Skip to main content

Meet the Real-Life Versions of Dune’s Epic Sandworms

A Dune-loving worm paleontologist makes the case that worms have been just as important on Earth as they are in the blockbuster film

Dune Part Two Sandworms

Sandworms pursue a crowd in this scene from Dune: Part Two.

Warner Bros./FlixPix/Alamy Stock Photo

The film Dune: Part 2 might feature human actors Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya, but the biggest stars — at least literally — are the sandworms. The sandworms are central to the desert ecosystem of the fictional planet Arrakis, the film’s main setting, and to the culture of its inhabitants, the Fremen. Sandworms live underground and excrete a substance that becomes the all-important drug called spice, and the Fremen ride them like giant sandy freight trains. In the film’s first glamour shot of a sandworm, a house-sized mouth ringed with teeth erupts out of the sand to swallow a whole platoon of soldiers.

To find out whether the fictional worms in Dune share anything in common with real worms, Nature spoke with palaeontologist Luke Parry at the University of Oxford, UK. He studies worms from the Cambrian and Ordovician periods, which together lasted from roughly 540 million to 443 million years ago.

Dune’s sandworms can grow to a length of at least 450 metres, about 15 times that of the longest blue whale. How big do real-life worms get?


On supporting science journalism

If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.


There [are] annelid worms that get up to several metres in length called eunicid worms [bristle worms]. They’re pretty gnarly, they have big jaws, they look a bit like Graboids from [the film] Tremors. Some of them are ambush predators. They eat octopuses, squid, vertebrates.

Bobbit worm at night

Bobbit worm (Eunice aphroditois) at night.

Credit: scubaluna/Getty Images

There are some earthworms that get really big as well. Megascolides [reaches] up to 2 metres. The biggest ones are from Australia.

Do any of them have teeth?

The worms in Dune have lots of teeth around their mouths, and that's what the Fremen use to make their crysknives. There are worms like that, [called] priapulids. These are the sorts that were making those first complex burrows in the early Cambrian. They use all of these teeth, called scalids, on a proboscis to drag themselves through burrows. Alitta worms — sandworms — and ragworms have teeth for catching prey. Some leeches have teeth.

The sandworms in Dune have totally changed their planet by excreting the valuable drug called spice, making the weird blue liquid called the Water of Life and other more. Have worms on Earth changed our planet?

Worms [on Earth] were responsible for burrowing into sediments over half a billion years ago and changing marine ecosystems forever. It’s part of what we call the Cambrian explosion, one of the most profound changes on the planet.

Before the advent of worms, the sea floor would have been smothered with what are called microbial mats. All the sediment would have been anoxic [without oxygen]. If you've ever gone swimming in a river or a lake and it's muddy and you plunge your foot into it, and it’s smelly and anoxic, that's basically what the entire sea floor environment would have been around the world.

Then all of a sudden, some animals evolve a wormy body plan that allows them to move in three dimensions. They start burrowing into sediments, and that means that oxygen can get into the sediments and complex animal life can live there. It opens up new ways of making a living. Worms are part of this fundamental restructuring of the world.

When the Fremen in Dune want to ride a sandworm, they summon one with a device called a thumper that drums the ground. Do real worms sense vibrations?

Yeah, a common thing that birds do for catching earthworms is drumming on the ground, to bring them to the surface of the soil. Seagulls do it. Unfortunately, I don’t think the seagulls ride around on them.

If you were the right size to ride on a worm, do you think it would be similar to riding a sandworm in Dune?

It depends what sort of worm it was and where it was going. There are lots that crawl around on the surface of sediments — maybe you could ride those around. For worms that burrow, I think you'd find it quite uncomfortable and confining.

Any other favorite worm facts?

There are about 30 animal body plans — what we call the animal phyla, the big groups that we chop up animal diversity into — and [more than half] of them are worms. It's a really good, versatile way of making a living. Lots of things that didn't start off as worms just become worms. There are groups of lizards that lose their limbs, like snakes and amphisbaenians, worm lizards. There are worms that live in hydrothermal vents in the deep sea.

How do you feel about having the organisms you study portrayed on screen?

I think it's awesome. Although there's nothing like the worm in Dune that's alive today, some of the things that it does, or some of the ways it looks, are actually like some of these really unfamiliar organisms that we find in the ocean. If a handful of people find out about those animals as a result of watching Dune, I think that's awesome, because these things are — life is — amazing and diverse.

This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on March 7 2024.

Julian Nowogrodzki is a science writer based in Boston, Massachusetts.

More by Julian Nowogrodzki

First published in 1869, Nature is the world's leading multidisciplinary science journal. Nature publishes the finest peer-reviewed research that drives ground-breaking discovery, and is read by thought-leaders and decision-makers around the world.

More by Nature magazine