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PLATYELMIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 827 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PLATYELMIA  , a phylum of the

animal
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kingdom which comprises three classes, the,
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Planarians,
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Trematodes (q.v.) and Cestodes . It is the
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group of animals in which the act of creeping has first become habitual . In association with this
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movement in a definite direction the
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body has become vermiform and bilaterally symmetrical . One end of the body, through contact, during locomotion, with fresh tracts of
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medium and other forms of stimuli, has become more specialized than the rest, and here the
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nervous
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system and sense-
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organs are more densely aggregated than elsewhere, forming a means of controlling locomotion and of correlating the activities of the inner organs with the varying stimuli that impinge upon the body . The form and habits of the group vary widely . The Planarians are
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free-living animals, the Trematodes are parasitic upon and within animals, and the Cestodes are wholly endoparasitic . Structure.—The chief features which Platyelmia possess in
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common are the following . The body is not metamerically segmented and is composed of a
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muscular tunic covered externally by a more or less modified cellular layer . Within this muscular tube lies a parenchymatous tissue which may be
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uniform (Cestodes) or differentiated into a central or
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digestive, and a peripheral portion (some Turbellaria), or finally the central portion becomes tubular and forms the digestive
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sac (Trematodes), while the peripheral portion is separated from it by a space lined in some forms by a flattened epithelium (most Planarians) . It is characteristic of the group that the mouth should be the only means of ingress to and egress from the digestive sac and that no true perivisceral space or coelom exists in the sense in which these terms are used in higher Invertebrates . The peripheral paren-chyma gives rise to protonephridia, that is to coiled tubes commenc•
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ing in pyriform cells containing a flame-like bundle of cilia and provided with branched outgrowths, and communicating with the exterior by long convoluted canals which open at the
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surface of the body . These protonephridia are the excretory organs .

The nervous system, though centralized at one end of the body, contains diffused

nerve-cells in the course of its tracts, which are disposed in two or more
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longitudinal bundles interconnected by transverse bands . The Platyelmia are hermaphrodite and the reproductive organs are complex . The male organs consist of paired testes communicating by delicate canals with a protrusible penis . This
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organ is generally single but sometimes paired and occasionally multiple . It is frequently armed with spines, hooks or stylets, and is further complicated by the addition of a nutritive secretion (the prostate gland) which may open at its
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base or pass separately by a
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special duct to the exterior . There. is some reason to believe that this complicated and 'variable apparatus is used for stabbing the body of another animal and that beginning as a weapon for catching prey it has become modified for hypodermic impregnation and only gradually adapted for insertion into the bursa copulatrix . The
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female organs are no less complex . They consist of solid or tubular ovaries which may be single, double or multiple . In the majority of Platyelmia the
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primitive ovary becomes divided into fertile and sterile portions, i.e. into distinct ovarian and vitellarian regions . , The yolk prepared by the latter is conducted by one or more specialized ducts to the oviduct and the point of union is distinguished by the opening of a " shell-gland " which secretes a membrane around the conjoined mass of ovum and yolk . From this junction there proceeds an oviduct or " uterus " (paired or single) which before opening to the exterior expands to form a muscular protrusible pouch—the bursa copulatrix . Frequently also from this junction of the ovaria and the vitellaria a median tube is given off which either opens to the exterior or into the intestine, in the latter case it appears to serve as means of conveying superfluous yolk to the gut, where it may serve as food .

Inter-relationships.—The inter-relationships of the three members of the Platyelmia are of a more doubtful nature than is the unity of the phylum . The Turbellaria undoubtedly form the most primitive

division, as is shown by their free-living habits, ciliation and sense-organs . The Trematodes are somewhat modified in accordance with their ecto- or endoparasitic
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life, but they exhibit such a close similarity of structure with the Turbellaria that their origin from Planarians can hardly be doubted, and indeed the Temnocephaloidea (see PLANARIANS) form an almost ideal annectant group linking the ectoparasitic Trematodes and Rhabdocoel Planarians . The Cestodes, however, are connected by no such intermediate forms with the other Platyelmia . Their adaptations to parasitic life in vertebrate animals appear to have involved such modifications of structure and development that their
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affinities are quite problematical . The entire absence of any trace of a distinct alimentary tract, the loss of true regenerative power, the
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peculiar gametic segmentation of the body Into hundreds of "proglottides" budded off from n (From Cambridge Natural
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History, vol. ii., "
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Worms, &c.;" by permission of
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Macmillan & Co., Ltd.) Fm. i.—Free-swimming Larva (Muller's Larva) of a Polyclad Planarian to illustrate the trochosphere-hypothesis of the origin of Platyelmia . The larva is seen in
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optical section, and its distinguishing feature is the ciliated lobed
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band (al, sl, dl), which corresponds to the pre-oral ciliated band of a trochosphere-larva . It is here
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drawn out into eight processes, of which six are shown, their continuity being expressed by the dotted
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line . br, Brain. mg, Stomach . dr, Glands. n, Nerves . ep, Epidermis. ph, Pharynx . mo, Mouth. par, Parenchyma .

one extremity, and the absence of any morphologically distinct ante'iot extremity, are adaptations to the wholly parasitic life of this class . Their structure is similar to that of Trematodes, from which in the

opinion of most zoologists they have been derived . Affinities.—As the Turbellaria (Planarians) are the most primitive division of the Platyelmia, the problem of the affinities of this phylum resolves itself into that of the relationships of the Turbellaria . With regard to the origin of this class two divergent views are still held . On the one hand the Turbellaria are considered to be an offshoot of the early Coelomate stock, on the other they are held to be descendants of a simpler two-layered stock . The former hypothesis with its variants may be called the Trochosphere-hypothesis, the latter the Gastraea-hypothesis . The Trochosphere-hypothesis (2), (3) is based chiefly on the occurrence in certain Polyclad Turbellaria, of a larval form (Muller's larva) which is comparable to a certain stage (
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pro-trochula) in the development of the Trochosphere-larva . This Trochosphere is the characteristic larva of
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Mollusca,
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Annelida T OT (After Abbott, Tdkyo Zool . Society's Annot . Zoologicae Japonensis, iv . 4, 2 and 3.) and some
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Gephyrea; and the Rotifera appear to remain throughout life as modified Trochospheres . It is a top-shaped, free-swimming organism provided with a preoral band of cilia, an apical sense-organ, a
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simple gut, protonephridia and schizocoele .

The importance of this resemblance between the Polyclad larva and the Trochosphere-larva of higher invertebrates is increased if the widely adopted view (held on other grounds) that the Polyclads are the most primitive of the Turbellaria, is soundly based . The grounds for this view are the radial symmetry of several Polyclads and the supposed origin of gonads and excretory flame-cells from the walls of gut, the occurrence of nematocysts in Anonymus, one of the most radially constructed Polyclads, and lastly the presence of two peculiar animals Ctenoplane and Coeloplana, which suggests a transition from

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Ctenophora to Polyclads . At the
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present time, however, none of these grounds can be said to possess so much force as they did some years ago (4) . The
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argument has come to rest on the agreement between the cell-lineage of Polyclads and that of certain Mollusca and Annelids . This resemblance is considered by Hubrecht (5) to give reason for concluding that the Polyclads are an qffshoot, and possibly a degenerate offshoot, from the early Coelomate stock . The Gastraea-hypothesis is founded on quite other considerations . In effect (6) it traces the Turbellaria to small two-layered organisms consisting of an
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outer ciliated epidermis and a central syncytial tissue . Such an organism is found in the peculiar Trichoplax, Lohmanniella, &c . The early stages of most animals pass through such a stage, which is known as a " planula." From such beginnings the
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evolution of the Turbellaria leads first through the Acoelous forms in which the central syncytium is partly differentiated into digestive, muscular and skeletotrophic tissue, then to the more specialized Rhabdocoela, and so through the Alloeocoela to the Triclads and finally to the Polyclads . The careful study of the development of one Acoelous form and of certain Rhabdocoels has strengthened this hypothesis by showing that no definite enteron or gut is at first laid down, but that certain embryonic syncytial tracts become digestive tracts, others excretory, others again muscular . The study of Rhabdocoelsl7) has led to the important
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discovery that the rudiment of the gonads and that of the pharynx are the first organs to appear, and that the alimentary sac arises independently of them . This segregation of the germ cells and their independence of the intestinal sac is an indication that the origin of these cells is not coelomic nor enteric, and until we possess further information as to the evolution of the complex genitalia of the higher Turbellaria we cannot hope to understand the presence of such highly modified structures in animals of an otherwise low grade or organization .

(F . W .

End of Article: PLATYELMIA
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