'Kinorhyncha' (Gr. ''kīneō'' 'move' + ''rhynchos'' 'snout') is a
phylum of small (1 mm or less) marine
pseudocoelomate invertebrates that are widespread in mud or sand at all depths as part of the
meiobenthos. They are also called 'mud dragons'.
They are segmented, with a body consisting of a head, neck, and a trunk of eleven segments. They do not have external
cilia, but instead have a number of spines along the body, plus several circles of spines around the head, which they use for
locomotion, withdrawing the head and pushing forward, then holding with the spines while drawing up the body. The spines are part of a
cuticle secreted by the
epidermis; this is molted several times while growing to adulthood. The head is completely retractable, and is covered by a set of neck plates called placids when retracted.
Kinorhynchs eat
diatoms and other things found in the mud.
There are two sexes that look alike, and the
larvae are free-living, but little else is known of their reproductive process.
Their closest relatives are thought to be the phyla
Loricifera and
Priapulida. Together they constitute the
Scalidophora.
The two groups of Kinorhynchs are still generally characterized as orders rather than classes, about 150 species are known.
Order Cyclorhagida
★ Suborder Cyclorhagae
★
★ Family
Echinoderidae
★
★ Family
Zelinkaderidae
★
★ Family
Centroderidae
★
★ Family
Dracoderidae
★ Suborder Conchorhagae
★
★ Family
Semnoderidae
★ Suborder Cryptorhagae
★
★ Family
Cateriidae
Order Homalorhagida
★ Suborder Homalorhagae
★
★ Family
Pycnophyidae
★
★ Family
Neocentrophyidae
External links
★
Introduction to the Cephalorhyncha
★
Drawings of Kinorhyncha