-14The invertebrates, or animals without backbones, make up the great bulk of the animal life of an atoll. The role of these animals in the cycling of radioactive materials in an atoll is as varied as the invertebrate forms. Sea cucumbers have been compared with earth worms in their ceaseless turning of the gravel and sand as they obtain their nutriment from bacteria and algae. Corals and clams remove microorganisms and particulate matter from the water and also are host to the unicellular algae, tissues. Zooxanthellae, which are found in their The Zooxanthellae may be thought of as a vast reservoir of trapped plankton. Their relationship to their host is not completely understood but it is probable that they play an important part in the removal of phosphate wastes. Corals and clams are eroded by algae and sponges, which bore holes in the skeleton or shell, thus contributing to a return of carbonates to the water. Crabs, sipunculid worms and others also attack the skeleton of the corals. Some of the land crabs contribute to the deposition of radioisotopes from the sea onto the islands by dragging fish and algae ashore when feeding. In short, within the invertebrates and their symbionts alone complete biological cycles occur from land to sea and back again, from inorganic substances to organic and back again. The fishes of the waters in and about the Marshall Islands have received a major share of the attention in the study of the biological cycling of radioactive materials UWFL-55). (AECD-3446, UWFL-46, UWFL-47, UWFL-49, UWFL-51, Despite detailed study, the great variety of

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