Green Ribbon Worm at Noah Marryat blog

Green Ribbon Worm. The ribbon worm, or nemerteans, is a group of segmented marine worms found. Most nemertea are dioecious (having two separate sexes), free living organisms that like to spend much of their time beneath rocks or thick algal growth, or else burrowing into soft mud or sand. Phylum nemertea, or ribbon worms, contains approximately 1,200 species of bilaterally symmetrical, coelomate, unsegmented worms, which are divided into two. Rare upclose photo of a ribbon worm (nemertea) consuming a newly emerged cricket. There are more than 900 species in the ribbon worm phylum, and while some inhabit land and freshwater, the majority. The footage has since gone viral.

Minden Pictures Ribbon Worm (Lineus fuscoviridis), Wakayama, Japan
from www.mindenpictures.com

The ribbon worm, or nemerteans, is a group of segmented marine worms found. There are more than 900 species in the ribbon worm phylum, and while some inhabit land and freshwater, the majority. The footage has since gone viral. Rare upclose photo of a ribbon worm (nemertea) consuming a newly emerged cricket. Most nemertea are dioecious (having two separate sexes), free living organisms that like to spend much of their time beneath rocks or thick algal growth, or else burrowing into soft mud or sand. Phylum nemertea, or ribbon worms, contains approximately 1,200 species of bilaterally symmetrical, coelomate, unsegmented worms, which are divided into two.

Minden Pictures Ribbon Worm (Lineus fuscoviridis), Wakayama, Japan

Green Ribbon Worm Phylum nemertea, or ribbon worms, contains approximately 1,200 species of bilaterally symmetrical, coelomate, unsegmented worms, which are divided into two. The footage has since gone viral. Phylum nemertea, or ribbon worms, contains approximately 1,200 species of bilaterally symmetrical, coelomate, unsegmented worms, which are divided into two. The ribbon worm, or nemerteans, is a group of segmented marine worms found. Rare upclose photo of a ribbon worm (nemertea) consuming a newly emerged cricket. There are more than 900 species in the ribbon worm phylum, and while some inhabit land and freshwater, the majority. Most nemertea are dioecious (having two separate sexes), free living organisms that like to spend much of their time beneath rocks or thick algal growth, or else burrowing into soft mud or sand.

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