priapulid

invertebrate
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Also known as: Priapulida
Related Topics:
aschelminth
Eumetazoa

priapulid, (phylum Priapulida), any of some 15 species of predatory, marine, mud-inhabiting, unsegmented worms. Once considered a class of the former phylum Aschelminthes or placed with echiuran and sipunculan worms in the former phylum Gephyrea, priapulids have no obvious relationship to any other group of animals. The largest of the priapulids are 10 to 15 cm (4 to 6 inches) long and inhabit the colder seas, while the smallest, several millimetres long, inhabit warmer seas.

The presoma, or anterior end of the body, with the mouth at the tip, can be retracted into the trunk and is used in locomotion as well as in feeding. The body is covered with a cuticle that is secreted by the hypodermis. Beneath this cuticle lie body-wall muscles that enclose a spacious body cavity. The cuticle hardens into a ridged case (the lorica) during the larval stage. It forms spines on the presoma, especially around the mouth, within the pharynx, and to a lesser degree elsewhere on the body, and it molts as the worm grows to an adult.

The mouth of the priapulid leads into a large muscular pharynx, a short esophagus, a larger intestine (with musculature), and a rectum with the anus at the hind end. There is no circulatory system. The excretory system consists of flame cells (solenocytes) opening by ducts to the exterior. The nervous system is very simple, consisting of a nerve ring surrounding the mouth, a ventral nerve cord, and peripheral nerves. The reproductive organs are tubular, with posterior openings, and internal fertilization is known to occur in one species.

Sea otter (Enhydra lutris), also called great sea otter, rare, completely marine otter of the northern Pacific, usually found in kelp beds. Floats on back. Looks like sea otter laughing. saltwater otters
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A number of fossil species that closely resemble modern priapulids are known from roughly 540 million to 525 million years ago during the Early Cambrian Period.

This article was most recently revised and updated by John P. Rafferty.