The researchers’ discovery that the wooden planks in their experiment were untouched raises the possibility that ships such as Britain's Endurance, which sank in 1915 after she became trapped and crushed in pack ice, might still be in good condition, says Adrian Glover, a marine biologist at the Natural History Museum in London who is first author of the study. (The team chose oak and Nordic pine for the experiment because those are the types of wood used in the construction of ships such as Endurance.)
The abundance of Osedax worms and the absence of wood-eating bivalves in the study “illustrate how two organisms with similar life histories can have amazingly different biogeographic patterns”, says Kenneth Halanych, a marine biologist at Auburn University in Alabama.
Andrew Thurber, an oceanographer at Oregon State University in Corvallis, agrees, saying that the study raises intriguing evolutionary questions. The Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which flows clockwise around the continent, is thought to act as a barrier that prevents the larvae of many species from reaching Antarctic waters. It's possible that the bone-eating worms may have crossed the barrier numerous times during evolutionary history, perhaps following the migration routes of whales, says Thurber.
By contrast, trees have been absent from Antarctica for at least the past 30 million years, so the only wood in the marine ecosystem comes from human activities such as shipwrecks and waste. The presence of bone-eating worms could be a “window into history past”, says Thurber.