Annelid Worms
Leeches differ from other annelids in having the number of segments in the bodyfixed at 34, chaetae or bristles lacking, and the coelomic space between the gut and the body wall filled with packing tissue (see illustration). In a typical leech the first six segments of the bodyare modified to form a head, bearing eyes, and a sucker, and the last seven segments are incorporated into a posterior sucker.
The mouth of a leech opens within the anterior sucker, and there aretwo main methods of piercing the skin of the host to obtain blood: an eversible proboscis or three jaws, each shaped like half a circular saw, placed just inside the mouth. The process of digestion isvery slow, and a meal may last a leech for 9 months. The carnivorous forms have lost most or all of their gut diverticula and resemble earthworms in having a straight, tubular gut. Leeches arehermaphroditic, having a single pair of ovaries and several pairs of testes.
The importance of leeches as a means of making incisions for the letting of blood or the relief of inflammation is declining, andin developed countries the bloodsucking parasites of mammals are declining, because of lack of opportunity for contact with the hosts. In other countries they are still serious pests.
(leeches), aclass of annelid worms. Leeches are mostly black, yellowish brown, or greenish. Their flattened or, less frequently, cylindrical body consists of a prostomium and 33 body segments. The cutaneouscoverings of the segments are divided into three to five (or more) annuli. There are two suckers: one anterior and one posterior. Leeches range in length from 0.2 to 15 cm. Most species have from one to...
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