Wood Borers
There are numerous wood boring organisms which can be divided up into two broad groups: the wood boring molluscs (Shipworm) or crustaceans (Gribble).
The Gribble resembles small underwater insects and degrades the wood from the surface creating small galleries on the surface of the wood, as shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1
Wreck Protect is, however, particularly interested in the activity of wood boring molluscs (true Shipworm) in the Baltic. As opposed to the crustaceans, these organisms first settle onto the wood as minute larvae and thereafter bore into the wood and create tunnels, lined with calcium carbonate. From the surface, active wood borers can be very difficult to see, as it is only the small entrance hole which remains visible, if it is not obscured by seaweed and other matter.
A typical shipworm is shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2
Often on shipwrecks where shipworm attack has taken place, all that remains are the “stumps” of frames sticking up from the seabed (Figure 3) or when planking or frames are sectioned the numerous tunnels of the shipworm are clearly visible (Figure 4).
Help create an overview of the possible influence of shipworm in the Baltic.