Quite a few folks guessed correctly that last night's mystery close-up (above) is a worm tube. Here's the entire tube as we found it washed up on the beach:
Meet Pectinaria californiensis! These interesting worms are commonly called "ice cream cone worms." Perhaps you can see why in the next photo:
Modified from Gordon, D.C.
1966. The effects of the deposit
feeding polychaete Pectinaria gouldii on the intertidal sediments of
Barnstable Harbor. Limnology and
Oceanography 11: 327-332.
Although the older illustration below shows the worm on the surface, you can see the relationship between the worm and its tube. (For those of you who spend time along freshwater streams, this is somewhat similar to a caddisfly.)
Modified from Sowerby, J.
1806. The British Miscellany: or,
Coloured figures of new, rare, or little known animal subjects; many not before
ascertained to be inhabitants of the British Isles. London.
2 comments:
Again, wonderful researtch and educational explanation! Thanks from all of unable, or unwilling, to get out and wander the cold & windy, lonely beaches of this world.
Thanks so much! This was a fun one to share.
:) Jackie
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