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قراءة كتاب Earthworms and their Allies
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correspond with the external division into segments. The septa are in fact inserted on to the body-wall along the furrows which mark the divisions between adjacent segments. Anteriorly the large pharynx is responsible for confusing the arrangement of the septa, which become subdivided and fused or are prolonged a greater way backwards and thus present a less obviously segmental disposition. Certain of the more anteriorly placed of these septa are much thicker than the rest. This is the case with the septa which separate segments V to XII. The alimentary canal is perfectly straight and runs in the middle line, being supported by the septa which it perforates. The mouth leads into a buccal cavity which later becomes the pharynx, a portion of the tube which is much thickened by muscular walls dorsally. Then follows a very short section of the oesophagus and in the fifth segment this becomes the gizzard, a very characteristic organ with thick muscular walls quite smooth and with a very thick lining of structureless membrane. After this is a narrower tube, the rest of the oesophagus. Into this open in each of segments VII, VIII, IX a pair of calciferous glands; these are diverticula of the gut with much folded walls, the cells of which secrete carbonate of lime. In the XIIth segment or so, the oesophagus suddenly widens out to form the intestine which runs as such to the end of the body. This wider tube has a ridge running along its dorsal side, the typhlosole. Along the dorsal surface of the intestine and the oesophagus is seen a red tube, contractile during the life of the worm, which is the dorsal blood vessel and whose contained blood is coloured red, as is the blood of vertebrated animals, by haemoglobin. But in the earthworm the colouring matter is not situated in corpuscles as in the vertebrate. The dorsal vessel is connected by a few pairs of equally contractile transverse trunks with a ventral vessel which is not contractile. There are other branches of these main longitudinal trunks and some minor longitudinal trunks which we shall not stop to describe further. The nervous system of the worm consists of a pair of ganglia which lie above the gut in the third segment; they are connected by a commissure running round the gut with a chain of closely fused pairs of ganglia, one for each segment to the very end of the body. In each of the segments, except the first two or three, there are a pair of excretory organs known as nephridia; these are essentially coiled glandular tubes opening on to the exterior by the regularly placed pores already referred to in considering the external characters. The tube ends in a funnel-shaped, and therefore dilated, mouth, which opens into the segment in front of that which contains the rest of the organ; a nephridium therefore lies in two segments. The only other important organs which are left for consideration are those devoted to the reproduction of the species. The essential organs are the spermaries and the ovaries. Of the former there are two pairs of minute whitish bodies which lie in segments X and XI on either side of the nerve cord attached to the anterior septal wall of their segments. The ovaries are not in the following, but in the XIIIth, segment, and occupy an identical position in that segment. A short tube with a funnel or trumpet-shaped and wide orifice opens into the cavity of the XIIIth segment opposite to each, and, perforating the septum, opens on to the exterior on the XIVth segment. A similar but larger and more folded pair of trumpet-shaped funnels opens in the same way opposite to each spermary. But in this case the two tubes of the sperm ducts run backwards for some way and those of each side after joining open on to the XVIIIth segment by the pores already mentioned. On the XVIIth and XIXth segments open two glands which are long and tubular in form and much coiled. These are the spermiducal glands and each opens in common with a muscular sac containing the long and ornamented seta referred to in describing the various external orifices. It will be noticed that the sperm duct has no direct connection with these glands but only indirectly through the external gutter which connects the three male orifices of each side of the body. Segments IX-XII inclusive contain certain sacs which depend from, and are formed as outgrowths of, the septa of those segments. These are the sperm sacs in which the male germ cells undergo their development. A corresponding body (but very much smaller) is sometimes found in relation to the ovary but has not been actually described in the particular species dealt with here. Finally, in segments VIII and IX are a pair (that is four altogether) of roundish sacs, with two or three minute diverticula, known as the spermathecae. In the diverticula of these sacs are stored the sperm derived from another individual.

Fig. 6. Genital region of Maoridrilus dissimilis (in which species the different organs are essentially as in Notiodrilus tamajusi). The oesophagus is cut away between the Xth and XVIIIth segments to display the various organs. n external orifices of nephridia which alternate in different segments; the one lettered opens in front of dorsalmost pair of setae, that of segment XVI opens in front of ventralmost pair, p coiled glands opening on to XVIth and XIXth segments, sc. sacs containing long seta, associated with these glands, t spermary of segment; another pair in an exactly similar position in segment XI. Behind spermaries are funnel-shaped openings of sperm ducts which are seen running along the body to their external orifice on XVIIIth segment. v.s. sperm sacs behind the posterior of these and in segment XIII is seen the large ovary corresponding in position to the spermary and opposite to each ovary the oviduct. (× 3.)

Fig. 7. A spermatheca of Notiodrilus tamajusi. The external orifice is shown at o; above this are the diverticula, s is a portion of an intersegmental septum. (After Eisen.)
This completes the general sketch of the structure of Notiodrilus tamajusi which we have selected as a type. In this same genus are a large number of species which differ from that selected in various small structural points. Thus in N. annectens (Beddard), a species from New Zealand, the spermaries and ovaries are attached to the posterior, instead of to the anterior, wall of their segments, and there are neither calciferous glands nor modified setae upon segments XVII and XIX.