CHAPTER I
STRUCTURAL AND SYSTEMATIC

The group of segmented, bristle-bearing, worms, termed Oligochaeta by zoologists, comprises what are popularly known as earthworms together with certain forms, inhabitants of ponds, lakes and rivers, which are not so well known as to have received a more distinctive name than merely 'worms.' Their next allies are apparently the leeches and—a little more remote—marine bristle-bearing worms termed Polychaeta; the three groups, together with perhaps a certain number of other forms belonging to smaller groups, constitute the Annelida which are a distinct and separate assemblage of invertebrate animals.

The most interesting features about these Oligochaetous worms are their very great anatomical variation and the facts of their distribution over the globe. Their importance as geological agents in levelling the ground was made known a long time ago by Darwin, and that aspect of earthworms has remained in much the same position as Darwin left it. We shall concern ourselves here only with the structure, habits, and range of the earthworms and their immediate allies, the aquatic Oligochaeta. These three aspects of the animals dovetail into each other more thoroughly than is the case with some other groups. This is due to the fact that they have of late years been very thoroughly studied from the anatomical and distributional side. So lately as 1889, M. Vaillant in a very comprehensive treatise was only able to enumerate 369 species, of which a large number were but incompletely differentiated, and some are no longer admitted. There are at the moment of writing perhaps 1500 species, the vast majority of which are well known owing to careful investigation. Furthermore there are but few parts of the world, and these are not of large area, from which earthworms at any rate have not been gathered. Though there can be no doubt that a very considerable number of species await discovery, it would seem that we are in possession of information which is not likely to be seriously affected by future researches.

The Anatomy of Earthworms.

Fig. 1

Although it is not contemplated to make the present volume a guide to the structure of this group of worms, it is necessary to give some little anatomical sketch of the group in order first of all to illustrate their diversity of structure, secondly to give reasons for the classification of them, and thirdly to enable the reader to realise certain structural details which it is absolutely necessary to give some account of in order to explain other matters.

It is for example impossible to attempt any account of the fitness of some of these animals for their terrestrial life and of others for an aquatic life without treating of anatomy to some extent.

I shall take one particular species as a type and indicate later the principal divergencies shown by other forms. According to the general opinion among those who have studied the Oligochaeta I take as a representative form a Megascolecid (this and the other families are dealt with seriatim on p. 14 et seq.), as this group is presumed to be the oldest, and within that group a representative of the genus Notiodrilus which is with some reason held to be the most primitive genus in the group. Finally I have no particular reason for selecting the species Notiodrilus tamajusi except that there happens to be a longer and fuller description of it than of many.