Difference between revisions of "Glow of the earthworm"
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− | [[File:Life_that_Glows_Attenborough_1.jpg|thumb|Film Still: From Attenboroughs [http://ihavenotv.com/attenboroughs-life-that-glows Life that Glows]|500px|none]] | + | [[File:Life_that_Glows_Attenborough_1.jpg|thumb|Film Still: From Attenboroughs [http://ihavenotv.com/attenboroughs-life-that-glows Life that Glows]|500px|none]] |
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as early as 1828:<br/> | as early as 1828:<br/> | ||
"I may add here, that I distinctly remember witnessing, when quite a child, the phosphorescence of the earthworm; the light appeared connected with the slimy matter that covers the animal’s body. It was whilst digging at night, in a large dunghill, for worms to supply baits for a fishing excursion that my schoolfellows and myself turned up many hundred Lumbrics in a highly luminous condition; but I cannot recollect in what month this happened." | "I may add here, that I distinctly remember witnessing, when quite a child, the phosphorescence of the earthworm; the light appeared connected with the slimy matter that covers the animal’s body. It was whilst digging at night, in a large dunghill, for worms to supply baits for a fishing excursion that my schoolfellows and myself turned up many hundred Lumbrics in a highly luminous condition; but I cannot recollect in what month this happened." | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
== GENERAL INTRODUCTION == | == GENERAL INTRODUCTION == | ||
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<br/> | <br/> | ||
− | == | + | == GLOWING EARTHWORM SPECIES == |
− | === | + | === Worms where the whole body shines === |
− | '''Avelona ligra''' | + | '''Avelona ligra'''<br/> |
--> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida (Haplotaxida are one of two orders within the annelid subclass Oligochaeta); Lumbricidae; Avelona;<br/> | --> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida (Haplotaxida are one of two orders within the annelid subclass Oligochaeta); Lumbricidae; Avelona;<br/> | ||
− | Avelona ligra seems to be an endogeic earthworm. | + | [https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/1365-2664.12440 Avelona ligra seems to be an endogeic earthworm.]<br/> |
− | [[File:A.ligra-impression-ps.jpg| | + | |
+ | [[File:A.ligra-impression-ps.jpg|400px]]<br/> | ||
+ | [http://blogs.biomedcentral.com/bmcseriesblog/2017/06/01/the-evolution-of-earthworms/ Photography: Marcel Koken] | ||
+ | <br/><br/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Fridericia heliota''' (Siberian luminous earthworm)<br/> | ||
+ | --> Annelida; Clitellata; Enchytraeida (Enchytraeidae); Fridericia;<br/> | ||
+ | [[File:3-Figure1-1.jpg|400px]]<br/> | ||
+ | [https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/A-novel-type-of-luciferin-from-the-Siberian-by-and-Petushkov-Dubinnyi/9961544b407c2fc1938118edf7bfa0aea437fe9f Photography from: '''A novel type of luciferin from the Siberian luminous earthworm Fridericia heliota: structure elucidation by spectral studies and total synthesis.'''] | ||
+ | <br/> | ||
<br/> | <br/> | ||
+ | === Worms that secretes bioluminescent fluids === | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Eisenia lucens'''<br/> | ||
+ | --> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida; Lumbricidae; Eisenia;<br/> | ||
+ | [[File:4165.jpg|400px]]<br/> | ||
+ | [https://www.biolib.cz/en/taxonimage/id4165/?taxonid=44036 Photography from BioLib.cz]<br/> | ||
+ | [https://www.zobodat.at/pdf/Ber-Naturforsch-Ges-Oberlausitz_10_0073-0075.pdf Erstfund von Eisenia lucens (Waga, 1857) (Lumbricidae) in Deutschland]<br/> | ||
+ | [https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2016/pp/c5pp00412h/unauth#!divAbstract A study on bioluminescence and photoluminescence in the earthworm Eisenia lucens] | ||
+ | <br/><br/> | ||
− | ''' | + | '''Microscolex phosphoreus'''<br/> |
− | --> Annelida; Clitellata; | + | --> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida; Acanthodrilidae; Microscolex;<br/> |
+ | [[File:Microscolex.JPG|400px]]<br/> | ||
+ | [http://www.theturfdiseasecentre.co.uk/pests%20and%20moss/Microscolex.htm Photography] | ||
+ | <br/><br/> | ||
− | [[File: | + | '''Diplocardia longa'''<br/> |
+ | --> Annelida; Clitellata; Oligochaeta; Haplotaxida; Acanthodrilidae; Diplocardia; longa<br/> | ||
+ | Diplocardia longa actually origins from North America. Maybe it was brought in?<br/> | ||
+ | [[File:W1siZiIsInVwbG9hZHMvcGxhY2VfaW1hZ2VzLzlhNGFmMmU5MWRmYzhjZDIxMl90dW1ibHJfbG84dDRxSTlMSDFxYzZqNXlvMV81MDAuanBnIl0sWyJwIiwidGh1bWIiLCIxMjAweD4iXSxbInAiLCJjb252ZXJ0IiwiLXF1YWxpdHkgODEgLWF1dG8tb3JpZW50Il1d.jpg|400px]]<br/> | ||
+ | [https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-eerie-earthworms-of-hawkinsville-georgia Photography] | ||
+ | <br/><br/> |
Latest revision as of 14:56, 16 May 2022
From the book:
Phosphoresence or, The Emission of Light by Minerals, Plants, and Animals
T.L. PHIPSON 1862
"One summer`s night after a rainy day," says the writer (M. Adrien, of Pont Saint-Esprit, in a letter dated 18th November, 1858), "I saw the ground sparkling with a whitish phosphoric light whilst sprinkled with warm urine, and I recognized at the same time the presence of numerous small worms. ... The phenomenon was so curious that I took up some of these worms and carried them into the house to examine them by the light of my lamp. I immediately recognized them to be small Lumbrics, about fifteen (not fifty???) millimètres long. Returning again into my garden, with a lantern, I saw at the same place many Lumbrics crawling upon the ground with their usual slow and regular mode of progression. But they showed no light; and when the lantern was put out, their presence could not be recognized. But as soon as they were in their turn sprinkled with warm urine, the phosphorescence of their entire bodies shone forth and illuminated their wriggling movements."
An observation by M. Vallot, of the Academy of Dijon,
as early as 1828:
"I may add here, that I distinctly remember witnessing, when quite a child, the phosphorescence of the earthworm; the light appeared connected with the slimy matter that covers the animal’s body. It was whilst digging at night, in a large dunghill, for worms to supply baits for a fishing excursion that my schoolfellows and myself turned up many hundred Lumbrics in a highly luminous condition; but I cannot recollect in what month this happened."
Contents
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
Amongst the about 7000 known earthworm species, thus far only 40 are reported to produce light. Source: The French National Firefly Observatory & Preliminary results on Flaugergues bioluminescent earthworm
This site contains a summary of the research underlying the art project Glow of the earthworm from Baggenstos/Rudolf
GLOWING EARTHWORM SPECIES
Worms where the whole body shines
Avelona ligra
--> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida (Haplotaxida are one of two orders within the annelid subclass Oligochaeta); Lumbricidae; Avelona;
Avelona ligra seems to be an endogeic earthworm.
Fridericia heliota (Siberian luminous earthworm)
--> Annelida; Clitellata; Enchytraeida (Enchytraeidae); Fridericia;
Photography from: A novel type of luciferin from the Siberian luminous earthworm Fridericia heliota: structure elucidation by spectral studies and total synthesis.
Worms that secretes bioluminescent fluids
Eisenia lucens
--> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida; Lumbricidae; Eisenia;
Photography from BioLib.cz
Erstfund von Eisenia lucens (Waga, 1857) (Lumbricidae) in Deutschland
A study on bioluminescence and photoluminescence in the earthworm Eisenia lucens
Microscolex phosphoreus
--> Annelida; Clitellata; Haplotaxida; Acanthodrilidae; Microscolex;
Photography
Diplocardia longa
--> Annelida; Clitellata; Oligochaeta; Haplotaxida; Acanthodrilidae; Diplocardia; longa
Diplocardia longa actually origins from North America. Maybe it was brought in?
Photography