Nereididae (formerly spelled Nereidae) are a family of polychaete worms. It contains about 500 – mostly marine – species grouped into 42 genera. They may be commonly called ragworms or clam worms.
Nereididae | |
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Alitta succinea | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Annelida |
Clade: | Pleistoannelida |
Subclass: | Errantia |
Order: | Phyllodocida |
Suborder: | Nereidiformia |
Family: | Nereididae Fauchald, 1977 |
Characteristics
editThe prostomium of Nereididae bears a pair of palps that are differentiated into two units. The proximal unit is much larger than the distal unit. Parapodia are mostly biramous (only the first two pairs are uniramous). Peristomium fused with the first body segment, with usually two pairs of tentacular cirri. The first body segment with 1-2 pairs tentacular cirri without aciculae. Compound setae are present. Notopodia are distinct (rarely reduced), usually with more flattened lobes, notosetae compound falcigers and/or spinigers (rarely notosetae absent). They have two prostomial antennae (absent in Micronereis). Their pharynx, when everted, clearly consists of two portions, with a pair of strong jaws on the distal portion and usually with conical teeth on one or more areas of both portions. Most genera have no gills (if present, they are usually branched and arise on mid-anterior segments of body). The larval body consists of four segments.
Jaw material
editRagworms' teeth are made of a very tough, yet lightweight material. Unlike bone and tooth enamel, this is not mineralised with calcium, but is formed by a histidine rich protein, with bound zinc ions.[1] Research on this material could lead to applications in engineering.[2]
Systematics
editNereididae are currently considered a monophyletic taxon. Their closest neighbours in polychaete phylogenetic tree are Chrysopetalidae and Hesionidae (the superfamily Nereidoidea).
Nereididae are divided into 42 genera, but the relationships between them are as yet unclear. The family contains traditionally three subfamilies - Namanereidinae, Gymnonereinae and Nereidinae.
Genera
editSubfamily Gymnonereidinae Banse, 1977[3]
- Australonereis Hartman, 1954
- Ceratocephale Malmgren, 1867
- Dendronereides Southern, 1921
- Gymnonereis Horst, 1919
- Kinberginereis Pettibone, 1971
- Leptonereis Kinberg, 1865
- Micronereides Day, 1963
- Olganereis Hartmann-Schröder, 1977
- Rullierinereis Pettibone, 1971
- Sinonereis Wu & Sun, 1979
- Stenoninereis Wesenberg-Lund, 1958
- Tambalagamia Pillai, 1961
- Tylonereis Fauvel, 1911
- Tylorrhynchus Grube, 1866
- Typhlonereis Hansen, 1879
- Websterinereis Pettibone, 1971
Subfamily Namanereidinae Hartman, 1959[3]
- Namalycastis Hartman, 1959
- Namanereis Chamberlin, 1919
Subfamily Nereidinae Blainville, 1818[3]
- Alitta Kinberg, 1865
- Ceratonereis Kinberg, 1865
- Cheilonereis Benham, 1916
- Composetia Hartmann-Schröder, 1985
- Eunereis Malmgren, 1865
- Hediste Malmgren, 1867
- Imajimainereis de León-González & Solís-Weiss, 2000
- Laeonereis Hartman, 1945
- Leonnates Kinberg, 1865
- Micronereis Claparède, 1863
- Neanthes Kinberg, 1865
- Nectoneanthes Imajima, 1972
- Nereis Linnaeus, 1758
- Nicon Kinberg, 1865
- Paraleonnates Chlebovitsch & Wu, 1962
- Parasetia Villalobos-Guerrero, Conde-Vela & Sato, 2022
- Perinereis Kinberg, 1865
- Platynereis Kinberg, 1865
- Potamonereis Villalobos-Guerrero, Conde-Vela & Sato, 2022
- Pseudonereis Kinberg, 1865
- Simplisetia Hartmann-Schröder, 1985
- Solomononereis Gibbs, 1971
- Unanereis Day, 1962
- Wuinereis Khlebovich, 1996
Subfamily Nereididae incertae sedis:[3]
- Kainonereis Chamberlin, 1919
- Lycastonereis Nageswara Rao, 1981
Ecology
editRagworms are predominantly marine organisms that may occasionally swim upstream to rivers and even climb to land (for example Lycastopsis catarractarum). They are commonly found in all water depths, foraging in seaweeds, hiding under rocks or burrowing in sand or mud. Ragworms are mainly omnivorous but many are active carnivores. Nereids breed only once before dying (semelparity), and most of them morph into a distinct form to breed (epitoky).
Ragworms are important food sources for a number of shore birds.[4]
Human use
editRagworms such as Hediste diversicolor are commonly used as bait in sea angling.[5] They are a popular bait for all types of wrasse and pollock. They are also used as fish feed in aquaculture.[6]
Ragworms, such as Tylorrhynchus heterochetus, are considered a delicacy in Vietnam where they are used in the dish chả rươi.[7]
In rice-growing areas of China, these worms are called 禾虫 (Mandarin: hé chóng, Cantonese: woh4 chuhng4). They are harvested from the rice fields and are often cooked with eggs.
References
edit- ^ Broomell et al. (2008) Cutting Edge Structural Protein from the Jaws of Nereis virens Biomacromolecules, 9 (6), pp 1669–1677.
- ^ Marine Worm's Jaws Say 'Cutting-Edge New Aerospace Materials' Science Daily
- ^ a b c d Read, G.; Fauchald, K. (Ed.) (2023). World Polychaeta Database. Nereididae Blainville, 1818. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=22496 on 2023-10-27
- ^ Animal Fact files: Ragworm (Nereis diversicolor) BBC Science & Nature
- ^ Budd, Georgina (2008). "Ragworm: Hediste diversicolor". Marine Life Information Network. Retrieved 2013-05-18.
- ^ Merrit, Mike (13 January 2013) Sea-change as farm grows fish on land The Scotsman, Retrieved 22 January 2013
- ^ Nguyen Quang Chuong (2009). Some contribution to study on productive charecteristics of the palolo (Tylorrhynchus heterochaetus) Polychaeta - Nereidae in Hai Phong brackish water.