Echiura

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How to read a taxobox
Echiura
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echiura
Stephen, 1965

The Echiura, or spoon worms, are a small group of marine animals. They are often considered to be a group of annelids, although they lack the segmented structure found in other members of that group, and so may also be treated as a separate phylum. The Echiura fossilise poorly and the earliest known specimen is from the Pennsylvanian (called the Upper Carboniferous outside North America). However, U-shaped fossil burrows that could be Echiuran have been found dating back to the Cambrian.

Echiurans are marine worms similar in size and habit to sipunculans. Many species, such as Echiurus, Urechis, and Ikeda, live in burrows in sand and mud; others live in rock and coral crevices. Thalassema mellita, which lives off the southeastern coast of the US, inhabits the tests (exoskeleton) of dead sand dollars. When the worm is very small, it enters the test and later becomes too large to leave.

The majority of echiurans live in shallow water, but there are also deep sea forms. About 140 species have been described.

The body of an echiuran is composed of a sausage-shaped, cylindrical trunk and an anterior proboscis. They are usually a drab gray or brown color, but some such as Bonellia, are green, and others are red or rose. A few are transparent. The proboscis is large, flattened projection of the head and cannot be retracted into the trunk.

Poorly studied, with the exception of the species Bonellia viridens. Bonellia produces a vivid green pigment in its skin, known as bonellin. Planktonic Bonellia larva are very sensitive to the presence of this chemical, and develop into males that the adult female then inhales. They survive as a semi-parasitic and minute sperm-producing organism, living within a specialised chamber within her body.

In the presence of light, bonellin is a very effective biocide, killing bacteria, larva of other organisms, and red blood cells in laboratory tests. It is currently being investigated as a possible model for novel antibiotics.

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