enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Shipworm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shipworm

    An average adult shipworm measures 4 to 6 inches (10 to 15 cm) in length and less than one-quarter inch (6.4 mm) in diameter, but some species grow to considerable size. [ 2 ] The body is cylindrical, slender, naked, and superficially vermiform (worm-shaped). In spite of their slender, worm-like forms, shipworms possess the characteristic ...

  3. Teredo navalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teredo_navalis

    Teredo navalis, commonly called the naval shipworm or turu, [2] is a species of saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Teredinidae. This species is the type species of the genus Teredo .

  4. Teredo (bivalve) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teredo_(bivalve)

    Teredo (Zopoteredo) Bartsch, 1923. Zopoteredo. Teredo is a genus of highly modified saltwater clams which bore in wood and live within the tunnels they create. They are commonly known as " shipworms;" however, they are not worms, but marine bivalve molluscs (phylum Mollusca) in the taxonomic family Teredinidae. The type species is Teredo navalis.

  5. Kuphus polythalamius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuphus_polythalamius

    The tube of Kuphus polythalamius is known as a crypt and is a calcareous secretion designed to enable the animal to live in its preferred habitat, the mud of mangrove swamps. A typical specimen measures 100 cm (40 in) in length and is shaped like a truncated elephant's tusk. The wider, anterior end is closed, has a rounded tip, and is about 110 ...

  6. Shipworms ravaged wooden sailing ships for eons. Now they're ...

    www.aol.com/shipworms-ravaged-wooden-sailing...

    For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us

  7. Teredora princesae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teredora_princesae

    Description. Like other shipworms, Teredora princesae has an elongated, wormlike body which is completely enclosed in a tunnel it has made in floating or submerged timber. At the front end of the animal are two calcareous valves, as found in other bivalve molluscs. These are white and sharp and have rough ridges that are used to rasp the timber ...

  8. Ruth Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Turner

    Ruth Turner. Ruth Dixon Turner (1914 – April 30, 2000) was a pioneering U.S. marine biologist and malacologist. She was the world's expert on Teredinidae or shipworms, a taxonomic family of wood-boring bivalve mollusks which severely damage wooden marine installations. Turner held the Alexander Agassiz Professorship at Harvard University, and ...

  9. Bankia (bivalve) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankia_(bivalve)

    Bankia fimbriatula Moll and Roch, 1931 – fimbriate shipworm; Bankia fosteri Clench and Turner, 1946; Bankia gouldi (Bartsch, 1908) – cupped shipworm, gould shipworm; Bankia martensi (Stempell, 1899) Bankia neztalia (Turner and McKoy, 1979) Bankia setacea (Tryon, 1863) – feathery shipworm; Bankia sibirica Roch, 1934; Bankia zeteki Bartsch ...