Everything about The Flatworm totally explained
The
flatworms (Phylum
Platyhelminthes from the
Greek platy, meaning "flat" and
helminth, meaning worm) are a
phylum of relatively simple soft-bodied invertebrate
animals. With about 25,000 known
species they're the largest phylum of
acoelomates. Flatworms are found in marine, freshwater, and even damp terrestrial environments. A troublesome terrestrial example is the New Zealand flatworm,
Arthurdendyus triangulatus, which rapidly colonized large areas of Ireland and Scotland since its unintentional introduction in the 1960s and has since destroyed most of the indigenous earthworms . Most flatworms are free-living, but many are
parasitic. There are four
classes:
Trematoda (flukes),
Cestoda (tapeworms),
Monogenea, and
Turbellaria.
Description
The flatworm’s
cephalized soft body is ribbon-shaped, flattened dorso-ventrally (from top to bottom), and
bilaterally symmetric. Flatworms are the simplest
triploblastic animals with organs. This means their
organ systems form out of three
germ layers: an outer
ectoderm and an inner
endoderm with a
mesoderm between them. Turbellarians generally have a
ciliated
epidermis. There is also no true
body cavity (coelom) except the gut; hence, flatworms are classified as acoelomates. The interior of the acoelomate body is filled with somewhat loosely spaced mesodermal tissue called
parenchyma tissue.
Flatworms exhibit an undulating form of locomotion.
Depending on species and age, individuals can range in size from almost microscopic to over 20
m long. The longest ever recorded flatworm was a
tapeworm over 90
ft (27 m) long.
Haptor
The haptor is a part of Platyhelminthes used to attach to its host. These differ between the prohaptor which is on the anterior end of the body and the opisthaptor, which is part of the posterior end of the body.
The prohaptor has various adhesive and feeding structures. In some species, the prohaptor may have a number of cephalic or head glands that secrete a sticky adhesive substance, and shallow muscular suckers, all used for attachment. In other species there's an oral sucker, with various degrees of muscularisation that surrounds the mouth.
The opisthaptor is primarily responsible for the attachment of the monogeneans to the host. The morphology of the opisthaptor is highly variable. It may have suckers in various degrees of development, large hooks called anchors (or hamuli), small hooks that are remnants from the larval stage, or complex clamps that may be either muscular or sclerotised.
Circulation and nervous system
There is no true
circulatory or
respiratory system, but like all other
animals, flatworms do take in oxygen. Extracellular body fluids (
interstitial fluids) percolate between cells to help distribute
nutrients,
gases, and waste products.
Flatworms
respire at their
integument; gasses diffuse directly across their moist outer surface. This type of system is called
integumentary exchange.
However, flatworms do have a bilateral
nervous system; they're the simplest animals to have one. Two cordlike nerves branch repeatedly in an array resembling a ladder. The head end of some species even has a collection of
ganglia acting as a rudimentary brain to integrate signals from
sensory organs such as eyespots.
Feeding
Usually the
digestive tract has one opening, so the animal can feed, digest, and eliminate undigested particles of
food simultaneously, as most animals with tubular guts are able to do. This blind-ended
gastrovascular cavity functions similarly to that of the
Cnidaria. However, in a few particularly long flatworms or those with highly branched guts, there may be one or more
anuses. A small group where the gut is absent or non-permanent, called acoel flatworms, appear to be unrelated to the other Platyhelminthes (see below).They eat rarely, maybe a few times per year(once or twice). Their diet includes small bugs found in soils and other types of
worms, smaller then itself.
Despite the simplicity of the digestive chamber, they're significantly more complex than
cnidarians in that they possess numerous
organs, and are therefore said to show an organ level of organization. Mesoderm allows for the development of these organs, and true
muscle. Major sense organs are concentrated in the front end of the animals for species who possess these organs.
Muscular contraction in the gut causes a strong sucking force which allows flatworms to ingest food.
Reproduction
Flatworm
reproduction is
hermaphroditic, meaning each individual produces
eggs and
sperm. When two flatworms mate, they exchange sperm so both become fertilized. Some flatworms, such as
Pseudobiceros hancockanus engage in
penis fencing, in which two individuals fight, trying to pierce the skin of the other with their penises; the first to succeed inseminates the other, which must then carry and nourish the fertilized eggs. Flatworms usually don't fertilize their own eggs.
Turbellarians classified as
planarians (usually freshwater, non-parasitic) can also reproduce
asexually by
transverse fission. The body constricts at the midsection, and the posterior end grips a substrate. After a few hours of tugging, the body rips apart at the constriction. Each half grows replacements of the missing pieces to form two whole flatworms. This also means that if one of these planarian flatworms is cut in half, each half will regenerate, forming two separate, fully-functioning flatworms.
Classes
Flatworms were formerly consider to be basal among the
protostomes. Molecular evidence suggests that this is only true of the orders
Acoela and
Nemertodermatida, which are thus given their own phylum
Acoelomorpha. These findings, however, are still not accepted by all biologists. The systematic position of
Catenulida seems uncertain, although Donoghue and Cracraft would place it as a sister group to all other non-Acoelomorpha flatworms.
Xenoturbella was at first believed to be a flatworm as well, but it's now obvious that it belongs in its own phyla. The remaining and true flatworms form a monophyletic group that developed from more complex ancestors, and grouped with several other phyla as the
Platyzoa. The traditional classifications of flatworms is primarily based on differing degrees of parasitism and divided into three monophyletic classes:
- Trematoda - flukes, probably paraphyletic to Cestoda.
- Cestoda - tapeworms
- Monogenea - ectoparasitic flukes with simpler life cycles than Trematode flukes. They live an exclusively parasitic existence.
The remaining flatworms are grouped together for convenience as the class
Turbellaria, now comprising the following orders:
Catenulida
Macrostomida
Lecithoepitheliata
Rhabdocoela
Prolecithophora
Proseriata
Tricladida
Polycladida - Marine flatworms
Most of these groups include free-living forms. The flukes and tapeworms, though, are parasitic, and a few cause massive damage to humans and other animals.
Biochemical memory experiments
In 1955, Thompson and James V. McConnell conditioned planarian flatworms by pairing a bright light with an electric shock. After repeating this several times they took away the electric shock, and only exposed them to the bright light. The flatworms would react to the bright light as if they'd been shocked. Thompson and McConnell found that if they cut the worm in two, and allowed both worms to regenerate each half would develop the light-shock reaction. In 1962, McConnell repeated the experiment, but instead of cutting the trained flatworms in two he ground them into small pieces and fed them to other flatworms. Incredibly these flatworms learned to associate the bright light with a shock much faster than flatworms who hadn't been fed trained worms.
This experiment intended to show that memory could perhaps be transferred chemically. The experiment was repeated with mice, fish, and rats, but it always failed to produce the same results, . The perceived explanation was that rather than memory being transferred to the other animals, it was the hormones in the ingested ground animals that changed its behaviour. McConnell believed that this was evidence of a chemical basis for memory, which he identified as memory RNA. McConnell's results are now attributed to observer bias. No double-blind experiment has ever reproduced his results.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Flatworm'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://flatworm.totallyexplained.com">Flatworm Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |