They are narrow, brilliantly colored ribbons of slimy skin which glide at a speed of about six feet an hour over damp moss and leaves in the everlasting twilight. When alarmed they can break up instantly into scores of “blobs of slime” and in a few hours each piece will become a complete new worm. One of them can eat five-sixths of its own body and entirely recover.
These fantastic creatures are the terricola or land planarians—lowliest of worms and one of the lowliest forms of animal life. Only the microscopic protozoa, the slime moulds, the sponges, jellyfish, and corals are more primitive.
They range from fractions of an inch to nearly a foot in length. They are hunters and scavengers. Nearly all are creatures of darkness and dim light—survivors of the haunted dawn of life on earth. They probably are quite close to the ancestral form of all worms. All are free-living animals, although related closely to the degenerate flukes and cestodes, which are internal parasites of man and other animals.
They belong to an enormous clan. There are several hundred known species and perhaps as many more still unknown. These worms are found over most of the world but most abundantly in the damp tropical and sub-tropical rain forests. They are seldom seen in nature although they are fairly well-known in experimental biology classes, for which they are purchased from dealers. Australia has about sixty species. America may have many more, most of which remain undescribed. One would be likely to come upon them only by accident.
Among these land planarians are some of the most fantastic creatures of the animal kingdom. They have been described as “gliding strips of skin.” The family includes some of the most brilliantly colored of all living things. They probably represent the earliest traces of eyes and brains in the world.
The “eyes” of the terricola are black dots arranged in two parallel rows along both sides of the back. Some species are two-eyed. Many varieties are eyeless. Hundred-eyed worms are quite common. The black dots are light-sensitive. Presumably they represent the beginning of vision. By means of them the worms can distinguish between light and darkness. They also tell the direction from which light comes. Actually, however, planarians without eyes have the same ability, but they are slower to react. This is demonstrably true for fresh-water forms. For most of the land forms at least exposure to strong sunlight would be fatal.
Each of the eye dots has a nerve connection with the brain. It is quite unlikely, however, that the animals actually see anything, in the sense of discriminating specific objects in their surroundings. In a few species, however, from two to four of these black dots nearest to the brain seem somewhat more complicated than the others. As the faculty of vision evolves among animals these will become actual eyes and all the other light-sensitive spots will be discarded. In most planarians, however, the number of eyes increases with the age of the animal.
Nearly all are predatory meat eaters. They are both hunters and scavengers. Some pursue, kill, and eat living animals, such as earthworms and small mollusks, as big as themselves. They apparently are able to locate their victims at some distances by an already evolved sense of smell. One blind Brazilian species is said to pursue earthworms into their burrows several feet underground.
When the victim is overtaken the planarian first enfolds it in its sheetlike, slimy body. Then from its mouth, always on the underside of the body near the middle instead of at the head end, it projects its pharynx, a muscular tube which is part of the digestive system. From this is exuded a substance of some sort which slowly liquifies the flesh. Then the liquid is sucked into the body through the mouth. Digestion then is completed within the digestive tract by special cells which engulf minute particles in the same way as they are engulfed and digested by one-celled animals, the amoeba. The nature of the dissolving material exuded from the pharynx is unknown. It is believed, however, to contain a mixture of enzymes such as those found in the intestinal tracts of higher animals.
Planarians may attack healthy animals and overpower them in spite of their violent struggles against being enfolded in the slimy skin. They are, however, particularly attracted to the sick and injured which they apparently locate by smell. Most of these worms are devourers of dead flesh. A common method of capturing fresh-water forms is to leave a bit of liver or other raw meat exposed in an area they are likely to frequent. Both water and probably land forms will congregate around it. Then the collector is likely to have a difficult job. As the naturalist William Beebe says about one large Venezuelan rain forest species: “To pry one loose and put it in a bottle is like pouring thick, cold molasses mixed with thick glue.”