Online Encyclopedia

LEECH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 366 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LEECH  , the

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common name of members of the Hirudinea, a division of Chaetopod
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worms . It is doubtful whether the medicinal leech, Hirudo medicinalis, which is rarer in England than on the continent of
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Europe, or the horse leech, Aulastoma gulo, often confused with it, has the best right to the
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original possession of this name . But at
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present the word " leech " is applied to every member of the
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group Hirudinea, for the general structure and classification of which see CHAETOPODA . There are many genera and
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species of leeches, the exact
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definitions of which are still in need of a more
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complete survey . They occur in all parts of the
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world and are mostly aquatic, though sometimes terrestrial, in habit . The aquatic forms frequent streams, ponds and marshes, and the sea . The members of this group are always carnivorous or parasitic, and prey upon both vertebrates and invertebrates . In relation to their parasitic habit one or two suckers are always
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developed, the one at the anterior and the other at the posterior end of the
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body . In one subdivision of the leeches, the Gnathobdellidae, the mouth has three chitinous jaws which produce a triangular bite, though the
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action has been described as like that of a circular saw . Leeches without biting jaws possess a protrusible
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proboscis, and generally engulf their prey, as does the horse leech when it attacks earthworms . But some of them are also ectoparasites . The leech has been used in
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medicine from remote antiquity as a moderate
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blood-letter; and it is still so used, though more rarely than formerly .

As unlicensed blood-letters, certain

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land-leeches are among the most unpleasant of parasites that can be encountered in a tropical jungle . A species of Haemadipsa of
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Ceylon attaches itself to the passer-by and draws blood with so little irritation that the sufferer is said to be aware of its presence only by the trickling from the wounds produced . Small leeches taken into the mouth with drinking-
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water may give rise to serious symptoms by attaching themselves to the fauces and neighbouring parts and thence sucking blood . The effects of these parasites have been mistaken for those of disease All leeches are very extensile and can contract the body to a plump, pear-shaped form, or extend it to a long and
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worm-like shape . They frequently progress after the fashion of a " looper "
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caterpillar, attaching themselves alternately by the anterior and the posterior sucker . Others swim with
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eel-like curves through the water, while one land-leech, at any
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rate, moves in a gliding way like a land Planarian, and leaves, also like the Planarian, a slimy trail behind it . Leeches are usually olive green to brown in colour, darker patches and spots being scattered over a paler ground . The marine parasitic leech Pontobdella is of a bright green, as is also the land-leech Trocheta . The
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term " leech," as an old
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English synonym for physician, is from a Teutonic root meaning " heal," and is etymologically distinct from the name (O . Eng. lyce) of the Hirudo, though the use of the one by the other has helped to assimilate the two words . (F . E .

End of Article: LEECH
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STEPHEN DILL LEE (1833-1908)
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JOHN LEECH (1817-1864)

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you didn't have what I wanted about leech body skin types like fur or feathers.
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