worm (2024)

Introduction

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Adult animals that have soft, elongated, often tubelike bodies and that lack backbones are commonly called worms. Worms are so different from one another that zoologists do not classify them together in a single group; they place them in about a dozen different and often unrelated taxonomic groups called phyla. In everyday language the name worm may be loosely applied to other animals as well—to the larvae, or immature forms, of some insects, for example, or even to some vertebrates, such as the blindworm, a limbless, snakelike lizard. However, the name is properly applied only to certain adult invertebrates.

Worms play a major role in virtually all ecosystems. Some terrestrial worms condition the soil. Many worms are parasites of plants and animals, including humans. Many free-living, or nonparasitic, worms form an important link in food chains.

Characteristics

All worms are bilaterally symmetrical, meaning that the two sides of their bodies are identical. They lack scales and true limbs, though they may have appendages such as fins and bristles. Many worms have sense organs to detect chemical changes in their environments, and some have light-sensing organs.

Different groups of worms may have significantly different internal characteristics. Flatworms, for example, lack a coelom—a cavity in the body between the internal organs and the body wall. They may also lack a digestive tract, or the digestive tract may be greatly simplified. Proboscis worms also lack a coelom, but they are more advanced than flatworms, in terms of evolution, because they have a complete gut with a separate mouth and anus and a true circulatory system. Roundworms have a complete digestive system and a pseudocoel, or false coelom. Segmented worms are the most advanced because they have a true coelom and well-developed digestive, respiratory, circulatory, and nervous systems.

Some worms are extremely mobile; they may burrow, crawl, or swim. Other worms are sedentary and live in burrows or tubes that they have built for themselves. Some worms are scavengers, others are carnivorous predators, and still others are totally parasitic.

Some worms reproduce sexually. Hermaphroditism, the condition in which a single individual possesses both male and female reproductive parts, is common in many groups of worms. Asexual reproduction, whereby new individuals develop from the body cells of another, also occurs in some groups.

Kinds of Worms

Authorities often disagree on how to classify organisms, and worms are no exception. Many of the known worms can be placed in four major phyla. The remaining species may be classified in a number of additional phyla—usually from six to eight, depending on the classification scheme used.

Flatworms

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are primitive, usually broad and flat-bodied invertebrates. They are placed in the phylum Platyhelminthes, which most authorities divide into three major classes—Turbellaria, Trematoda, and Cestoda. (Some divide the phylum into five classes.) Flatworms of the class Turbellaria are the most primitive and generally live in marine habitats. Most are free-living, though some live in or on a host. All are covered with cilia, or tiny hairlike structures. The best-known flatworms are the planarians, most of which are harmless freshwater scavengers.

The small, parasitic flatworms in the class Trematoda are called flukes. They use adhesive, disklike suckers in the mouth and on the underside of the body to attach themselves to their hosts. They are parasites of all classes of vertebrates and of some invertebrates, but they most commonly parasitize fishes, frogs, and turtles. Like most parasites, many flukes have complex life cycles in which they parasitize two or more hosts (see parasite).

The class Cestoda consists of the parasitic flatworms known as tapeworms. Because tapeworms, unlike the other flatworms, have no digestive tract, they live inside the digestive tracts of vertebrates and certain invertebrates and absorb food through their body walls. The head, or scolex, bears suckers and often hooks, which are used to attach the tapeworm to the host’s intestine.

Proboscis worms,

or ribbon worms, resemble flatworms but are distinguished by a long, muscular, tube-shaped structure—the proboscis—that can be forced out from the front end of the body like a tongue. These worms belong to the phylum Rhynchocoela (sometimes called Nemertinea or Nemertea). Most members of the phylum are nonparasitic, bottom-dwelling marine predators. The proboscis of some species is armed with venom-producing glands and is coiled around the worm’s prey to trap and subdue it.

Roundworms,

which make up the phylum Nematoda, are among the most abundant multicellular animals in the world. There are more than 10,000 known species. The free-living forms are found from the polar regions to the tropics. Millions can be found in a square meter of garden soil or ocean mud. Their bodies are cylindrical and usually tapered at both ends, and some types grow to more than 20 feet (6 meters) in length. Many roundworms are parasitic and nearly every major group of plants and animals is capable of being infested by at least one species. Some of the parasitic forms are known by such common names as hookworm, lungworm, pinworm, threadworm, and eelworm. Because of certain similarities in structure, the roundworms are sometimes placed together with the horsehair worms (phylum Nematomorpha) and spiny-headed worms (phylum Acanthocephala) and various other worms in a single phylum, Aschelminthes (see below).

Segmented worms,

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which make up the phylum Annelida, have elongated bodies that are round or flattened and divided into segments by transverse rings. The phylum is divided into three major classes: Polychaeta, Oligochaeta, and Hirudinea. Polychaeta, the largest class, contains primarily ocean-dwelling worms. Most are nonparasitic and are brightly colored. Some are free-swimming and some are active burrowers. Others are sedentary, living on the ocean floor in sand tubes. Some worms build their tubes close together and form colonies. Polychaetes of the genera Spirorbis and Serpula secrete their own calcareous, or lime, tubes that can be attached to hard objects.

The class Oligochaeta includes the common earthworm and other soil-dwelling forms as well as some aquatic species. They have movable bristles, called setae, that project from the bottom of their bodies. The members of the class are primarily burrowing scavengers that feed on decaying organic material.

The class Hirudinea consists of the leeches, most of which are blood-sucking parasites. They have two large suckers—one in front and one in back—that they use to attach themselves to the skin of their hosts.

Other worms

include the long, thin horsehair worms (phylum Nematomorpha—sometimes called Gordiacea). The young are parasites of arthropods and other invertebrates, but the adults are free-living.

Spiny-headed worms (phylum Acanthocephala) are parasites of arthropods as juveniles and of vertebrates as adults. Their name is derived from the snout, which bears tiny spines that are used to hook onto the intestines of their hosts.

The six remaining phyla of worms, each with relatively few known species, are strictly marine organisms. The phylum Gnathostomulida consists of tiny worms commonly found in marine sediments. Beard worms (phylum Pogonophora) live in long tubes on the ocean floor at depths ranging from 330 feet (100 meters) to tens of thousands of feet. The front end of the body is surrounded by tentacles that are probably used to collect food. Peanut worms (phylum Sipuncula) are unsegmented but are believed to be related to the annelid worms. They live on the bottom of shallow seas. Spoon worms (phylum Echiura) are burrowers or crevice dwellers in coastal regions. They have sausage-shaped bodies with an enlarged, flattened front end. The phylum Priapulida consists of no more than a dozen known species of little-understood cucumber-shaped worms that live in marine sediments. The arrowworms (phylum Chaetognatha) are primarily swimming or floating marine worms. The body is shaped like a torpedo, with lateral and tail fins for swimming. The arrowworms are carnivorous and are more advanced than most other worms.

worm (2024)

FAQs

What is a worm in slang? ›

an unpleasant person who does not deserve respect: Don't be such a worm. You don't have to lie to me.

Is A worm A Bug or an insect? ›

Worms and slugs are not insects. Insects have six legs, two antennae, and an exoskeleton. Worms and slugs have soft bodies, do not have arms or legs, and move by crawling. Worms crawl by stretching and contracting the strong muscles in their bodies.

Is a worm a virus? ›

Worms consume large volumes of memory, as well as bandwidth. This results in servers, individual systems, and networks getting overloaded and malfunctioning. A worm is different from a virus, however, because a worm can operate on its own while a virus needs a host computer.

What are signs of worms? ›

Intestinal parasites
  • Abdominal pain.
  • Diarrhea.
  • Nausea or vomiting.
  • Gas or bloating.
  • Dysentery (loose stools containing blood and mucus)
  • Rash or itching around the rectum or vulva.
  • Stomach pain or tenderness.
  • Feeling tired.

What if someone calls you a worm? ›

If you call a person a worm, you are insulting them by saying that they have a very weak or unpleasant character and you have no respect for them.

What does it mean to call a girl a worm? ›

Calling someone a worm implies they're barely even worthy of contempt, so it makes sense to measure a partner's love and commitment by whether or not they'd still fancy you if you turned into one.

Do worms have teeth? ›

Earthworms do not have any eyes, ears, teeth or lungs. Don't be fooled though, they make up for it with the interesting aspects they do have. Like five hearts that squeeze two blood vessels to push blood throughout their little bodies.

Are worms asexual? ›

For example, earthworms and red wiggler worms are hermaphrodites, meaning they have both male and female reproductive organs and can reproduce sexually. On the other hand, some types of flatworms can reproduce asexually by simply splitting themselves in two (yikes!).

How big can worms get? ›

Form and function. Depending on the species, an adult earthworm can be from 10 mm (0.39 in) long and 1 mm (0.039 in) wide to 3 m (9.8 ft) long and over 25 mm (0.98 in) wide, but the typical Lumbricus terrestris grows to about 360 mm (14 in) long.

Are worms full of germs? ›

They found that new bacterial colonies formed mostly because of E. coli being cast off the worms' sticky, approximately 0.04-inch-long bodies. But some bacteria also passed through the worms' gut alive and undigested, and were thus able to establish additional outposts.

What are worms in a dog? ›

Intestinal worms are parasites that live in your dog's intestines and feed off blood or other nutrients that they find there. Worms can be very unpleasant for your pooch and some can even be fatal if not treated.

How do worms spread? ›

Worms are mainly spread in small bits of poo from people with a worm infection. Some are caught from food. You can get infected by: touching objects or surfaces with worm eggs on them if someone with worms doesn't wash their hands.

Do you still poop if you have worms? ›

A person with intestinal worms may also experience dysentery. Dysentery is when an intestinal infection causes diarrhea with blood and mucus in the stool. Intestinal worms can also cause a rash or itching around the rectum or vulva. In some cases, you will pass a worm in your stool during a bowel movement.

How do I deworm myself? ›

If you have worms, a GP will prescribe medicine to kill them. You take this for 1 to 3 days. The people you live with may also need to be treated. Any worms in your gut will eventually pass out in your poo.

How long do worms stay in you? ›

Threadworms live about 5-6 weeks in the gut, and then die. However, before they die the female worms lay tiny eggs around the anus. This tends to be at night when you are warm and still in bed. The eggs are too small to see, but cause an itch around the anus.

What worm stands for? ›

In computer media, write once, read many, or WORM, is a data storage technology that allows data to be written to a storage medium a single time and prevents the data from being erased or modified.

What is someone who is a worm? ›

an abject, wretched, or contemptible person. 4. something that gnaws or distresses one inwardly, suggesting a parasitic worm.

What does can of worms slang mean? ›

phrase. If you say that someone is opening a can of worms, you are warning them that they are planning to do or talk about something that is much more complicated, unpleasant, or difficult than they realize and that might be better left alone. Introducing this legislation would be like opening a can of worms.

What drug is worm slang for? ›

(drugs) phencyclidine [ety. unknown]. Abel Dict. Drug Abuse Terms .

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