Chaetopteridae

Family of annelid worms


title: "Chaetopteridae" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["polychaetes", "annelid-families"] description: "Family of annelid worms" topic_path: "general/polychaetes" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaetopteridae" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Family of annelid worms ::

|image = Chaetopterus variopedatus A monograph of the British marine annelids 1915 LXXXIX-transformed.jpeg |image_caption = Chaetopterus variopedatus (Renier, 1804) |taxon = Chaetopteridae |authority = Audouin & Milne Edwards, 1833 |subdivision_ranks = Genera |subdivision = See text

The Chaetopteridae are a family of marine filter-feeding polychaete worms that live in vertical or U-shaped tubes in tunnels buried in the sedimentary or hard substrate of marine environments. The worms are highly adapted to the hard tube they secrete. Inside the tube the animal is segmented and regionally specialized, with highly modified appendages on different segments for cutting the tunnel, feeding, or creating suction for the flow of water through the tube home. The modified segments for feeding are on the 12th segment from the head for members of this family.

Larvae

Chaetopteridae larvae are the largest among the polychaete worms. The most common form of larval developmental plan for polychaetes is the trochophore larvae. The trochophore will add segments sequentially from a posterior growth zone to produce a nectochaete larva. Chaetopterus represents a distinct deviation from this general design. At no point in larval growth stages does the metatrochophore take on the clearly segmented form of the typical nectochaete larva. The 15 segments of Chaetopterus are formed by subdivision of existing anlage.

Feeding

The Chaetopteridae have several genera with peculiar and well-studied filter-feeding mechanisms. The genera Chaetopterus, Mesochaetopterus, and Spiochaetopterus feed using a thin mucus net suspended across the upper portion of their tube. The mucus net is secreted by a hooplike structure called the aliform notopodia arch. The net can grow at a rate as great as one millimeter per second as water currents generated by the notopodial fans pass plankton through the net. When the net grows large enough it contacts the ciliated cup, which rolls up the net. When the roll becomes large the net is disconnected from the aliform notopodia and is rolled into a ball before the ciliated mid-dorsal groove transports it to the mouth.

Affinity

Molecular analysis suggests that this group is basal within the annelids, below the sipunculid worms.

Genera

The World Register of Marine Species lists the following genera as being in the family:

References

References

  1. Read, Geoffrey. (2014). "Chaetopteridae: Audouin & Milne Edwards, 1833".
  2. Ruppert, E., Fox, R., & Barnes, R. (2007). ''Invertebrate Zoology: A functional Evolutionary Approach''. 7th Edition. Belmont:Thomson Learning. {{ISBN. 0-03-025982-7
  3. Osborn, K.J.. (2007). "Description and Relationships of ''Chaetopterus pugaporcinus'', an Unusual Pelagic Polychaete (Annelida, Chaetopteridae)". The Biological Bulletin.
  4. Irvine, S.Q.. (1999). "Larval Ontogenetic Stages of Chaetopterus: Developmental Heterochrony in the Evolution of Chaetopterid Polychaetes". The Biological Bulletin.
  5. (2011). "Phylogenomic analyses unravel annelid evolution". Nature.

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