Название: Earthworms and Their Allies
Автор: Beddard Frank Evers
Издательство: Public Domain
Жанр: Зарубежная классика
isbn:
isbn:
This completes the general sketch of the structure of Notiodrilus tamajusi which we have selected as a type. In this same genus are a large number of species which differ from that selected in various small structural points. Thus in N. annectens (Beddard), a species from New Zealand, the spermaries and ovaries are attached to the posterior, instead of to the anterior, wall of their segments, and there are neither calciferous glands nor modified setae upon segments XVII and XIX. In all essentials however the two types agree and are thus to be looked upon as referable to the same genus. Starting from the structure of these types we may now sketch in quite a brief way the main divergencies of structure shown in the group of Oligochaeta.
We shall naturally begin with the family Megascolecidae of which a type has just been described.
Within the limits of the same sub-family as that which contains Notiodrilus, i. e. the Acanthodrilinae, the changes of structure affect all the principal organs of the body except the nervous system, but are not very large and vary from genus to genus. They are mainly perhaps in the direction of reduction and simplification. Thus in Chilota, Maheina and Yagansia the spermaries are reduced to one pair in either the Xth or XIth segment, while in Yagansia one pair of spermathecae and of spermiducal glands have also disappeared. In Microscolex the spermaries remain normal, but one pair of spermathecae and of spermiducal glands have disappeared, the remaining organs of these series being in the IXth and XVIIth segments respectively. In Microscolex, Chilota and Yagansia, moreover, there is a further degeneration in the disappearance of the calciferous glands. These glands are often absent and sometimes less developed in the New Zealand Maoridrilus, which is otherwise not a degenerate form and differs characteristically from Notiodrilus by the fact that the paired nephridia alternate in position in successive segments, being now in front of the dorsal, and in other segments in front of the ventral, pairs of setae. While these genera are somewhat degenerate, the New Zealand Plagiochaeta has undergone specialisation in an upward direction. For the setae of each segment are increased to a large number much exceeding eight.
It is not a long step to the sub-families Diplocardiinae and Trigastrinae. In the first of these, an American race confined to the northern and central parts of that continent, the male pore shows a tendency to move backwards, being situated on any of segments XVIII-XXI. The two spermiducal glands follow it, but are always placed one pair in front and one behind, as in Notiodrilus. In this group we get a new feature of specialisation in the duplication or triplication of the gizzard.
So too with the Trigastrinae where there are either two or three gizzards; but in this sub-family another modification has become apparent. The paired nephridia have disappeared and their place is taken by several, often quite numerous, pairs of much smaller nephridia called on that account 'micronephridia' instead of 'meganephridia.' To this sub-family belong the especially African but also American and Malayan Dichogaster, whose name is derived from the important fact that it possesses two gizzards.
Not far off is to be placed another sub-family, that of the Octochaetinae, which is New Zealand and Indian in range, the intermediate countries being, strange to say, not populated by this race of Oligochaeta. The group contains several genera of which Octochaetus, Eutyphoeus, and Dinodrilus are the best known. All these worms agree in the main features of their anatomy with Notiodrilus; but they have diverged in different directions. Thus in Octochaetus the typical two pairs of gonads and glands belonging to the generative system have been retained, while the nephridial system consists of micronephridia; in Eutyphoeus, one pair of spermiducal glands has disappeared, and as a general rule the species of this genus have only one pair of spermaries and the corresponding pair of sperm ducts. They are close to Octochaetus. The third genus mentioned, Dinodrilus, is a New Zealand form specialised in possessing 12 setae in each segment. Otherwise it is not far removed from Octochaetus.
A fifth sub-family is also easily referable to the type whose structure has been dealt with as a preliminary to the present survey. That sub-family is the Ocnerodrilinae which is American and African in range. These worms are somewhat degenerate in comparison with their allies. Thus the calciferous glands are reduced to a single pair or to a single gland in the IXth segment, the nephridia though regular and paired have no covering plexus СКАЧАТЬ