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Earthworms and their Allies

Chapter 3 THE EXTERNAL FEATURES OF EARTHWORMS AND

Word Count: 1083    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

N TO HABIT AN

except the leeches and a very few marine Polychaeta. This modified region of the body is often of a different colour to the rest and has a glandular look which readily enables one to recognise its position and limits, though its obviousness is less in some cases. It either forms a complete ring round the body or is developed upon the dorsal surface and only to a slight extent upon the ventral surface. Its use, as is well known, is to secrete the cocoon in which the eggs are deposited; and the epidermis which forms it is thickened and more glandular than that in other regions of the body. Among earthworms it is doubtful whether the clitellum ever occupies less than three segments; it consists of three only in the great majority of species of the marked genus Pheretima. From this lowest level it extends in other forms, and in the partially aquatic African genus Alma it may occupy as many as forty segments. The position also varies from genus to genus and from species to species. It is sometimes further forward and sometimes further back. In the remarkable family Moniligastridae this organ is developed earlier in the body than in any other group of true earthworms, consisting of four segments or so commencing with the tenth. As a rule the clitellum begins further back than this-the thirteenth or fourteenth being a common place for the first commencement of the organ among the Megascolecidae, while among the Geoscolecidae and Lumbricidae it is generally much further back, commencing in Alma at the forty-fifth. These details might be increased to many pages; but enough has been said to emphasise the variabil

as I also think is the case with the genital papillae-to prevent hybridisation. That the sense of touch is delicate in these animals seems clear from the abundant development of epidermal sense-organs. It may be that the feel of the clitellum during union enables two individuals of a given species to come together and prevents those of different species from mating. In any case there is no positive evidence that hybridisation does occur in this group of animals. Th

omonis to show papillae which are to b

view of Pheretima

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