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قراءة كتاب Earthworms and their Allies

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Earthworms and their Allies

Earthworms and their Allies

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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xml:lang="la">Nais, Chaetogaster, Vejdovskyella, Amphichaeta, Stylaria, Macrochaetina, Pristina, Naidium.

Several genera, Pristina, Nais, Dero, are found in many parts of the world; but it is not possible at present to consider very seriously the facts of their geographical distribution.

Next to the Naids a group of aquatic worms present themselves for consideration which are usually placed in three distinct families, which families are however rather hard to define. These three families are the Tubificidae, Phreodrilidae, and Lumbriculidae. The Phreodrilidae were at one time placed with the Tubificidae by Michaelsen. It is now perhaps the general opinion that they form a family of their own, at any rate since the discovery of two other genera Phreodriloides and Astacopsidrilus, besides the original genus founded by myself, and named Phreodrilus from the fact that the species was found in a deep well in New Zealand.

The distribution of this family especially of the genus Phreodrilus is extremely interesting. The genus Phreodrilus is the only one genus of the aquatic Oligochaeta which has, like Notiodrilus, a circumpolar range, the pole being the south pole. It occurs in New Zealand, in Kerguelen, and, if we are to accept the opinions of Drs Michaelsen and Benham that my genus Hesperodrilus is to be merged in Phreodrilus, in Patagonia also.

In this genus the male pores are upon the XIIth segment while the spermaries lie in segment XI. Moreover the spermathecae lie behind the male pores. In the Tubificidae on the other hand it is at least the rule for the spermaries and male pores to be pushed a segment further forwards. And the spermathecae are before the male pores. Phreodriloides is like Phreodrilus but has no spermathecae. It is also New Zealand in range. Astacopsidrilus is Australian and is semi-parasitic upon the Crayfish Astacopsis, whence its generic name. Phreodrilus branchiatus is one of the few forms of Oligochaeta that possesses gills. Of these there are a series of pairs on about the last eleven segments of the body. They are lateral in position, and thus contrast with the also gilled Branchiura sowerbii, where the gills, also on the posterior segments of the body, are more numerous and lie dorsally and ventrally, a pair to each segment.

The Tubificidae differ from the Phreodrilidae mainly in the points already noted. There are a considerable number of genera of which the following are the best known, viz., Tubifex, Limnodrilus, Limnodriloides, Branchiura, Lophochaeta, Ilyodrilus, Psammoryctes, Clitellio, Telmatodrilus, Bothrioneuron, Lycodrilus.

The Tubificidae are mainly northern temperate forms, and a few of them such as Clitellio arenarius and 'Peloryctes inquilina[1]' are found on the sea coast. There are also a few of this family in the southern hemisphere. These forms include Clitellio abjornseni from Australia, and a few species of Branchiura from New Zealand and the islands of the Antarctic ocean. There is also to be mentioned Rhizodrilus (or Vermiculus) aucklandicus from the island of that name in the New Zealand area. The only tropical species appears to be the Indian and Malayan Bothrioneuron iris, though this genus also occurs in Europe and in southern South America. It is quite likely however that Branchiura sowerbii, a species known at present from tanks in hot houses, may be a tropical American species.

[1]With many synonyms, including Tubifex ater (see p. 53).

The family Lumbriculidae is yet more restricted in its range. It has not yet been met with away from the temperate northern hemisphere, and the great variety of species recently described from Lake Baikal by Dr Michaelsen is a very remarkable fact. The Lumbriculidae are entirely fresh water in habit and not even partially terrestrial. The following are the principal known genera: Lumbriculus, Trichodrilus, Rhynchelmis, Phreatothrix, Claparedilla, Stylodrilus, Mesoporodrilus, Sutroa, Eclipidrilus, Aurantina, Athecospermia, Lamprodrilus, Teleutoscolex.

In the worms of this family the male pores are usually upon the tenth segment but sometimes upon the eighth or eleventh. And in addition to a pair of funnels in the antecedent segment there is also commonly a second pair in the same segment as that which contains the external pore. The two sperm ducts however open into the same distended atrial cavity before opening on to the exterior. In Lamprodrilus however each sperm duct opens by its own separate atrium on to the exterior and in two consecutive segments. In Teleutoscolex there is but one pair of funnels opening into the same segment with the atrial pore.

Near perhaps to the Lumbriculidae comes a very small family indeed, that of the Alluroididae. So small is it that it consists of but a single genus Alluroides of which there are two species A. pordagei and A. tanganyikae. Both of these species were described by myself, one of them from but a single specimen, the other from only two. Both species—and the name of one denotes the region—are from eastern tropical Africa. The Tanganyika worm is purely aquatic; the other species was found in a swamp of the mainland opposite to Mombasa. This remarkable genus has a pair of spermaries in segment X; but the ovaries are as in earthworms in the XIIIth segment. The male pores are upon that segment also, i.e. further back than in the aquatic worms. The spermathecae open close to the median dorsal line of the body in one species; in A. tanganyikae there is but one spermatheca which opens actually in the dorsal median line between segments VIII and IX. This family seems to come nearest to the Lumbriculidae but has also obvious points of likeness to the terrestrial Moniligastridae. It fully deserves a separate family, which was founded for it by Dr Michaelsen.

Not obviously related to any of the other families of Oligochaeta is the family Enchytraeidae. This consists of a very large number of species, which

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