Fig. 187.—Longitudinal section of the head and neck of Tænia crassicollis, showing the lens-shaped muscular rostellum, with two hooks lying in the concentric cup-like mass of muscles. L.m., longitudinal muscles of the neck; L.f., left lateral nerve; G., ganglion; S.c., subcuticular layer; W1, external, W2, internal excretory vessel. 30/1.
The NERVOUS SYSTEM commences in the scolex and runs through the neck and the entire series of proglottids. Within the proglottids it consists of a number of longitudinal nerve fibres of which those at each lateral border are usually the largest. In the Tæniæ the lateral nerves are accompanied both dorsally and ventrally by a thinner nerve (accessory nerve) (fig. 185); on each surface, moreover, between the lateral nerve and the median plane, there are two somewhat stronger bundles (sub-median), so that there is a total of ten longitudinal nerve bundles. They lie externally to the transverse muscle plates, and the lateral and accessory bundles lie externally to the principal excretory vessels, and are everywhere connected by numerous anastomoses and secondary anastomoses; one typical ring commissure is usually found at the posterior border of the segments. In the Bothriocephalidæ the distribution of the nerve bundles is different (for instance, two lie in the medullary layer), or they are split up into a larger number of branches. In the scolex the nerve bundles are connected in a very remarkable manner by commissures with that which is generally termed the central part of the entire nervous system. There occurs normally a commissure between the two lateral nerves; at the same level, the dorsal and ventral median nerves are also connected at each surface as well with each other as with the lateral nerves, so that a hexagonal or octagonal figure is formed. The so-called apical nerves pass from this commissural system anteriorly, embrace the secondary muscular system of the rostellum semicircularly, and form an annular commissure (rostellar ring) at the inner part of the rostellum.
Fig. 188.—Tænia cœnurus, head and part of neck showing nervous system. Enlarged. (After Niemiec.)
The peripheral nerves arise from the nerve bundles as well as from the commissures situated in the scolex; some go direct to the muscles, while others form a close plexus of nerves external to the inner longitudinal muscles, which plexus likewise sends out fibres to the muscles, but principally to numerous fusiform sense organs (fig. [184], Pl.); they lie internal to the subcuticular cells and, piercing the cuticle with their peripheral processes, end as projecting “receptor” hairs. Higher organs of sense are not known.
The EXCRETORY APPARATUS of the Cestodes is similar to that of other flat worms. The terminal (flame) cells, which hardly differ in appearance from those of the Trematodes, are distributed throughout the parenchyma, but are more common in the cortical than in the medullary layer (fig. 184, T.c.). Before opening into a collecting tube, the capillaries run straight, tortuously, or in convolutions, anastomosing frequently with one another or forming a rete mirabile. The collecting tubes, which have their own epithelial and cuticular wall, and which also appear to be provided with muscular fibres, occur typically as four canals passing through the entire length of the worm (fig. 189); they lie side by side, two (a wider thin-walled ventral, and a narrower thick-walled dorsal one) in either lateral field; in the head the two vessels on each side unite by means of a loop, at the posterior extremity they open into a short pyriform or fusiform terminal bladder which discharges in the middle of the posterior edge of the original terminal proglottis.
This primitive type (fig. 189) of arrangement of collective tubes is subject to variation in most Cestodes, in the scolex as well as in the segments. Indeed, even the lumen of the four longitudinal tubes does not remain equal, as the dorsal or external tubes are more fully developed and become thicker, whereas the ventral or internal ones remain thin, and in some species quite disappear in the older segments (figs. [185], 187). Moreover, very frequently connections are established between the right and left longitudinal branches, as in the head, where a “frontal anastomosis” develops, which in the Tæniidæ usually takes the form of a ring encircling the rostellum (fig. [190]), and in the segments of a transverse anastomosis at each posterior border, especially between the larger branches, and more rarely between the smaller collecting tubes also (fig. 191).