When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Leech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leech

    Leech anatomy in cross-section: the body is solid, the coelom (body cavity) reduced to channels, with circular, longitudinal, and transverse muscles making the animal strong and flexible. [ 26 ] Like most annelids, with a few exceptions like Sipuncula , Echiura and Diurodrilus , [ 27 ] the leech is a segmented animal, but unlike other annelids ...

  3. File:Leech anatomy in cross-section.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Leech_anatomy_in...

    English: Leech in cross-section. Whereas other annelids are largely hollow, with a spacious coelom, leeches are largely solid, filled with dermis, and the coelom reduced to channels. Whereas other annelids are largely hollow, with a spacious coelom, leeches are largely solid, filled with dermis, and the coelom reduced to channels.

  4. Hirudo verbana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hirudo_verbana

    During a blood meal, a leech rhythmically contracts its muscles to draw blood from a host animal into the crop for storage. It can consume over five times its own weight in blood in one feeding. Once satiated, a leech detaches from its host. Hirudo verbana uses anticoagulants when it feeds, so its bite wounds continue bleeding for some time ...

  5. Hirudo medicinalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hirudo_medicinalis

    Hirudo medicinalis, or the European medicinal leech, is one of several species of leeches used as medicinal leeches. Other species of Hirudo sometimes also used as medicinal leeches include H. orientalis , H. troctina , and H. verbana .

  6. Macrobdella decora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrobdella_decora

    Macrobdella decora, also known as the North American medicinal leech, is a species of freshwater leech found in much of eastern North America in freshwater habitats, although there is one disjunct population in northern Mexico. M. decora is a parasite of vertebrates, including humans, and an aquatic predator of eggs, larvae, and other ...

  7. Hirudo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hirudo

    Hirudo is a genus of leeches of the family Hirudinidae.It was described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. [2]The two well-accepted species within the genus are: [3]

  8. Clitellum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clitellum

    Earthworm with clitellum lablelled. Close-up of the clitellum of a Lumbricus rubellus. The clitellum is a thickened glandular and non-segmented section of the body wall near the head in earthworms and leeches that secretes a viscid sac in which eggs are stored. [1]

  9. Haemadipsidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemadipsidae

    The Xerobdellidae are sometimes included in the Haemadipsidae, but their status as a distinct family is supported by sequence analysis of the nuclear 18S and 28S rDNA and mitochondrial COI genes as well as the anatomy of their sexual organs and nephridia; the latter are located at the belly rather than along the body sides as in the ...