About Ridgeia piscesae

Ridgeia piscesae is a tube worm found in a variety of environments on the Juan de Fuca Ridge. Found in clusters up to several square meters in area, these Polychaete’s lack a digestive tract, instead taking up organic carbon from symbiotic, chemoautotrophic bacteria found in their specially-evolved trophosomes. These bacteria oxidize sulfur in order to create organic material. Initially thought to be several species of the Ridgeia genus on the Juan de Fuca Ridge, genetic comparison showed that only one species existed, with various morphologies. The two extreme morphologies are the so-called long-skinny and fat-short forms.

Classification

Animalia (Kingdom); Annelida (Phylum); Polychaeta (Class); Sedentaria (Subclass); Canalipalpata (Infraclass); Sabellida (Order); Siboglinidae (Family); Ridgeia (Genus); Ridgeia piscesae (Species)

Original Name

Ridgeia piscesae Jones, 1985

Key Reference Paper

1. Jones M L. On the Vestimentifera, new phylum: six new species, and other taxa, from hydrothermal vents and elsewhere[J]. Bull Biol Soc Wash, 1985, 6: 117. (Jones et al., 1985)
2. Southward E C, Tunnicliffe V, Black M. Revision of the species of Ridgeia from northeast Pacific hydrothermal vents, with a redescription of Ridgeia piscesae Jones (Pogonophora: Obturata= Vestimentifera)[J]. Canadian Journal of zoology, 1995, 73(2): 282-295. (Southward et al., 1995)

Distribution

Shepherd's Vent, Axial Seamount, Juande Fuca Ridge. Hydrothermal vents of Juan de Fuca Ridgeand northern Gorda Ridge


Basic Information
SpeciesPhylumCommon NameEcosystemDepthHabitatNCBI Taxonomy ID
Ridgeia piscesaeAnnelidatube wormsHydrothermal vent1,780-2,227the Juan de Fuca Ridge (47°57.00′ N, 129°5.82′ W)27915

Genome Assembly Information
Genome AssemblyGenome SizeAssembly levelReleased yearWGS accessionSubmitterBioProjectBUSCO completeness (%)Scaffold/Contig N50 (kb)GC content (%)Repeat Rate (%)Gene Number
R07B-5658.2MbContig2022JAODUO01Universite de MontrealPRJNA78643894.00 365.441-31,703

References
TitleJournalPubmed ID
Third-Generation Sequencing Reveals the Adaptive Role of the Epigenome in Three Deep-Sea PolychaetesMolecular Biology and Evolution37494294

Gene Information

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Gene IDDescription
KAK2189573.1REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE DOMAIN-CONTAINING PROTEIN
KAK2189574.1SERINE INCORPORATOR
KAK2189575.1DECARBOXYLATING DEHYDROGENASES-ISOCITRATE, ISOPROPYLMALATE, TARTRATE
KAK2189576.1PROPROTEIN CONVERTASE SUBTILISIN/KEXIN-RELATED
KAK2189577.1PROPROTEIN CONVERTASE SUBTILISIN/KEXIN-RELATED
KAK2189578.1IQ DOMAIN-CONTAINING PROTEIN H
KAK2189579.1IQ DOMAIN-CONTAINING PROTEIN H
KAK2189580.1IQ DOMAIN-CONTAINING PROTEIN H
KAK2189581.1SYNAPTIC ADHESION-LIKE MOLECULE SALM
KAK2189582.1-
KAK2189583.1ORGANIC ANION TRANSPORTER
KAK2189584.1THYROTROPIN-RELEASING HORMONE RECEPTOR
KAK2189585.1NEUROPEPTIDE RECEPTOR-RELATED G-PROTEIN COUPLED RECEPTOR
KAK2189586.1G-PROTEIN COUPLED RECEPTOR
KAK2189587.1PYGOPUS
KAK2189588.1TUBULIN POLYGLUTAMYLASE
KAK2189589.1COATOMER SUBUNIT EPSILON
KAK2189513.1TRANSCRIPTASE, PUTATIVE-RELATED-RELATED
KAK2189514.1BUCENTAUR RELATED
KAK2189515.1-
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