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[Annelida] wood-boring polychaetes

José Eriberto Assis via annelida%40net.bio.net (by eri.assis from gmail.com)
Fri May 26 14:56:25 EST 2017


I have found a *Branchiomma* species in wood fragments. I have sure theses
species did not create these spaces, but they occuped theses spaces
opportunity.
Thanks a lot
Best regards,
Eriberto

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On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 4:47 PM, Chiara Romano <cromano from ceab.csic.es> wrote:

> Hello all,
>
> I agree with Geoff, we should distinguish between polychaetes that
> actively burrow and secondary colonizers. I don’t think I have ever
> encountered the first ones.
> However, I found various polychaetes that colonize the wood inside the
> burrows created by other organisms, so always co-occurring with live or
> rest of known wood-boring organisms (e.g. bivalves xylophagaids).
> For what I am aware, *Sclerolinum* Siboglinidae was originally described
> from wood and was recently found co-occurring with *Xylophaga*
> https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238309601_A_case_
> of_co-occurrence_between_Sclerolinum_pogonophoran_
> Siboglinidae_Annelida_and_Xylophaga_Bivalvia_from_a_
> north-east_Atlantic_wood-fall
> Dear Magdalena Georgieva is this the publication you were speaking about?
>
> Dear Erica Keppel thank you for the citation of Gambi about Eunicidae
> boring in Posidonia and others seagrases (I did not know that)
>
> Best regards,
> Chiara
>
> =/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=/=
> Chiara Romano, PhD
> Marie Curie Postdoctoral Fellow
> Marine Invertebrate Phylogenetics Lab
> Scripps Institution of Oceanography
> 8750 Biological Grade
> Hubbs Hall
> La Jolla, CA  92037 USA.
> e.mail: chromano from ucsd.edu
>
> and
>
> Centre d’Estudis Avancats de Blanes (CEAB - CSIC)
> Carrer d'acces a la Cala Sant Francesc 14
> 17300 Blanes (Girona), Spain.
> e.mail: cromano from ceab.csic.es
>
>
>
>
> Il giorno 26 mag 2017, alle ore 12:44, Chiara Romano <chromano from ucsd.edu>
> ha scritto:
>
> Hello all,
>
> I agree with Geoff, we should distinguish between polychaetes that
> actively burrow and secondary colonizers. I don’t think I have ever
> encountered the first ones.
> I found various polychaetes that colonize the wood inside the burrows
> created by other organisms, so always co-occurring with live or rest of
> known wood-boring organisms (e.g. bivalves xylophagaids).
> For what I am aware, *Sclerolinum* Siboglinidae was originally described
> from wood and was recently found co-occurring with *Xylophaga*
> https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238309601_A_case_
> of_co-occurrence_between_Sclerolinum_pogonophoran_
> Siboglinidae_Annelida_and_Xylophaga_Bivalvia_from_a_
> north-east_Atlantic_wood-fall
> Dear Magdalena Georgieva is this the publication you were speaking about?
>
> Dear Erica Keppel thank you for the citation of Gambi about Eunicidae
> boring in Posidonia and others seagrases (I did not know that)
>
> Best regards,
> Chiara
>
>
>


-- 

*Dr. JOSÉ ERIBERTO DE ASSISDoutor em Ciências Biológicas (Zoologia)*
*Universidade Federal da Paraíba*
*Pós-doutorado pela Universidade Federal de Pernambuco (Campus Recife)*
*Professor de Educação Básica, **Departamento de Educação*

*Prefeitura Municipal de Bayeux, Paraíba*



*e-mail: eri.assis from gmail.com <eri.assis from gmail.com>(55) (83)
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