Fan Worm Worth Seeing, Sabellastarte spectabilis
Fan Worm Worth Seeing, Sabellastarte spectabilis, Underwater photograph taken in coastal waters off Kawaihae, Hawaii, February 2020. Photographs and identification courtesy of Bob Hillis, Ivins, Utah.
Phylogeny: The Fan Worm Worth Seeing, Sabellastarte spectabilis (Grube, 1878) is a member of the Sabellidae Family of Feather-duster Worms. The Genus Sabellastarte is one of forty-one genera in that Family, and there are eight species in this Genus. The Fan Worm Worth Seeing is also known as the Indian Fan Worm, and generically as a Feather Duster Worm, and in Mexico as the gusano abanico vistoso.
Morphology: The Fan Worm Worth Seeing has a well-developed crown of long filaments called radioles. The radioles circumscribe, and hide, the mouth. They are a variety of shades of brown, often with two or three darker bands on the radioles. They can, however, vary in color from white to almost black. The body is encased in a resiliant leathery tube. The body consists of an anterior thorax and a posterior abdomen. Unlike most Fan Worms, this species lacks eyes, and therefore is less likely to retract when approached. The body of Fan Worm Worth Seeing, without the crown, can reach a maximum of 8.0 cm (3.1 inches) in length. The radioles can reach 6.3 cm (2.5 inches) in length.
Habitat and Distribution: Fan Worms Worth Seeing are found attached to pilings, rocks, rubble, coral, and even on sandy flats. Often, they are found in areas with significant water movement, but they are also found in calm silty water. They live subtidally, from depths of 1 m (3 feet) to 6 m (20 feet). The Fan Worm Worth Seeing is native to the Red Sea and the Indo-Pacific but it has spread to have almost global distribution in tropical waters. In Mexican waters they have a very limited distribution being found only from La Paz to the greater Los Cabos area in Baja California Sur.
Diet: Fan Worms Worth Seeing are suspension feeders, filtering plankton and organic matter from the passing currents, or by creating currents by use of the radioles.
Predators: The Fan Worm Worth Seeing are preyed upon by fish, such as triggerfish, angelfish, butterflyfish, and wrasses, and shrimp.
Reproduction: The Fan Worm Worth Seeing reproduced either asexually (through fragmentation) or sexually. Reports vary in that the Fan Worms Worth Seeing are either male or female, however some sources indicate that that they are sequential hermaphrodites. Fertilization is external. Fertilized eggs drift as plankton before settling to the bottom as trochophore larvae, which then develop into adult worms.
Ecosystem Interactions: The Fan Worm Worth Seeing and thought to be beneficial to coral reef habitats helping to keep organic matter from smothering the coral animals. Otherwise, little is know about their relationship with other species, especially in regards to their non-native/invasive impacts.
Human Interactions: Fan Worms Worth Seeing are utilized by the aquarium trade. They also are considered to be fouling organisms- fouling ship hulls, pier pilings, pipelines, and other submerged infrastructure. Efforts to prevent their further spread has had limited success. From a conservation perspective the Fam Worm Worth Seeing has not been formally evaluated however they have are common with a wide distribution and should be consider to be of Least Concern.
Synonyms: Laonome punctata, Sabella grandis, Sabella indica, Sabella notata, Sabella spectabilis, Sabellastarte indica, and Sabellastarte indica quinquevalens.