Oligochaeta

From Freepedia

(Redirected from Oligochaete)
For the plant genus Oligochaeta from the sunflower family (Asteraceae): see Oligochaeta (plant)
Oligochaeta
Image:Earth-worm 1.jpg
Earthworm (Lumbricus terrestris)
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Annelida
Class:Clitellata
Subclass:Oligochaeta
Orders
Arhynchobdellida
Haplotaxida
Rhynchobdellida

The Oligochaeta or "few-bristled" worms (singular Oligochaete, IPA /ˈɒlɪgoʊˌkit/) are well-segmented Annelids, most with a spacious coelom that is used as a hydroskeleton. Their setae (chaetae) or "bristles" are generally few in number and they lack the parapodia of the polychaeta. They have external fertilization, but copulate and store sperm in a receptacle called a spermatheca. Like the leeches, they have a clitellum which secretes a "cocoon" into which both eggs and sperm are deposited and which acts as an incubator for the embryonic worms. They lack a trochophore larval stage.

This taxon contains mainly freshwater and semi-terrestrial forms, including the earthworms (some of which are fully terrestrial), the tubificids, pot worms, ice worms and many interstitial marine worms. Most are detritus feeders. Some genera are predaceous (Agriodrilus and Phagodrilus).




Views
Personal tools
In other languages
Similar Links