X. THE WORMS

Few groups of animals differ so much in general appearance as the worms. Some resemble miniature snakes; others are flat, some are like needles, one lives in a cell; another stays in the tissue of some animal, while certain others infest the soil. Almost everywhere, on land and in the sea, under nearly all conditions, we shall find these remarkable creatures, which may be briefly described as animals having a head, tail, and upper and lower surfaces, and made up of a great many rings, or segments. In them we find an approach to the higher animals. Thus they have a heart, with red or green blood, breathing organs, though many breathe through the body walls, and a nervous system consisting of a minute brain in the upper portion of the small head.

Fig. 60.—Development of a planarian worm.

All the worms deposit eggs, and nearly all are remarkable for the wonderful changes through which they pass before they attain maturity. This is well illustrated in a planarian worm (Fig. 60), which seems to require the presence of another animal to enable it to complete its development. The little creature which breaks from the egg (A) is a free-swimming creature surrounded by cilia or hairlike swimming organs. By these it moves through the water, and with strange instinct searches for some animal, generally a snail, which it enters. There it becomes surrounded by a sack and produces a little creature called the nurse (b), which soon grows to resemble the tadpolelike creature (C), which is filled with small egglike or germlike objects (a). It now changes into a wormlike creature (D), in which the germs have assumed the shape of worms (a), and soon breaks forth as a little form with a tadpolelike tail (E)—a remarkable performance. But the end is not yet; another animal is necessary to complete the change. Swimming about, the little creature is swallowed by some animal in drinking, and finds its way to the liver, where it lives, the tail being lost. The animal now changes into a perfect flukeworm (F), which finally leaves the animal or host and lays eggs in the water; these pass through the same wonderful transformation. The flukeworms (Fig. 61) are disagreeable flat creatures, not often seen, the marine forms attaining large size.

Fig. 61.—A flukeworm.

Fig. 62.—Thorn-headed worm.