Reproduction Preferences Additional Information | M. sanguinea's pelagic stage is reduced to just a few hours. In this species, in fact, the trochophore is driven by a strong positive phototrophism to leave their parents’ burrow and seek the surface of the water, where they complete their larval development. Development up to the nectochaete with four setigerous segments proceeds using the yolk contained in the egg as a food resource; indeed, only when four segments have developed is the masticator apparatus perfectly formed and fully functional and the intestine canalized. Up to this stage, the larvae produce a sticky substance that anchors them to the substrate and prevents them from being swept in the open sea by the action of the tide. From this stage onwards, their greater mobility enables them to incorporate particles of sediment into the mucilaginous substance, and they begin to build themselves a tube inside which they live. |