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Priapulida


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Priapulida

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Priapula - English
URL: http://phylogeny.arizona.edu/tree/eukaryotes/animals/priapula/priapula.html

Part of tree of Life - Classification from Brusca and Brusca (1990).

[ eng ]


Introduction to the "Aschelminth" Phyla - English
URL: http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/aschelminthes/aschelminthes.html

Acanthocephala -- spiny-headed parasitic worms; about 1150 species known Chaetognatha -- arrowworms; about 70 species known. Cycliophora -- cycliophorans; 1 species known, microscopic Gastrotricha -- gastrotrichs; about 430 species known, all microscopic Kinorhyncha -- kinorhynchs; about 150 species known, all microscopic Loricifera -- loriciferans; about 10 species described, all microscopic Nematoda -- nematodes or roundworms; about 12,000 species known, but an estimated 200,000+ species extant, mostly microscopic Nematomorpha -- horsehair worms; about 320 species known Priapulida -- priapulid worms; 16 species known, abut half microscopic Rotifera -- rotifers or "wheel animalcules"; about 1500 species known, all microscopic

[ eng ]


Natural History - Phylogeny - English
URL: http://www.nearctica.com/nathist/phylog.htm

The phylogeny of living organisms has changed dramatically in the past few years. As a consequence you will find that different sites may given different, and sometimes conflicting, systematic arrangements for the same group of organisms. No where is this more true than for the "lower organisms", i.e. those groups traditionally treated as bacteria, protozoans, algae and fungi. The traditional older arrangement divided live into two main group; the Monera (bacteria and blue-green algae) and the Eucaryotes (protozoa, algae, plants, fungi, and animals). This older scheme was surplanted by the so-called "Five Kingdom Classification" created by Robert Whittaker.

[ eng ]


Priapulida - English
URL: http://rainbow.ldeo.columbia.edu/ees/life/slides/oldec/priapulida.html

Description, picture.

[ eng ]


PHYLUM PRIAPULIDA - English
URL: http://www.teaching-biomed.man.ac.uk/bs1999/bs146/biodiversity/priapul.htm

The Priapulida are benthic, worm-like animals commonly found in cooler marine environments. Priapulidans range in size from 0.5mm to 30cm in length, although the majority are between 12 and 15cm long. Only around sixteen species have been identified positively as belonging to this phylum [Ruppert and Barnes, 1994]. Priapulidans can be found from the intertidal zone to depths of several thousand metres, burrowing into soft sediments or existing as interstitial organisms.

[ eng ]


Literaturliste der Priapulida - German
URL: http://www.gwdg.de/~clembur/prialifr.htm

[ ]


Nearctica - Natural History - Miscellaneous small phyla - English
URL: http://www.nearctica.com/nathist/miscanim/misc1.htm

The priapulids are marine animals looking somewhat like a cross between a worm and a cucumber. They have a two part body with an anterior prosoma consisting of a bulbous proboscis, a short collar, and a mouth armed with short hooks. The second body part is a warty trunk. No sites dealing with this animal have been found on the Web.

[ eng ]


PRIAPULIDA. The Columbia Encyclopedia - English
URL: http://www.bartleby.com/65/pr/Priapuli.html

Phylum consisting of 17 species of predatory, unsegmented marine worms that live in the sand and mud at the sea bottom. The largest are 4 to 6 in. (10–17 cm) long, but the majority of species are less than .05 in. (.13 cm) in size. The animals consist of a spiny body with an anterior that can be everted or inverted into the trunk for locomotion or feeding. Spines around the mouth and in the pharnyx are everted to capture prey. The sexes are separate and the egg is fertilized externally, hatching into a larval stage in all but one species.

[ eng ]


 
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