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Published February 2009 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Spawning and development in Osedax boneworms (Siboglinidae, Annelida)

Abstract

We report observations on spawning and early development in bone-eating worms of the genus Osedax. Individual females of Osedax rubiplumus were observed at 1820 m depth freely spawning hundreds of oocytes, and females of an undescribed species, Osedax "orange collar", were observed spawning in laboratory aquaria. Cytological and molecular analysis of the spawned oocytes of two Osedax species revealed no evidence for the bacterial endosymbionts that the female worms require for their nutrition, suggesting that the bacteria must be acquired later from the environment, as they are in other siboglinids. Individual O. "orange collar" females released an average of 335 (±130) eggs per day, but the number of oocytes spawned per day varied greatly, suggesting that not all the females spawned daily. Fertilization rates of the spawned oocytes varied from 0 to 100%, though most females showed nearly 100% fertilization rates. Oocytes spawned in the laboratory at 4–6°C were negatively buoyant. If fertilized, these oocytes extruded polar bodies and then after at least four hours cleaved unequally. Subsequent cleavages occurred in a spiral pattern at roughly 2-h intervals, resulting in free-swimming trochophore larvae after 24 h. These lecithotrophic trochophores swam for 9–16 days before settling with several hooked chaetae, similar to those of dwarf Osedax males. The larval life span of the Osedax species studied in the laboratory appears to be shorter than in closely related Vestimentifera. Osedax rubiplumus, on the other hand, has much larger oocytes and so may have greater dispersal potential than these other Osedax species. The high fecundity and apparently continuous reproduction of Osedax boneworms permits the opportunistic exploitation of sunken vertebrate bones.

Additional Information

© 2009 Springer. Received: 10 September 2008. Accepted: 14 November 2008. Published online: 10 December 2008. Communicated by M. Byrne. Thanks to the pilots of ROV Tiburon and ROV Ventana and crews of RV Western Flyer and RV Point Lobos. We also thank Eddie Kisfaludy (SIO) for essential aquarium facilities, Lonny Lundsten (MBARI) for edited videos, Evelyn York (SIO) for SEM assistance, and Larry Chlebeck (SIO) and Shawn Arellano (OIMB) for laboratory assistance. We thank Victoria J. Orphan at the California Institute of Technology for use of FISH microscopy facilities. Funding was provided by The David and Lucille Packard Foundation (to MBARI), by Scripps Institution of Oceanography (to GWR), and by NSF (OCE-0118733 and OCE-0527139 to CMY). Work carried out in this study complies with the current laws in the USA.

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August 20, 2023
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