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Lab Exercise 23b Dissection: The Earthworm Objectives Introduction - To learn some of anatomical structures of the earthworm. - To be able to make contrasts and comparisons of structures between different animal phyla as additional organisms are observed. - To deduce the adaptive significance of differences in the structures of animal phyla as additional organisms are studied. The following exercise allows you to examine some of the morphological and anatomical structures of a member of the phylum Annelida. This phylum includes more than 9,000 species. Members of this phylum are characterized by their segmented bodies, a well developed coelom, closed circulatory system and a well developed central nervous system with the sensory organs concentrated at the anterior end of the animal. The phylum is divided into three classes; the Polychaeta (the polychaete worms), the Oligochaeta (which includes the earthworms), and Hirudinea (the leeches). Here you will examine the external features and anatomy of the earthworm, genus Lumbricus. To begin this exercise, go to the Diversity section of the BiologyOne DVD. Select Dissections and then, after the introduction screen, select the Earthworm from the list of organisms. In the dissection exercises, you will be asked to examine the organisms and learn something of their individual anatomy. Equally important is a comparison of the anatomical structures of between organisms, noting how they are similar, how they differ, and how their differences may be adaptive to the different life styles of these organisms. Ramp. Copyright © 2012 by F.one Design. All rights reserved. 23b 1 Activity 23b.1 External Features Activity 23b.2 Internal Anatomy Before examining the internal anatomy of the organism you should examine its external morphology. From this you can observe a number of features that show adaptations to the way the organism lives and clues to its internal structures. To dissect the earthworm, you would lay it out in a dissecting tray, dorsal side up, and hold it in place by pinning down its prostomium at the anterior end and also near its posterior end. You would make a shallow incision behind the clitellum just to one side of the mid-dorsal line. Cut just deep enough to cut through the skin but avoid cutting into the internal organs. Then, insert one tip of a pair of scissors into the incision, lift the skin away from the internal organs and carefully cut toward the anterior end of the worm. When you have completed this dissection, reveal the internal organs by pinning the skin back on either side of the worm. Click on the forward arrow in the lower right to complete this dissection of the earthworm. Examine the external features of the earthworm. Note the segmented body of the earthworm. The anterior end can be recognized by noting the location of the clitellum. This is a lighter colored, swollen region that covers several segments near the anterior end of the worm. During reproduction, the clitellum slips off the anterior end of the worm and forms a cocoon for the development of fertilized eggs. You may also be able to find the prostomium, a projection that overhangs the mouth. The anus is located at the last segment of the posterior end. If you were to rub your finger along the sides of the worm you would feel short bristles. Except for the first and last, each segment has a two pair of bristles or setae extending from its side, pointing toward the worm’s back. The rows of these bristles are located on the ventral side of the worm. What function could they serve? If you could closely examine the segments you may also see pores in the skin of the worm. Each segment has a pair of excretory pores that remove metabolic wastes from the worm. In addition, in segments 14 and 15 are pairs of pores for the male and female reproductive system respectively (the location of these pores varies some in different species). The female pores are relatively small, located on segment 14. The male pores located on segment 15 are surrounded by swollen ‘lips’. After studying the external features of the earthworm, label the illustration located in the Results Section. Ramp. Copyright © 2012 by F.one Design. All rights reserved. As you examine the internal organs of the earthworm, you should note the lack of organs for respiration. The earthworm relies on diffusion across the skin for gas exchange. Given the relative size and diameter of these organisms, how effective do you think this method of respiration is in the earthworm relative to the other organisms you have/ will study? Do you see any mechanism that increases the efficiency of gas exchange in the earthworm? What is it? The earthworm has a closed circulatory system. This means that the blood is contained within blood vessels. There is a large dorsal blood vessel and a large ventral blood vessel that run the length of the worm’s body. In each segment a pair of vessels extends laterally from these main blood vessels. In segments 7 through 11, the lateral extending blood vessels have become enlarged and are much more muscular. These are the 5 pairs of ‘hearts’ that pump the blood through the worm’s circulatory system. The earthworm’s digestive system forms a tube extending the entire length of the body from the mouth located in the first body segment to the anus located in the body’s last segment. Near the anterior end this digestive tube has regions that have specialized to perform different functions. The first part of the digestive system past the mouth is the small buccal cavity. This leads to an enlarged cavity, the pharynx located in segments 3 through 5. The pharynx is attached to the body wall by muscles that create a sucking 23b 2 action when they contract. From the pharynx, food passes through the esophagus and empties into the thin-walled crop. Here food is stored until it is ready to pass into the muscular gizzard that grinds the food into small particles. Around segment 19 the gizzard joins with the intestine that runs the rest of the length of the worm’s body until it reaches the anus at the terminal segment. In the intestine, the chemical digestion and absorption of food takes place. A fold on the dorsal side of the intestine called the typhlosole increases the inner surface area of the intestine improving the efficiency of food absorption. What is another way an earthworm can increase the intestine’s surface area so that it can absorb more nutrients from the material passing through its digestive system? Located in segment three are two large ganglia that wrap around the digestive tract just anterior to the pharynx. These make up the brain of the earthworm. A ventral nerve cord runs the length of the organism. Ramp. Copyright © 2012 by F.one Design. All rights reserved. Earthworms are monecious. Each individual produces both sperm and eggs although the eggs must be fertilized by sperm from a different worm. The two ovaries are located in segment 12. When the eggs are produced they travel through an oviduct that exits the body in segment 14. Two pairs of testes are located in segments 10 and 11. After being produced in the testes, the sperm mature and are stored in the large seminal vesicles. These are located in segments 9 through 13. When copulation occurs, the sperm travel through a tube (the vas deferens) that exist the body at segment 15. During copulation, the sperm are stored by the receiving worm in two pairs of sacs, the seminal receptacles. These are located in segments 9 and 10. When the worm’s eggs are mature and it is ready to release these, the clitellum slips forward, first receiving eggs as it passes the female pores and then sperm as it passes the pores to the seminal receptacles. Study the anatomy of the earthworm and label the illustration in the Results Section. 23b 3 Lab Exercise 23b Name _______________________ Results Section Activity 23b.1 External Features Label the illustration below 3. _____________________ 2. _____________________ prostomium female pore openings to seminal receptacles 1. _____________________ Ramp. Copyright © 2012 by F.one Design. All rights reserved. 23b 4 4. _____________________ Activity 23b.2 Internal Anatomy Label the illustration below 5. _____________________ 1. _____________________ 6. _____________________ 7. _____________________ 2. _____________________ 8. _____________________ 3. _____________________ (the black line) 4. _____________________ Ramp. Copyright © 2012 by F.one Design. All rights reserved. 23b 5