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Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge

 E-Mail IMAGE: Fragment of the anterior end of an individual living worm (Ramisyllis multicaudata) dissected out of its host sponge. Bifurcation of the gut can be seen where the worm branches. The. view more  Credit: Ponz-Segrelles & Glasby The marine worm Ramisyllis multicaudata, which lives within the internal canals of a sponge, is one of only two such species possessing a branching body, with one head and multiple posterior ends. An international research team led by the Universities of Göttingen and Madrid is the first to describe the internal anatomy of this intriguing animal. The researchers discovered that the complex body of this worm spreads extensively in the canals of their host sponges. In addition, they describe the anatomical details and nervous system of its unusual reproductive units, the stolons, which form their own brain when detached for fertilization, allowing them to navigate their environment. The results were published in the

Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge

Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge
miragenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from miragenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Program explains why ants are amazing

Program explains why ants are amazing Support Local Journalism “Ants are amazing because they’re way more diverse than most people realize,” said UC Davis entomology doctoral candidate Jill Oberski. “Some are huge, some are tiny, some are blue or green and a lot of them have crazy spines. There are ants that run farms with crops and livestock, and ants that can build bridges and survive floods and ants that live in the highest treetops and never touch the ground.”  That’s just some of the information to be showcased at the UC Davis Biodiversity Museum Month program from 11 a.m. to noon Saturday, Feb. 13, when three doctoral students in the Phil Ward lab, UC Davis department of entomology and nematology, take the helm.

Biodiversity Day this year is a whole month

Biodiversity Day this year is a whole month 2 minute read Ernesto Sandoval of the UC Davis Botanical Conservatory answers questions from visitors at a Biodiversity Day. This year it will be a month and it will be virtual. Kathy Keatley Garvey/Courtesy photo Support Local Journalism It will not be a day it will be a month, the month of February. It will not be a walk-around event it will be virtual. The UC Davis Biodiversity Museum Day/Month, held throughout February, promises to be a lion of a program. This specimen is from the Museum of Wildlife and Fish Biology.

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