
Xenoturbella profunda, one of four new species of deep-sea worm that have shed light on how animals evolve.
(CNN)A new
species of deep-sea creature that resembles a discarded purple sock has
been identified as an early form of life in a discovery that will help
scientists understand how animals have evolved over time.
The very simple creature, Xenoturbella,
has no brain, gills, eyes, or reproductive organs, and only one opening
through which food goes in and waste goes out. And although the animal
was first described in 1949, its peculiar biology left scientists
baffled for decades.
One of the lead authors of the study that finally identified it -- published in the journal Nature -- said previous research had led scientists to believe that the creatures had evolved from more complex organisms.
"What
we've shown is that, no, they probably always were simple," said Nerida
Wilson, a research scientist with the Western Australian Museum. "So
our little guys are simple because they are one of the early branches of
the tree of life."
The 'purple sock'
The
first specimen of the deep-sea flatworm was found in waters off Sweden
60 years ago. Early research using genetic tests mistakenly identified
it as a mollusc and concluded that it had once been a complex creature
that had evolved and become simple over time.
But
the four new species of the creature identified in the study were found
at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean 12 years ago by Wilson and another
of the lead researchers, Greg Rouse, a scientist with the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography in the U.S.
Wilson
said it had been a "serendipitous" chance discovery that came about
while they were looking at whale carcasses on the floor of the north
Pacific Ocean off California and Mexico using remotely operated vehicles
(ROV).
She said they had quickly
nicknamed it the "purple sock" because it was so difficult to describe
the shape of the "really weird" creatures to people who hadn't seen
them.
"That's kind of what they remind
us of, they just look like when you throw your sock at the end of the
day, next to the dirty clothes bin, kind of rumpled and flattened and
not very special," Wilson said.








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