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Myzostomida Marine Worm

Myzostoma fuscomaculatum

Description:

Myzostomida are a group of small marine worms, which are parasitic on crinoids. Classification: Biota > Animalia (Kingdom) > Annelida (Phylum) > Polychaeta (Class) > Aciculata (Subclass) These unusual Lophotrochozoa were first discovered by Friedrich Sigismund Leuckart in 1827. A typical myzostomid has a flattened rounded shape, with a thin edge drawn out into delicate radiating hairs called cirri. The dorsal surface is smooth, with five pairs of parapodia on the bottom surface. These parapodia are armed with supporting and hooked setae, by means of which the worm adheres to its host. Beyond the parapodia are four pairs of organs, often called suckers. These organs are probably of sensory nature, and are comparable to the lateral sense organs of Capitellids. The mouth and cloacal opening are generally at opposite ends of the bottom surface. The former leads to a protrusible pharynx, from which the esophagus opens into a wide intestinal chamber with branching lateral diverticula. There appears to be no vascular system. The nervous system consists of a circumoesophageal nerve, with scarcely differentiated brain, joining below a large ganglionic mass, no doubt representing many fused ganglia. The dorsoventral and the parapodial muscles are much developed, while the coelom is reduced mostly to branched spaces in which the genital products ripen. Full-grown myzostomids are hermaphrodites. Their internal organs consist of a branched sac opening to the exterior or each side. The paired ovaries discharge their eggs into a median chamber with side branches, often called the uterus, from which the ripe ova (eggs) are discharged by a mediar dorsal pore into the end of the rectum.

Habitat:

Some species, such as Myzostoma cirriferum, move about on the host; others, such as Myzostoma glabrum, remain stationary with the pharynx inserted in the mouth of the crinoid. Myzostoma deformator gives rise to a gall on the arm of the host, one joint of the pinnule growing round the worm so as to enclose it in a cyst while Myzostoma pulvinar lives in the alimentary canal of a species of Antedon.

Notes:

Myzostoma fuscomaculatum on its host the crinoid Tropiometra carinata NB** Added to Symbiotic mission for interesting comparison as the relationship is actually parasitic.

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4 Comments

Tracey-lee
Tracey-lee 9 years ago

added - Thank - you !!

The MnMs
The MnMs 9 years ago

Can you please add this nice spotting to the mission for flatworms?
http://www.projectnoah.org/missions/8533...

JenKnight
JenKnight 10 years ago

fantastic detail

Mark Ridgway
Mark Ridgway 11 years ago

Beautiful. Great info. Thanks for sharing this.

Tracey-lee
Spotted by
Tracey-lee

Jozini Local Municipality, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

Spotted on Mar 21, 2011
Submitted on Apr 18, 2013

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