Cantore Arithmetic is able to consider the evolution of the sand dollar at Ocean Beach from a state that brings the ice worm on The History Channel series specific to a journey that evolution may purport as the migratory path of how the orphan organism finds a path to the shell as a animal at the beach of our City of San Francisco named ocean?
Perhaps the naming should be left to the map(s) and the continue in the advancing Cantore Arithmetic should do the obvious for the study of how a map is able to find the perhaps of evolution on such a path that word miracle may be left to the people whom believe.
This character to the Sand dollar is fascinating as the steam caves in Central America purport have the dinosaur of fresh life as the circle is a square with a file on the folding of time to complete!
The migratory path is here on Earth and that brings the path to a tramways as the bus may or may not find the dotted path to create a line. This avenue of construction has the venture to Ocean Beach and the locations may cause the elocution to deliver the notes.
A great excitement.
Ice worm
This article needs editing for compliance with Wikipedia's Manual of Style. In particular, it has problems with MOS:AMPERSAND. (November 2021) |
Ice worm | |
---|---|
Mesenchytraeus solifugus | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Annelida |
Class: | Clitellata |
Order: | Tubificida |
Family: | Enchytraeidae |
Genus: | Mesenchytraeus Eisen, 1878[1] |
Type species | |
Mesenchytraeus primaevus Eisen, 1878 | |
Species | |
Ice worms (also written as ice-worms or iceworms) are enchytraeid annelids of the genus Mesenchytraeus. The majority of the species in the genus are abundant in gravel beds or the banks of riverine habitats,[2][3] but the best-known members of the genus are found in glacial ice. They include the only annelid worms known to spend their entire lives in glacial ice,[4] and some of the few metazoans to complete their entire life cycle at conditions below 0 °C (32 °F).[5]
They were discovered in a wide range of environments, which include level snowfields, steep avalanche cones, crevasse walls, glacial rivers and pools, and hard glacier ice. These organisms are unique in that they can simply move between tightly packed ice crystals. They utilize setae, which are small bristles found on the outside of their bodies, to grip the ice and pull themselves along.
The genus contains 77 species, including the North American glacier ice worm (Mesenchytraeus solifugus) and the Yosemite snow worm (Mesenchytraeus gelidus).[6][7][8]
Ice worms eat snow algae and bacteria.[9] They live at zero degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit), but if temperatures dip even slightly below that, according to a Washington State University researcher, the worms die.[10]
Species[edit]
The genus contains 77 species. They are the following:[6][7][11]
- Mesenchytraeus affinis Michaelsen, 1901
- Mesenchytraeus altus Welch, 1917
- Mesenchytraeus americanus Bell, 1942
- Mesenchytraeus anisodiverticulus Shen, Chen & Xie, 2012
- Mesenchytraeus antaeus Rota & Brinkhurst, 2000
- Mesenchytraeus arcticus Bell, 1962
- Mesenchytraeus argentatus Nurminen, 1973b
- Mesenchytraeus armatus (Levinsen, 1884)
- Mesenchytraeus armatus armatus (Levinsen, 1884)
- Mesenchytraeus armatus kananaskis Dash, 1970
- Mesenchytraeus asiaticus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus atriaphorus Altman, 1936
- Mesenchytraeus beringensis Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus beumeri (Michaelsen, 1886b)
- Mesenchytraeus bungei Michaelsen, 1901
- Mesenchytraeus cejkai Cernosvitov, 1937d
- Mesenchytraeus celticus Southern, 1909
- Mesenchytraeus chaunus Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
- Mesenchytraeus chromophorus Altman, 1936
- Mesenchytraeus crenobius Timm, 1994
- Mesenchytraeus diplobulbosus Bell, 1949
- Mesenchytraeus diverticulatus Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
- Mesenchytraeus eastwoodi Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus eltoni Stephenson, 1925
- Mesenchytraeus falciformis Eisen, 1878
- Mesenchytraeus flavidus Michaelsen, 1887
- Mesenchytraeus flavus (Levinsen, 1884)
- Mesenchytraeus fontinalis Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus fontinalis fontinalis Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus fontinalis gracilis Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus franciscanus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus fuscus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus fuscus fuscus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus fuscus inermis Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus gaudens Cognetti, 1903a
- Mesenchytraeus gelidus Welch, 1916
- Mesenchytraeus gigachaetus Xie, 2012
- Mesenchytraeus glandulosus (Levinsen, 1884)
- Mesenchytraeus grandis Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus grebnitzkyi Michaelsen, 1901
- Mesenchytraeus groenlandicus Nielsen & Christensen, 1959
- Mesenchytraeus hamiltoni Healy, 1996b
- Mesenchytraeus harrimani Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus hydrius Welch, 1919a
- Mesenchytraeus johanseni Welch, 1919b
- Mesenchytraeus kincaidi Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus kontrimavichusi Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
- Mesenchytraeus konyamensis Michaelsen, 1916
- Mesenchytraeus kuehnelti Dózsa-Farkas, 1991a
- Mesenchytraeus kuril Healy & Timm, 2000
- Mesenchytraeus lusitanicus Collado, Martínez-Ansemil, and Giani, 1993
- Mesenchytraeus macnabi Bell, 1942
- Mesenchytraeus maculatus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus magnus Altman, 1936
- Mesenchytraeus melanocephalus Christensen & Dózsa-Farkas, 1999
- Mesenchytraeus minimus Altman, 1936
- Mesenchytraeus mirabilis Eisen, 1878
- Mesenchytraeus monochaetus Bretscher, 1900
- Mesenchytraeus monodiverticulus Shen, Chen & Xie, 2012
- Mesenchytraeus monothecatus Bell, 1945
- Mesenchytraeus multispinus (Grube, 1851)
- Mesenchytraeus nanus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus obscurus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus ogloblini Černosvitov, 1928b
- Mesenchytraeus orcae Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus pedatus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus pelicensis Issel, 1905c
- Mesenchytraeus penicillus Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus primaevus Eisen, 1878
- Mesenchytraeus rhithralis Healy & Fend, 2002
- Mesenchytraeus sanguineus Nielsen & Christensen, 1959
- Mesenchytraeus setchelli Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus solifugus (Emery, 1898)
- Mesenchytraeus solifugus solifugus (Emery, 1898)
- Mesenchytraeus solifugus rainierensis Welch, 1916
- Mesenchytraeus straminicolus Rota, 1995
- Mesenchytraeus sveni Christensen & Dózsa-Farkas, 1999
- Mesenchytraeus svetae Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
- Mesenchytraeus tetrapodus Timm, 1978
- Mesenchytraeus torbeni Christensen & Dózsa-Farkas, 1999
- Mesenchytraeus tundrus Piper, MacLean & Christensen, 1982
- Mesenchytraeus unalaskae Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus variabilis Cejka, 1914
- Mesenchytraeus vegae Eisen, 1904
- Mesenchytraeus viivi Timm, 1978
- Mesenchytraeus vshivkovae Timm, 1994
Mesenchytraeus franzi is a junior synonym of Cognettia clarae.[6] Mesenchytraeus megachaetae Shen, Chen & Xie, 2011 has been renamed Mesenchytraeus gigachaetus Xie, 2012 due to the previous name being preoccupied by Mesenchytraeus megachaetae Bretscher, 1901, a junior synonym of Mesenchytraeus armatus.[7][12]
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