AnimaliaacceptedgenusAccepted
Eudistylia

Eudistylia

Bush, 1905

GBIF:165414934

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ABOUT

Descriptions(4)

Eudistylia is a genus of marine polychaete worms. The type species is Eudistylia gigantea, now accepted as Eudistylia vancouveri.Bush, Katharine J. 1905. Tubicolous annelids of the tribes Sabellides and Serpulides from the Pacific Ocean. Harriman Alaska Expedition, 12: 169-346. This worm lives in a parchment-like tube with a single opening from which a crown of tentacles projects when the worm is submerged. It is a sessile filter feeder. the Eudistylia Vancouveri is unique because it has an opiculum which makes it possible to fully retract into the tube when predators are sensed.
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The head is formed from the prostomium and peristomium, which are fused. It bears two bundles of radioles or feeding tentacles which together form the funnel-shaped multicolored branchial crown divided into two groups on the dorsal and ventral side of the head. Each radiole is pinnately divided and covered in cilia. It has a central stiffening rod of connective tissue, a number of eyespots and a feeding groove. There are a pair of small palps beside the radioles and a large funnel-shaped mouth. There are about eight thoracic segments and the first has a flange-like collar which secures the worm to the mouth of its tube. The thoracic segments bear two rows of setae or bristles, the notochaetae on the dorsal side are grouped in tufts, while the neurochaetae on the ventral side form a row of small hooks. The abdomen is long and has many segments. The position of the setae on the abdominal segments is reversed, with the notochaetae being hooked and the neurochaetae being tufted. The pygidium at the posterior tip bears the large anus. There is a furrow on the dorsal side of the thoracic and abdominal segments called the faecal groove through which faecal material and gametes are transported to the open end of the tube.Invertebrate Anatomy OnLine
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Members of this genus are found on the Pacific coasts of Canada, the United States and Mexico.Global Biodiversity Information Facility A group of feather duster worms is called a hummuck, when these hummucks are created kelp attaches by the hold fast as to find habitat where are kelps habitat normally wouldn't be.
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Eudistylia brevicomata (Ehlers, 1905) Eudistylia catharinae Banse, 1979 Eudistylia ceratodaula (Schmarda, 1861) Eudistylia polymorpha (Johnson, 1901) Eudistylia tenella Bush, 1904 Eudistylia vancouveri (Kinberg, 1866) World Register of Marine Species
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CLASSIFICATION

Taxonomic Classification Tree

MULTIMEDIA

Media Files(1)

Eudistylia polymorpha

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IMAGES

Gallery(1)

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Occurrences with images

Source Information

English Wikipedia - Species Pages

checklist
Species pages extracted from the English Wikipedia article XML dump from 2022-08-02. Multimedia, vernacular names and textual descriptions are extracted, but only pages with a taxobox or speciesbox template are recognized. See https://github.com/mdoering/wikipedia-dwca for details.

Döring M (2022). English Wikipedia - Species Pages. Wikimedia Foundation. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/c3kkgh accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-16.

LicensePublished 8/2/2022View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
165414934
Dataset Key
cbb6498e-8927-405a-916b-576d00a6289b
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2329556
Taxon ID
32721147
Last Crawled
6/16/2026
Last Interpreted
6/16/2026