Irish Independent

Marine worm uses eyes 20 times heavier than its head to communicat­e in secret

- VISHWAM SANKARAN

Scientists are perplexed by the discovery of a marine worm with giant eyes that are 20 times heavier than its head and that give it vision as sharp as a mammal.

The eyes of the Vanadis bristle worm, found around the Italian island of Ponza, also enable the species to have a secretive language that is only seen by their own kind in the dark depths of the sea, researcher­s suspect. The nocturnal worm’s eyes are so large that if humans had eyes proportion­ally as big, they would add an extra 100kg to our heads.

Its eyes provide the worm “outstandin­g vision” on a par with that of mice or rats, enabling the species to see small objects and track their movements in the sea at night, scientists say.

“An ability like this is typically reserved for us vertebrate­s, along with arthropods (insects, spiders) and cephalopod­s (octopus, squid),” Dr Anders Garm from the University of Copenhagen said.

“This is the first time that such an advanced and detailed view has been demonstrat­ed beyond these groups.”

Scientists are seeking to understand how the otherwise simple nervous systems of the worm performs very complex functions. The worm has a transparen­t body, except for its eyes, meaning the evolutiona­rily benefits of the eyes must outweigh the consequenc­es of it making the Vanadis visible to its predators.

Researcher­s are also unsure of the exact functions of the large eyes, particular­ly since the creatures are nocturnal and inactive during the day, when eyes usually work best for all animals.

“No one has ever seen the worm during the day, so we don’t know where it hides. So, we cannot rule out that its eyes are used during the day as well,” Dr Garm said. “What we do know is that its most important activities, like finding food and mating, occur at night. So, it is likely that this is when its eyes are important,” he added.

Scientists also found that the worm’s eyes are tuned to see ultraviole­t light, invisible to humans, indicating that the Vanadis sees biolumines­cent signals in the otherwise pitch-black night-time sea.

In the new study, scientists speculate that the worms themselves could be biolumines­cent, communicat­ing with each other via UV light for mating and hunting prey.

“If the worm uses UV light, it will remain invisible to animals other than those of its own species. Our hypothesis is that they’ve developed sharp UV vision so as to have a secret language related to mating,” Dr Garm explained.

“It makes things exciting as UV biolumines­cence has yet to be witnessed in any other animal.” (© The Independen­t).

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