Echiuroid Worms
Echiuroid Worms
Echiuroid worms, or echiurans, commonly called spoon worms, are soft-bodied, unsegmented, marine animals of worldwide distribution. The approximately 125 species in the phylum Echiura occur mostly in the shallow intertidal zone of oceans. Most burrow or form tubes in sand or mud. Some live in discarded shells of sea urchins and sand dollars. Others inhabit cracks and crevices in rocks or coral fragments. Body length varies from a fraction of an inch to 20 in (50 cm) or more. There are two body divisions: the body proper, or trunk; and a proboscis, which is highly mobile and extensible, but not retractable into the trunk. The trunk may be smooth, or it may have rows of small papillae or tubercles, giving it a superficially segmented appearance. At its anterior end, close to the base of the proboscis, it bears a pair of curved or hooked chitinous processes called setae. (Presence of setae is a major characteristic of the phylum Annelida, in which the setae are more numerous.) In some species there are additional setae near the posterior end of the trunk. The body wall is muscular, and a spacious, fluid-filled cavity separates it from the gut. This cavity does not extend into the proboscis. The gut is much longer than the trunk, and parts of it are coiled. It begins at the mouth at the base of the proboscis, and terminates at the anus at the opposite end.
The proboscis may be short, broad, and spoonshaped, as in the common genus Echiurus, or it may be much longer than the trunk, narrow, and divided into two branches at the tip as in Bonellia. Its edges are rolled over ventrally to form a trough, which is lined by cilia and mucus-secreting cells. It is used in feeding to collect organic particles from the sandy or muddy substrate and to transport it to the mouth. Tubedwelling echiurans, for example Urechis, collect their food by filter-feeding. This worm secretes a mucus funnel that strains out particles from water pumped into the tube. From time to time the mucus is transported to the mouth and ingested, and a new funnel is formed.
Respiratory gas exchange in echiuroid worms occurs between the body fluid and sea water, usually across the body wall. But at least in some species, water is pumped in and out of the lower part of the gut through the anus, and gas exchange takes place across the wall of the gut. Although a circulatory system of closed vessels is present, the blood is usually colorless and serves mainly to transport nutrients. A few echiurans do have blood that contains hemoglobin. Excretion is performed by tubular structures called nephridia whose number varies widely among the species. One end of each nephridium is funnel-shaped and ciliated, and opens into the body cavity. The other end is narrow and opens to the outside by means of a minute pore. The nervous system is simple, without a brain or specialized sense organs. Sexes are separate. Each individual has a single gonad, either testis or ovary, which develops from the lining of the body cavity. Immature gametes are shed into the body cavity. Upon maturation they are transported to the outside through the nephridial tubes. Fertilization is external, and a planktonic “trochophore” larva (found also in the segmented worms, phylum Annelida, and a few other groups) develops.
Although in most echiurans males and females of a particular species look alike, an interesting example of sexual dimorphism and sex differentiation is presented by the European form Bonellia viridis. In this species, the male, which is ciliated and lacks a proboscis, is about 0.4–0.8 in (1–2 mm) long. In contrast, the female’s trunk alone is 2.3–3.1 in (6–8 cm), with an even longer proboscis. The male lives in the female’s pharynx or occasionally in her body cavity; there may be as many as 10– 15 males in a single female. About 17% of the larvae in this species are genetically male or female. The remaining majority of larva in this species develops into a female if it settles (at metamorphosis) some distance away from an existing female. On the other hand, if it settles close to a female, it develops into a male. It has been suggested that females produce and release into the surrounding water a “hormone” which has a masculinizing effect on the developing trochophore.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The long shadow cast by Cluny.(Cluny: In Search of God's Lost Empire)(Book review)
Magazine article from: National Catholic Reporter; 1/12/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...the history of a great and ancient abbey CLUNY: IN SEARCH OF GOD'S LOST EMPIRE By Edwin...of the once mighty Benedictine abbey of Cluny, which stood in Burgundy, France, for...building known by modern historians as "Cluny HI," took more than 40 years to build...
|
|
Claude Michel Cluny. Le Silence de Delphes: Journal litteraire, 1948-1962.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: World Literature Today; 10/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; Claude Michel Cluny. Le Silence de Delphes: Journal litteraire...ISBN 2-7291-1419-X FOR CLAUDE MICHEL CLUNY, passion both innate and cultivated must...Renaudot Essai Prize for 2002, confirms that Cluny knows freedom's dangerous frontiers well...
|
|
Cluny's a foxy lady; Cluny South talks about the joys and hardships of her three years spent capturing a community of foxes on film. By Sally Morgan.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Mirror (London, England); 5/19/2001; 700+ words
; ...For three years, assistant producer Cluny South and her cameraman husband Justin...the foxes that also live there," says Cluny, 35. "Not only were there about 40 co...a centre-parting on her forehead." Cluny met 30-year-old Justin at film school...
|
|
Order and Exclusion: Cluny and Christendom Face Heresy, Judaism, and Islam (1000-1150).(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Theological Studies; 3/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ORDER AND EXCLUSION: CLUNY AND CHRISTENDOM FACE HERESY, JUDAISM...Venerable, twelfth-century abbot of Cluny, seeing his Contra Petrobrusianos, Adversus...and others, who have so well explained Cluny's seigniorial dependencies. I.-P...
|
|
Filmmaker's last hurrah; 'Cluny' cements Lubitsch legacy.(WASHINGTON WEEKEND)(FROM THE VAULTS)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 8/30/2007; 700+ words
; ...Byline: Gary Arnold, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Cluny Brown, the last movie completed by Ernst...That Lady in Ermine as optimum Lubitsch. Cluny Brown harmonizes with his best movies while...year before World War II. Evidently, Cluny Brown is in need of a rediscovery because...
|
|
Claude Michel Cluny. Le retour des emigres: Journal litteraire, 1980-1981.(Book review)
Magazine article from: World Literature Today; 1/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; Claude Michel Cluny. Le retour des emigres: Journal litteraire...sage and modern Montaigne, Claude Michel Cluny has published to date close to five thousand...principle behind the many genres practiced by Cluny. Juxtaposing remembered childhood book...
|
|
Will the bell toll for Cluny Kirk faithful?
Newspaper article from: Evening News - Scotland; 11/6/2000; ; 640 words
; ...held is facing the threat of closure. Cluny Kirk in Morningside was the centre of national...Smith. The Labour leader was a member at Cluny and regularly attended services before...George Munro after 27 years as minister at Cluny. The Kirk's long-term blueprint for...
|
|
SWORD AND THE STONE PEAK PRACTICE: THE CURSE OF CLUNY PEAK PRACTICE: THE CURSE OF CLUNY Alow-level walk and an act of vengeance come to the rescue of Cameron McNeish
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Herald; 11/26/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...reminder of an ancient tale known as the Curse of Cluny. In the 16th century, Cluny, Chief of the Clan MacPherson, betrothed his eldest...s younger sister, but the couple believed that Cluny would only offer the hand of his youngest daughter...
|
|
Odeon's girlish cousin: Cafe Cluny brings the faux-brasserie formula, with a feminine bent, to the West Village.
Magazine article from: New York; 12/11/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Lynn Wagenknecht's new restaurant, Cafe Cluny, which anyone who spends an inordinate...did, that it was inspired by Abbaye de Cluny, the famous monastery in France. [ILLUSTRATION...doppelganger, Cafe Luxembourg), and Cafe Cluny seems to have been conceived as its petite...
|
|
New talent at the Cluny.(News)
Newspaper article from: Evening Chronicle (Newcastle, England); 8/1/2005; 598 words
; Byline: By Ben Atkinson The Cluny has a feast of live music in the coming...might be a bit off the beaten track but the Cluny is still at the forefront of unveiling...expanding as a melting pot for live music, the Cluny has been helping artists to succeed since...
|
|
Cluny, Order of
Book article from: A Dictionary of World History
Cluny, Order of A reformed Benedictine monastic order, whose mother house was the abbey of Cluny in France, founded by Duke William of Aquitaine...Under Abbot Odilo (994–1048) Cluny became the head of a system of dependent...
|
|
Cluny
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Cluny , former abbey, E France, in the present...Berno, a Burgundian monk and reformer. Cluny was one of the chief religious and cultural...The third abbey church built on the site, Cluny III (11th cent.), was designed in the...
|
|
Cluny Museum
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Cluny Museum 14th- and 15th-century Gothic and Renaissance structure in Paris, built by Pierre de Chaslus, abbot of Cluny, and rebuilt by Jacques d'Ambroise. The site is that of the ancient Roman baths of Emperor Julian. Acquired by the...
|
|
Bernard of Cluny
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Bernard of Cluny ( c. 1100– c. 1150), also called Bernard of Morlás or Morval. He was probably a Cluniac monk. His poem, De contemptu mundi , is the source of ‘Jerusalem the Golden’.
|
|
Cluniacs
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
...Benedictine monks from the monastery of Cluny (Burgundy) founded by William, duke of Aquitaine, in 909. Cluny was a centre of reformed observance, laying...and Hugh (1049–1109), Cluny enjoyed considerable prosperity, and exercised...
|