Showing posts with label flatworms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flatworms. Show all posts

Friday, December 30, 2011

Micro-rock-pooling in Winter.


It's too cold in winter to spend a lot of time paddling around in rock pools but you can always take a few samples of seaweed home on a jar of seawater and have a look at the smaller inhabitants under the microscope. These two, each about a millimetre long, were in a  sample of Corallina officinalis seaweed. The upper specimen is an unusually bristly acarine mite, found clambering through the seaweed fronds. You can see more acarine mites by clicking here.

This is a minute flatworm, with two very simple eyes, found gliding over the surface of the seaweed, propelled by thousands of cilia that are only visible at high magnification under the microscope. You can see another marine flatworm, in more detail and with a movie of the cilia in action, by clicking here.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Flatworms:Minute Predators of the Rock Pool



One of the easiest ways to find the smallest animals that inhabit rock pools at the seaside is to collect fronds of red seaweed and examine them in a shallow dish of sea water under a low power microscope. I discovered this little flatworm this afternoon amongst the seaweed fronds from a rock pool on the Northumberland coast at Low Newton. It’s about two millimetres long and the images here were taken at magnifications of x40 (whole animal), x100 (head) and x400 (eye). Free-living flatworms, some tropical examples of which are over 30cm. long, belong to a very large phylum of animals called the Platyhelminthes that includes notorious parasites like liver flukes. These minute marine flatworms are predators on even smaller marine organisms. Their mouth is in the middle of the underside of the flattened body and opens into a highly branched digestive tract that you can see clearly as the dark brown network in the low power image of the whole animal (top). Flatworms are equipped with a pair of very simple eyes that are efficient at detecting the direction of light but don’t form images. They open via a ‘pinhole’ (just visible in the bottom photograph) and are lined with just a few light receptors attached to nerve endings. Flatworms glide around with the aid of thousands of rhythmically-beating cilia (see video) that cover a surface layer of large brick-like cells that you can see around the edge of the animal in the middle photograph. Freshwater flatworms that are very similar to this marine species, but are black rather than translucent, are present in every garden pond and can often be seen gliding around under the surface film.