Food particles, mostly timber raspings but also some microalgae, are extracted from the water passing through the gills where gas exchange also takes place. Waste, reproductive
gametes, and
larvae are discharged through the back of the burrow, which is open to the sea through a narrow aperture.
Teredo navalis is a protandrous
hermaphrodite. All individuals start their adult life as males, becoming mature when they are a few centimetres long, releasing sperm into the sea. In warmer areas they change into females about eight to ten weeks after settling, but this change may take six months before it occurs in colder climates. The eggs are fertilised when sperm gets sucked into the burrow of a female through the inhalant
siphon. More than a million
larvae at a time are brooded in the gill chamber, after which they are released into the sea as
veliger larvae. By this time they have developed a
velum, a
ciliated locomotory and
feeding organ, and the rudiments of a straight-hinged shell. They eat
phytoplankton and disperse with the current for two to three weeks. During further larval stages they develop siphons and gills. When they are ready to undergo
metamorphosis, they search for suitable timber on which to settle. They seem to be able to detect rotting wood and are able to swim towards it when they are close enough. Each one then crawls around until it finds a suitable location, where it attaches itself with a
byssus thread. It may secrete an
enzyme to soften the wood before starting to dig with its foot. When it has formed a hollow, it undergoes a rapid metamorphosis, shedding and consuming the velum and becoming a juvenile shipworm with small horny valves at the anterior end. It can then begin to dig more efficiently. It bores deeper into the wood and spends the rest of its life as a tunneller. In their gills, shipworms house
Teredinibacter turnerae, a
symbiotic bacterium which converts nitrogen (dinitrogen) from the water into a form usable by its host, essential for survival on nitrogen-poor diet of wood. The same bacteria produce cellulase, which allows the host to digest the
cellulose in the wood. There is evidence to suggest that
Teredinibacter turnerae may also have antibiotic properties. ==Economic effects==