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NEW! Larvaceans - Their houses are nets

Creative Commons Licence :

Attribution Non-Commercial

No Derivative

licence cc

Production CNRS

Original Idea

Christian Sardet

Director

Sharif Mirshak

Texts

Christian Sardet, Gaby Gorsky

Images

Sharif Mirshak, Christian Sardet

Editing

Sharif Mirshak

Sound mix

Romain Strugala

Narration

Gregory Gallagher

Sound engineer

Romain Strugala

NEW! Larvaceans - Their houses are nets

time 02:44

Larvaceans, close ancestors of vertebrates, build delicate houses that double as fishing nets.

Photo Gallery

Narration

Larvaceans produce and live in a bubble-like house that doubles as fishing net. They secrete cellulose and protein fibers that form complex feeding filters.  Fiercely beating its tail, the larvacean tadpole catches and sucks in algae, bacteria and protists.

Several times a day, the larvacean abandons the old house clogged by food particles. It secretes and then inflates a new one using its tail, a forerunner of the spine which characterizes all vertebrate animals.

Larvaceans are short-lived: just a few days of frantic activity, enough time to produce gametes that look like shiny helmets on their heads.

Larvacean houses and their contents constitute a large part of what we call marine snow, organic matter constantly drifting down from the surface. The discarded houses sediment on the sea floor, carrying atmospheric carbon from the larvacean’s diet of phytoplankton.

Short-lived, rapid developers, larvaceans can proliferate and form dense clouds when food is abundant. They live in oceans all over the world, an essential link in the marine food chain.

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