morphology and Physiology

External Morphology


Internal Anatomy


Cell Biology


Molecular Biology & Genetics

Molecular Biology


Conservation

Trends


Threats


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Content Summary

Brief Summary

 

Reteterebella queenslandia is a sedentary deposit feeding polychaete found at Heron Island in the Great Barrier Reef (Mather and Bennett, 1993). It is commonly referred to as a spaghetti worm because of its mass of white buccal tentacles, which it uses as sensory systems and feeding appendages (Davie et al., 2011). R. queenslandia also posses three pairs of extensively branched branchiae located anteriorly, next to the mouth. R. queenslandia feeds by passing sand particles along grooves in its tentacles towards its mouth. The particles are then sorted according to size, coated in mucus and either ingested or used to build a protective casing.
 

Typically R. queenslandia use crypsis to avoid predation by larger fish. In the reef system, the only visible part is the mass of feeding tentacles that comb the sand. If these tentacles are touched, then they immediately retract back into the polychaetes hiding crevice to avoid predation. This also makes it very difficult to gain estimates of population sizes. Because of this crypsis, overall population estimates are very poor. Currently R. queenslandia is described as being endemic to Heron Island, however the complete lifecycle and dispersal capabilities are unknown. It is likely that R. queenslandia occurs throughout the Great Barrier Reef but is yet to be correctly identified at other locations.
A fixed specimen of Reteterebella queenslandia showing mass of buccal tentacles and reduced setae before it is sectioned
 

Reteterebella queenslandia tentacles protruding out of a clump of coral/macroalgae. R. queenslandia are found under every other boulder in the sandy inner reef area of Heron Island

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