Class III. CESTODA, Rud., 1808.
Tapeworms have been known from ancient times—at all events, the large species inhabiting the intestines of man—and there has never been a doubt as to their animal nature. The large cysticerci of the domestic animals (occasionally of man also) have been known for an equally long period, but they were generally regarded as growths, or “hydatids,” until almost simultaneously Redi in Italy, and Hartmann and Wepfer in Germany, concluded from their movements and organization that they were of animal nature. From that time the cysticerci have been included amongst the other intestinal worms, and Zeder (1800) established a special class (Cystici, Rud., 1808) for the bladder worms. Things remained in this condition until the middle of the last century, when Küchenmeister, by means of successful feeding experiments, demonstrated that the cysticerci were definite stages of development of certain tapeworms. Before Küchenmeister, E. Blanchard, van Beneden, and v. Siebold had held the same opinion in regard to other asexual Cestodes.
Since the most remote period another question has again and again occupied the attention of naturalists, the question of the morphological nature—that of the INDIVIDUALITY OF THE TAPEWORM. The ancients, who were well acquainted with the proglottids (Vermes cucurbitani) that are frequently evacuated, were of the opinion that the tapeworm originated through the union of these separate proglottids, and this view was maintained until the end of the seventeenth century. In 1683 Tyson discovered the head with the double circlet of hooks in a large tapeworm of the dog; Redi (1684) was also acquainted with the head and the suckers of several Tæniæ. Andry (1700) found the head of Tænia saginata, and Bonnet (1777) and Gleichen-Rusworm (1779) found the head of Dibothriocephalus latus. Consequently most authors, on the ground of this discovery, considered the tapeworm as a single animal, that maintains its hold in the intestine by means of the head, and likewise feeds itself through it. The fact was recognized that there were longitudinal canals running through the entire length of the worm, and it was thought that these originated in the suckers, and that the entire apparatus was an intestine. As, moreover, the segments form at the neck, and are cast off from the opposite extremity, the tapeworm was also compared with the polyps, which were formerly regarded as independent beings.
Steenstrup, in his celebrated work on the alternation of generations (1841), was the first to give another explanation. This has been elaborated still further by van Beneden, v. Siebold and Leuckart, and until a few years ago all authorities adopted his views. According to this view, the tapeworm is composed of numerous individuals, something like a polyp colony, and, in addition to the proglottids—the sexual individuals which are usually present in large numbers—there is ONE individual of different structure, the scolex, which not only fastens the entire colony to the intestine, but actually produces this colony from itself, and therefore is present earlier than the proglottids. The scolex is a “nurse,” which, though itself produced by sexual means, increases asexually like a Scyphistoma polyp; the tapeworm chain has therefore been termed a strobila. Consequently the development of the tapeworms was explained by an alternation of generations. In support of this opinion it was demonstrated not only that the adult sexual creatures, the proglottids, can separate from the colony and live independently for a time, but that in certain Tæniæ, and especially in many Cestodes of the shark, the proglottids detach themselves long before they have attained their ultimate size, and thus separated continue to develop, grow and finally multiply; the scolex also exhibits a certain independence in so far as, though not, as a rule, capable of a free life, yet it in some cases lives as a free being, partly on the surface of the body of marine fishes and partly in the sea. With the more intimate knowledge of the development of the cysticerci, the independent nature of the scolex was recognized. It is formed by a budding of the bladder that has developed from the oncosphere, in some cases (Cœnurus) in large numbers, in other cases (Echinococcus) only after the parent cyst has developed several daughter cysts. Released from its mother cyst and placed in suitable conditions, it goes on living, and gives rise at its posterior end by budding to the strobila, the proglottids of which eventually become sexual individuals.
In order to make this clearer we will briefly summarize what takes place in the jelly-fishes.
By metamorphosis is meant a developmental change in the same individual, while alternation of generations, or metagenesis, implies a stage in which reproduction of individuals takes place by a process of budding or fission. This asexual reproductive stage alternates with the sexual mode of reproduction. Thus in the development of the Scyphozoa (jelly-fishes) we have:—
(1) The fertilized egg cell divides regularly and forms a morula.
(2) By accumulation of fluid in the interior this becomes a closed sac with a wall formed of a single layer of cells, forming the blastosphere or blastula.