A
Anonymous
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HEY! Mr. Pea...you just DID! 
<sm, feelin' so proud of Mr. Pea>
<sm, feelin' so proud of Mr. Pea>
Robin Goodfellow":18ekro5c said:hi.
Oh, so the pic on the previous F&G thread should be the abyssus of the clam, not the gland. Thanx John.
I will still pick on people who misuse the term microphotograph :wink:
Robin Goodfellow":3cam093e said:hi.
Alright! Alright! John, you gave me more hard times than all the Sumpsters add together! :lol:
Let me try it again.
"The answer to the previous F&G thread should be the byssi (pl. of byssus) of a clam, not the gland itself."
Robin Goodfellow":17951ej9 said:hi.
Some of you are very close, but none of you give me satisfactory answer. The key word that I am looking for is cirratulids ("hair worms"). Cirratulids is a close relative of terebellids (spaghetti worms), and often misidentified as such. The main difference between them is the lack of tube in the former, so I guess John_Brandt is damn close to the correct answer. Another feature is the presence of tenticles (actually, gill) on the "body." In the pic, you can see there are two types of tenticles. One zebra-type tenticles near the head, and one solide-colored (brown) on the body.
I am not an expert on the worms, so it is possible that terebellids is the right answer. Let me know so that several of you will get the credit you deserves if I am wrong.
I have the worm for about 4 years in my tank. It survived several tank disasters and several tank changes. (I moved the substrate from one tank to another.) Very interesting to watch.
See the following link for taxon. info on the order:
http://www.nhm.ac.uk/zoology/taxinf/bro ... rowser.htm