Energy News
EARLY EARTH
Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish
illustration only

Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish

by Jules Bernstein
Riverside, CA (SPX) Nov 07, 2025

A new study has unexpectedly discovered that a common parasite of modern oysters actually started infecting bivalves hundreds of millions of years before the dinosaurs went extinct.

The research, published in iScience, used high-resolution 3D scans to look inside 480-million-year-old shells from a Moroccan site known for its exceptionally well-preserved sea life. The scans revealed a series of distinctive patterns etched both on the surface of the fossils and hidden inside them.

"The marks weren't random scratches," said Karma Nanglu, a UC Riverside paleobiologist who led the research. "We saw seven or eight of these perfect question mark shapes on each shell fossil. That's a pattern."

"It took us a while to figure out the mystery behind these peculiar-looking traces. It was as if they were taunting us with their question mark-like shape," said Javier Ortega-Hernandez, paper co-author, Harvard evolutionary biologist and curator at the university's Museum of Comparative Zoology where the fossils used in this study reside.

"But as often happens, we came across the answer while deep in obscure literature before our eureka moment," he said.

The research team determined the marks are the work of a soft-bodied marine bristle worm, still common in today's oceans. The worms, which belong to a group called the spionids, live and feed on mussels and oysters without killing them, though they are still destructive.

"They parasitize the shells of bivalves like oysters, not the flesh of the animals themselves," said Nanglu. "But damaging their shells may increase oyster death rates."

The shells examined in the study belonged to an early relative of modern clams that thrived during the Ordovician, a period of rapid ecological change.

"This is a time when ocean ecosystems got more intense," Nanglu said. "You see the rise of mobility, predation, and, clearly, parasitism."

The researchers considered the possibility that the question marks on the fossils were made by the shellfish themselves or by some other kind of organism. But the evidence was strongest for the spionid explanation.

"There's one image in particular, from a study of modern worms, that shows exactly the same shape inside a shell," Nanglu said. "That was the smoking gun."

Beyond the thrill of identification, the discovery offers a rare evolutionary insight.

"This group of worms hasn't changed its lifestyle in nearly half a billion years," Nanglu said. "We tend to think of evolution as constant change, but here's an example of a behavior that worked so well, it stayed the same through multiple mass extinction events."

To get a look inside these question mark-shaped traces, the researchers used a method similar to a medical CT scan but much more detailed, called micro-CT scanning. This revealed another discovery, that more bivalves with more parasites were hidden from view inside the rock, where the fossil layers were stacked like a multilayered cake.

"We never would've seen this without the scanner," Nanglu said.

The parasite's life cycle also offered a key clue to its identity. It appears to have followed a consistent pattern: beginning life as a larva, settling onto a host shell at a specific time and place, then dissolving a small area to anchor itself. As it grew, it burrowed farther into the shell, forming the distinctive question mark shape.

No other known animal creates this exact pattern. "If it's not a spionid, then it's something we've never seen before," Nanglu said. "But it would have to have evolved the same behavior, in the same place, in the same way."

The same shell-burrowing behavior seen in the fossils still affects oysters today. Though spionid worms don't feed on the animals directly, the structural damage they cause can lead to higher mortality in commercial fisheries.

"This parasite didn't just survive the cutthroat Ordovician period, it thrived," Nanglu said. "It's still interfering with the oysters we want to eat, just as it did hundreds of millions of years ago."

The fossil site in Morocco is renowned for offering snapshots of long-lost behavior. Other finds include animals on the remains of squid-like creatures, providing rare evidence of ancient inter-species interactions frozen in time.

"You're lucky to get any record of an animal from that long ago," Nanglu said. "But to see evidence of two animals interacting? That's gold."

Research Report:A 480-million-year-old parasitic spionid annelid

Related Links
University of California - Riverside
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
EARLY EARTH
Ancient mantle revealed by 3.7-billion-year-old rocks in Australia
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Nov 06, 2025
Researchers at the University of Western Australia, along with colleagues from the University of Bristol, the Geological Survey of Western Australia, and Curtin University, examined feldspar crystals from anorthosite rocks found in the Murchison region of Western Australia. These rocks, dated at 3.7 billion years old, are confirmed to be the oldest on the Australian continent and among the earliest on Earth. Lead author Matilda Boyce said the scarcity of ancient rocks makes determination of early ... read more

EARLY EARTH
Wits expands earth science with new observatory and CORES center

China increases lead in global remote sensing research as US share slips

OlmoEarth AI Platform Released to Expand Access to Planetary Data and Insights

Reflectivity of ocean clouds drops as air pollution falls and global temperatures climb

EARLY EARTH
Centimeter-level RTK positioning now available for IoT deployments

Nanometer precision ranging demonstrated across 113 kilometers sets new benchmark for space measurement

PntGuard delivers maritime resilience against navigation signal interference

Next-generation visual navigation startup Vermeer secures major funding milestone

EARLY EARTH
Ethiopia's invasive prosopis tree chokes livelihoods and land

Amazonian forests altered by human actions show broad changes in diversity and evolutionary patterns

Amazon poised to host toughest climate talks in years

World leaders launch fund to save forests, get first $5 bn

EARLY EARTH
Illinois team creates aviation fuel from food waste with circular economy benefits

Industrial microbe enables conversion of carbon monoxide to ethanol

Revolutionary microbe enables resilient renewable energy from food waste

Finnish carbon-neutral ferry aims to set global benchmark for shipping

EARLY EARTH
China emissions flat in third quarter as solar surges: study

PolyU team advances tandem solar cell efficiency and reliability targets

Enhanced solar water splitting achieved with MoS2 GaN nanorod heterostructures

Graphene solar cells promise long-lasting self-powered sensor networks

EARLY EARTH
S.Africa seeks to save birds from wind turbine risks

Vertical wind turbines may soon power UK railways using tunnel airflow

Danish wind giant Orsted to cut workforce by a quarter

French-German duo wins mega offshore wind energy project

EARLY EARTH
Earth cannot 'sustain' intensive fossil fuel use, Lula tells COP30

China's power paradox: record renewables, continued coal

US government aims to open more public lands to coal mining

China coal power surges even as renewables hit record high

EARLY EARTH
China's 'Singles Day' shopping fest loses its shine for weary consumers

Daughter of 'underground' pastor urges China for his release

Unruffled by Trump, Chinese parents chase 'American dream' for kids

China dreams of football glory at last... in gaming

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.