Abstract

AbstractThe interstitial environment of marine sediments is a complex network of voids and pores that is inhabited by a diverse and abundant fauna. Animals living within these interstitial spaces show widespread functional adaptations to this environment and have developed many strategies for moving and navigating through small spaces. Interstitial annelids demonstrate a remarkable level of morphologic diversity, and some possess dexterous, filiform palps (tentacle-like appendages common across Annelida). The function(s) of these palps in interstitial spaces has not been closely examined, and we propose that they serve a sensory role in the navigation of interstitial spaces. We investigated the locomotory function of long, dexterous palps in three families of interstitial annelids to determine their role in interstitial navigation. We observed two species of protodrilids (Protodrilidae), Pharyngocirrus eroticus (Saccocirridae), and Protodorvillea recuperata (Dorvilleidae), as they moved through two transparent sand analogs: cyolite and glass beads. All four species of annelids consistently used their palps to probe the interstitial environment while locomoting, and the distance probed with their palps was greater than the distance traveled with their heads, indicating a sensory form of palp-based navigation. The functionality of palps as sensory organs in the interstitial environment raises interesting questions about interstitial navigation and how fauna without appendages map their surroundings. The discovery of this previously undocumented function was possible only through the direct observation of interstitial behavior and emphasizes the importance of developing new techniques to study these animals in more natural habitats.

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