The Clitellata are a class of annelid , characterized by having a clitellum – the 'collar' that forms a reproductive cocoon during part of their life cycles. The clitellates comprise around 8,000 species. Unlike the class of Polychaeta, they do not have parapodia and their heads are less developed.
Earthworms and their kin, in the subclass Oligochaeta, lack eyes but have photoreceptor cells in the skin, especially in the dorsal portion of the anterior end. They also lack Parapodium and appendages on the prostomium, the body and the periproct (terminal segment on which the anus is located). The gonads are located in a few segments near the clitellum, with the Testicle being anterior to the Ovary. There are four bundles of one to twenty-five on each segment; these have muscles attached to their bases and can be extended or retracted.
Leeches, order Hirudinida, mostly have flattened bodies, usually tapered at both ends. They have a fixed number of segments, 33, but the segmentation is not visible externally because the cuticle is marked with annulations. Leeches do not bear chaetae. The front few segments or head have been modified into a sucker that usually surrounds the mouth. These segments usually bear several ocelli on the upper side. The clitellum occupies segments 9 to 11 but is only noticeable during breeding periods. The hindermost segments form another, larger, disc-shaped sucker located on the underside of the body. The anus is on the dorsal surface just in front of the posterior sucker. The body wall includes strong transverse, longitudinal and diagonal muscles which give the animal great flexibility and extensibility.
Genetic studies have shown the class' genome have gone through an extreme rearrangement, more than any other animals. Earthworms have ‘completely scrambled’ genomes. Did that enable their ancestors to leave the sea?
The subclass Oligochaeta, which includes the earthworms as the largest members of the group, mostly live on land, burrowing in damp soil. Smaller freshwater species burrow in mud or live among aquatic vegetation. The marine species are mostly tiny and live in the interstices between sand grains, from the intertidal zone to the deep sea.
The group is divided into the subclasses Oligochaeta and Hirudinea. The oligochaetes contain the tubificids (Naididae, Lumbricidae, and Lumbriculidae) - commonly the tube worms and the earthworms. Hirudinea contains leeches (Hirudinida), Acanthobdellida, and Branchiobdellida.
Hirudinea is monophyletic, but the clade is embedded among the Oligochaeta. Two approaches are possible:Erséus et al. (2008)
Distribution and habitat
Reproduction
Systematics
According to Erséus et al. (2020) the monophyletic clades are: Branchiobdellida, Hirudinida, Randiellidae, Parvidrilidae, Capilloventridae, Phreodrilidae, Naididae, Propappidae, Enchytraeidae, Lumbriculidae, Moniligastridae, Crassiclitellata (including Pelodrilus cf. darlingensis), Aeolosoma sp., Hrabeiella periglandulata, Delaya leruthi, and Haplotaxis gordioides.
Footnotes
External links
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