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Nematodes aren’t toads at all, but worms. Roundworms, specifically, with cylindrical bodies. Different species are so nondescript we have a hard time telling them apart. That may make them sound uninteresting, but I assure you, they’re anything but. Nematodes are some of the oldest animal lifeforms on Earth, having appeared perhaps a billion years ago. And they’ve been a huge success. To start, their population is enormous. For every human on the planet, there are 60 billion nematodes. You might wonder where they are, then. Many live in the dirt. There are millions beneath your feet, digesting organic matter to enrich the soil so plants can grow. Some live below the dirt. They’ve been found 12,000 feet deep, in mines. Others have evolved to be parasitic, living within all kinds of organisms. Many species are tiny, just 1 millimeter long. But the kind that lives in whale intestines can reach 40 feet! Scientists recently found 46,000-year-old, previously unknown nematodes frozen in Siberian permafrost. When thawed, they wriggled back to life. Samples of nematodes even survived the deadly space shuttle crash. Which begs the question: Could extraterrestrial organisms have survived a meteor ride to Earth millions of years ago to diversify and populate the planet? If so, maybe it was the not-so-lowly nematode.
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