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The Secret to Longevity in Tubeworms
With an incredible lifespan of up to 250 years, the deep-sea tube
worm, Lamellibrachia luymesi, is among the longest-lived of all
animals, but how it obtains sufficient nutrients -- in the form
of sulfide -- to keep going for this long has been a mystery. In
a paper just published in the online journal PLoS
Biology, a team
of biologists now provide a solution: by releasing its waste sulfate
not up into the ocean but down into the sediments, L.
luymesi stimulates
the growth of sulfide-producing microbes, thus ensuring its own
long-term survival.
The research team includes Erik E. Cordes, a postdoctoral researcher
in the laboratory of Charles Fisher, professor of biology at Penn
State, along with Katriona Shea, assistant professor of biology
at Penn State, Michael A. Arthur, a professor of geosciences at
Penn State, and Rolf S. Arvidson, an earth sciences research scientist
at Rice University.
The sulfide this worm needs is created by a consortium of bacteria
and archaea that live in the cold deep-sea sediments surrounding
the seep where the worm lives. These organisms use energy from
hydrocarbons to reduce sulfate to sulfide, which L.
luymesi absorbs
through unique root-like extensions of its body, which tunnel into
the sediments. However, current measurements of sulfide and sulfate
fluxes in the water near the vents do not match either the observed
size of the tubeworm colony or the observed longevity of its individuals,
leading Cordes et al. to propose that L. luymesi also uses its
roots to release sulfate back to the microbial consortia from which
it draws its sulfide. Without this return of sulfate, the model
predicts an average lifespan of only 39 years in a colony of 1,000
individuals; with it, survival increases to over 250 years, matching
the longevity of actual living tubeworms.
To date, the proposed return of sulfate to the sediments through
the roots is only a hypothesis -- albeit one with much to support
it -- that still awaits direct confirmation. By providing a model
in which this hypothetical interaction provides real benefits and
explains real observations, the authors hope to stimulate further
research into the biology of the enigmatic and beautiful L.
luymesi.
This research was supported by the National
Science Foundation.
[ Paul Ocampo, PLoS Biology ]
CONTACT:
Erik E. Cordes: (+1) 814-863-8360, eec131@psu.edu
Charles Fisher: cfisher@psu.edu, (+1) 814-865-3365 or (+1) 814-863-6604
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): science@psu.edu, (+1) 814-863-4682
CITATION: Cordes EE, Arthur MA, Shea K, Arvidson RS, Fisher CR
(2005) Modeling the mutualistic interactions between tubeworms
and microbial consortia. PLoS Biol 3(3): e77.
COPY OF ARTICLE: A press-only preview of the article is available
at http://www.plos.org/press/plbi-03-03-cordes.pdf
The published article will be accessible to your readers at:
http://www.plosbiology.org/plosonline/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0030077
A RELATED ARTICLE ALSO IS AVAILABLE IN PLoS BIOLOGY:
"Microfauna-Macrofauna Interaction in the Seafloor: Lessons
from the Tubeworm" (DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030102)
Citation: Boetius A (2005) Microfauna-macrofauna interaction in
the seafloor: Lessons from the tubeworm. PLoS Biol 3(3): e102.
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