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The 'nematodes' or 'roundworms' (
Phylum 'Nematoda' from
Greek (nema): "thread" + -ode "like") are one of the most common phyla of
animals, with over 20,000 different described species (over 15,000 are
parasitic). They are ubiquitous in freshwater, marine, and terrestrial environments, where they often outnumber other animals in both individual and species counts, and are found in locations as diverse as
Antarctica and
oceanic trenches. Further, there are a great many parasitic forms, including
pathogens in most plants and animals, humans included.
The Nematodes were originally named Nematoidea by
Rudolphi (
1808). They were renamed Nematodes by Burmeister 1837 (as a family; Leuckart 1848 and von Siebold 1848 both promoted them to the rank of order), then Nematoda (
Diesing 1861), though
Nathan Cobb (
1919) argued that they should be called Nemata or Nemates (and in English 'nemas' rather than 'nematodes'). After some confusion which saw the nematodes placed (often together with the horsehair worms,
Nematomorpha) as a class or order in various groups such as
Aschelminthes,
Lankester (
1877) definitively promoted them to the level of phylum.
Abundance
Of the
pseudocoelomates, the Nematodes are the most common. Nematodes have successfully adapted to nearly every
niche from marine to fresh water, from the polar regions to the tropics, as well as the highest to the lowest of elevations. Though 20,000 species have been classified it is estimated that this number might be upwards of 500,000 if all were known.
[1]. In certain fertile areas the
topsoil is estimated to contain in the
billions of nematodes per
acre.
[2] In the
1914 edition of the Yearbook of the
United States Department of Agriculture N.A.Cobb wrote on the abundance of nematodes
:
Morphology
Nematodes are unsegmented,
bilaterally symmetric and
triploblastic protostomes with a complete
digestive system. Roundworms have no circulatory or respiratory systems so they use diffusion to breathe. Although they lack a circulatory system, nutrients are transported throughout the body via fluid in the pseudocoelom. They are thin and are round in cross section. Nematodes are one of the simplest animal groups to have a complete digestive system, with a separate orifice for food intake and waste excretion, a pattern followed by all subsequent, more complex animals. The body cavity is a
pseudocoelom (persistent
blastula), which lacks the muscles of coelomate animals used to force food down the digestive tract. Nematodes thus depend on internal/external pressures and body movement to move food through their digestive tracts. The mouth is often surrounded by various flaps or projections used in feeding and sensation. The portion of the body past the
anus or
cloaca is called the "tail." As they grow, their cells get larger, but the total number is constant, called eutely. The epidermis secretes a layered cuticle made of three layers of
collagen that protects the body from drying out, from digestive juices, or from other harsh environments. Although this cuticle allows movement and shape changes via a
hydrostatic skeletal system, it is very inelastic so does not allow the volume of the worm to increase. Therefore, as the worm grows, it has to
molt and form new cuticles. The cuticles don't allow volume to increase so as to keep hydrostatic pressure inside the organism very high. For this reason, the roundworms do not possess circular muscles (just longitudinal ones) as they're not required. This hydrostatic pressure is the reason the roundworms are round.
Most free-living nematodes are microscopic, though a few parasitic forms can grow to over a meter in length (typically as parasites of very large animals such as whales). There are no circular
muscles, so the body can only undulate from side to side. Contact with solid objects is necessary for locomotion; its thrashing motions vary from mostly to completely ineffective at swimming.
Nematodes generally eat
bacteria,
fungi and
protozoans, although some are
filter feeders.
Excretion is through a separate excretory pore. Nematodes also contract bacterial infections within excretion pores.
Reproduction
Reproduction is usually sexual. Males are usually smaller than females (often very much smaller) and often have a characteristically bent tail for holding the female for
copulation. During copulation, one or more
chitinized spicules move out of the cloaca and are inserted into genital pore of the female.
Amoeboid sperm crawl along the spicule into the female worm. Nematode sperm is thought to be the only
eukaryotic cell without the globular protein
G-actin.
Eggs may be embryonated or unembryonated when passed by the female, meaning that their fertilized eggs may not yet be developed. In free-living roundworms, the eggs hatch into larva, which eventually grow into adults; in parasitic roundworms, the life cycle is often much more complicated.
Nematodes have a simple nervous system, with a main
nerve cord running along the ventral side. Sensory structures at the anterior end are called
amphids, while sensory structures at the posterior end are called
phasmids.
Free-living species
In free-living species, development usually consists of four molts of the cuticle during growth. Different species feed on materials as varied as algae, fungi, small animals, fecal matter, dead organisms and living tissues. Free-living marine nematodes are important and abundant members of the
meiobenthos. They play an important role in the decomposition process, aid in recycling of nutrients in marine environments and are sensitive to changes in the environment caused by pollution. One roundworm of note is ''
Caenorhabditis elegans'', which lives in the soil and has found much use as a
model organism. ''C. elegans'' has had its entire genome sequenced, as well as the developmental fate of every cell determined, and every neuron mapped.
Some Nematodes can undergo
cryptobiosis.
Parasitic species
Parasitic forms often have quite complicated life cycles, moving between several different hosts or locations in the host's body. Infection occurs variously by eating uncooked meat with larvae in it, by entrance into unprotected cuts or directly through the skin, by transfer via
blood-sucking insects, and so forth.
Nematodes commonly parasitic on humans include
whipworms,
hookworms,
pinworms,
ascarids, and
filarids. The species ''
Trichinella spiralis'', commonly known as the trichina worm, occurs in rats, pigs, and humans, and is responsible for the disease
trichinosis. ''
Baylisascaris'' usually infests wild animals but can be deadly to humans as well. ''
Haemonchus contortus'' is one of the most abundant infectious agents in sheep around the world, causing great economic damage to sheep farms.
In contrast,
entomopathogenic nematodes parasitize insects and are considered by humans to be beneficial.
One form of nematode is entirely dependent upon the wasps which are the sole source of
fig fertilization. They prey upon the wasps, riding them from the ripe fig of the wasp's birth to the fig flower of its death, where they kill the wasp, and their offspring await the birth of the next generation of wasps as the fig ripens.
Plant parasitic nematodes include several groups causing severe crop losses. The most common genera are: ''Aphelenchoides'' (
foliar nematodes), ''Meloidogyne'' (root-knot nematodes), ''Heterodera'', ''Globodera'' (cyst nematodes) such as the
potato root nematode, ''Nacobbus'', ''Pratylenchus'' (lesion nematodes), ''Ditylenchus'', ''Xiphinema'', ''Longidorus'', ''Trichodorus''. Several phytoparasitic nematode species cause histological damages to roots, including the formation of visible galls (''Meloidogyne'') which are useful characters for their diagnostic in the field. Some nematode species transmit plant viruses through their feeding activity on roots. One of them is ''Xiphinema index'', vector of GFLV (Grapevine Fanleaf Virus), an important disease of grapes.
Other nematodes attack bark and forest trees. The most important representative of this group is ''Bursaphelenchus xylophilus'', the pine wood nematode, present in Asia and America and recently discovered in Europe.
The largest nematode ever recorded, ''Placentonema gigantisma'', was discovered parasitizing the placenta of a sperm whale, measuring 8.5 m in length with a diameter of 0.3 mm, and containing 32 ovaries (Gubanov, 1951).
Other large nematodes include: ''
Dioctophyma renale'', the giant kidney worm, a parasite most commonly found in
mink but also in dogs and humans, that can reach up to 103 cm in length.
[3]
Gubanov, N.M. 1951. Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR. 1951 Apr 21;77(6):1123-5. Translated: [Giant nematoda from the placenta of Cetacea; Placentonema gigantissima nov. gen., nov. sp.].
Gardening
Depending on the species, a nematode may be beneficial or detrimental to a gardener's cause.
From a gardening perspective, there are two categories of nematode: predatory ones, which will kill garden pests like
cutworms, and pest nematodes, like the
root-knot nematode, which attack garden plants.
Predatory nematodes can be bred by soaking a specific recipe of leaves and other
detritus in water, in a dark, cool place, and can even be purchased as an
organic form of
pest control.
==
Phylogeny==
While it has recently been suggested that nematodes are related to the
arthropods and
priapulids and should be grouped with them in the
Ecdysozoa (molting animals), there is substantial resistance within the nematology community. Grouping organisms based on behaviors is not generally accepted. While there seems to be ''some''
evolutionary connection between these phyla, the exact nature of their relationship is still being debated.
That the roundworms have a large number of peculiar
apomorphies and in many cases a parasitic lifestyle confounds analyses; the
DNA sequence data hitherto analyzed is equivocal on ecdysozoan
monophyly. Genetic analyses of roundworms suggest that - as is also indicated by their unique morphological features - the group has been under intense
selective pressure during its early radiation, resulting apparently in accelerated rates of both morphological and molecular evolution. Until a strong
phylogenetic tree based on combined evidence is produced, most agree that the Nematoda should simply be referred to as part of the
Metazoa.
Cultural References
★ The first episode of the children's television show
Doug involves a nematode, though it is posited that the animal is purely fictional. See
Doug Bags a Neematoad
★ In the
SpongeBob SquarePants episode
Home Sweet Pineapple, nematodes eat Spongebob's pineapple house, and he is forced to find a new home. In
Best Day Ever, SpongeBob leads hungry nematodes away from the Krusty Krab by playing the song "Best Day Ever" with his nose.
★ The "fiery serpents" plague mentioned in Numbers 21:6-9 could very well be the parasitic ''nematode''.
Robustness
★ Hundreds of nematode worms (''C. elegans''), featured in a research project on mission
STS-107, survived the
Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster.
[4]
See also
★
Toxocariasis
★
Acanthocheilonema viteae
★
Xiphinema List of species
★
Ascariasis
References
1. The invertebrates, vol. III. Acanthocephala, Aschelminthes, and Entoprocta, the pseudocoelomate Bilateria., , L.H., Hyman, Mc Graw Hill, ,
2. Animal Diversity, , Cleveland, Hickman, Mc Graw Hill, ,
3. Giant Kidney Worm Infection in Mink and Dogs
4. Worms survived Columbia disaster
External links
★ http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/phyla/ecdysozoa/nematoda.html
★
Nematode.net: Repository of parasitic nematode sequences.
★ http://www.nematodes.org/
★
NeMys World free-living Marine Nematodes database
★
Nematode Virtual Library
★
International Federation of Nematology Societies
★
Society of Nematologists
★
Australasian Association of Nematologists
★
Research on nematodes and longevity