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Geoplanidae

Geoplanidae is a family of flatworms known commonly as land planarians or land flatworms.[2]

Geoplanidae
Obama burmeisteri from the Atlantic rainforests of southern Brazil
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Platyhelminthes
Order: Tricladida
Superfamily: Geoplanoidea
Family: Geoplanidae
Stimpson, 1857
Subfamilies[1]

See text

Synonyms
  • Terricola Hallez, 1857

These flatworms are mainly predators of other invertebrates, which they hunt, attack and capture using physical force and the adhesive and digestive properties of their mucus.[3] They lack water-retaining mechanisms and are therefore very sensitive to humidity variations of their environment.[4]

Because of their strict ecological requirements, some species have been proposed as indicators of the conservation state of their habitats.[4][5] They are generally animals with low vagility (dispersal ability) and with very specific habitat requirements, so they can be also used to accurately determine the distribution of biogeographic realms. Today the fauna of these animals is being studied to select conservation priorities in the Atlantic rainforest in Brazil.[6]

At the other extreme, one species in this family, Platydemus manokwari has become an invasive species in both disturbed and wild habitats in the Pacific Islands, and has damaged the endemic land snail fauna. This species has been found in Europe (France) in 2013 for the first time,[7] and in 2015 in New Caledonia, Wallis and Futuna Islands, Singapore, Solomon Islands, Puerto Rico (first record in the Caribbean), and Florida, USA.[8]

Description edit

 
Obama anthropophila is a land planarian with dull colors.
 
A colorful species of the subfamily Bipaliinae.

Land planarians are distinguished from their marine and freshwater relatives by their terrestrial habits, as well as by morphological distinctions. Some species have dull colors, including shades of brown and grey, that make them inconspicuous in their environment, but most species are marked by very colorful patterns.[9] At first they may be confused with slugs or leeches,[10] but they lack the anterior tentacles of slugs and the segmentation of leeches. Their size vary greatly, from a few millimeters in length to about one meter.[11][12][13]

The most distinguishing feature that characterizes land planarians is the presence of a creeping sole, a highly ciliated region on the ventral epidermis that helps them to creep over the substrate.[14] The creeping sole may be wide and flat, occupying most of the ventral surface, or narrow and pronounced, being easily distinguished from the rest of the ventral surface.[15]

Anatomy edit

Epidermis edit

The epidermis of land planarians is composed by a simple epithelium of cubic or columnar cells. The cells are ciliated only on a ventral region, called creeping sole, which the animal uses to glide over surfaces.[9] Numerous secretory cells open throughout the epidermis, the most characteristic ones being the rhabditogen cells, which produce a secretion in the form of small rod-like structures, the rhabdites. Rhabditogen cells are very numerous on the dorsal epidermis, but rare on the ventral side.[9]

Nervous system edit

The nervous system of land planarians has the longitudinal nerve cords reduced to one ventral pair that is located much deeper in the body than in other triclads. These ventral cords are usually connected by many comissures, so that they fuse into a single ventral nerve plate.[14] Additionally, land planarians have a highly developed ventral nerve plexus just below the epidermis that is probably associated to the presence of a creeping sole.[14]

Contrary to aquatic planarians, land planarians do not have a distinct brain, i.e., there is no clear frontal cluster of nerve cells other than the ventral nerve plate.[16]

Diversity edit

The family Geoplanidae is composed of five subfamilies:[1]

Although there are over 830 known species of Geoplanidae in the world,[17] the diversity of land planarians is still poorly known. The highest diversity occurs in tropical forests in South America, Asia and Australia. Europe and North America are relatively species-poor, while the diversity of Africa may be as high as that of other tropical regions, but is highly understudied.[4]

Habitat edit

 
Polycladus gayi from the Valdivian rainforests of southern Chile

Most species of land planarians live at the soil of forests, especially in the leaf litter layer, but some may inhabit galleries constructed by other invertebrates or be found on vegetation, such as bromeliads.[18] Despite being sensitive to dehydration, some species are well adapted to considerably dry environments, such as savannas.[19]

During unfavorable conditions, such as dry seasons, land planarians tend to seek shelter by burrowing in the soil or building a cyst composed of soil particles united by mucus.[20]

Some species are well adapted to human-disturbed environments and many of those have been introduced in areas outside of their native range. In some localities, such as the United Kingdom, the number of introduced land planarian species greatly surpass the number of described native species.[21]

Feeding and predatory behavior edit

 
A group of land planarians of the species Endeavouria septemlineata feeding on a land snail, Bradybaena similaris

Land planarians are carnivorous and most species are active predators, but some are mainly scavengers.[22]

All planarians feed through a muscular and eversible pharynx located slightly posteriorly to the middle of the body length and opening through a ventral mouth. The pharynx is an extensible tube-like organ bearing a complex muscular coat. It specializes as a penetration organ for those planarians that feed on arthropods; or as a grasping organ for those planarians that feed on other soft bodied invertebrates such as earthworms. All geoplanidae pharynxes are equipped with glandular secretions that externally digest and dissolve their prey.[3]

As part of the soil ecosystem, land planarians feed mainly on other invertebrates, such as earthworms, snails, slugs, nemerteans, velvet worms, woodlice, millipedes, insects and arachnids.[23][24] Some may even feed on other land planarians.[25]

Some species of land planarians have become invasive pest species. The New Zealand flatworm Arthurdendyus triangulatus and the Australian flatworm Australoplana sanguinea alba have been introduced in the British Isles and are considered to be pest species because they prey upon earthworms and thus may negatively affect soil structure and fertility.[26][27] Another species, Platydemus manokwari, has been used as an agent of biological pest control of the introduced giant African snail Achatina fulica in Hawaii, the Maldives, Irian Jaya, and Guam, but has become an even worse pest and today threatens several native snail populations in the Pacific.[28]

Some land planarians show hunting behaviour, using chemical signals to detect their prey. Most land planarians have chemical sensory organs in the anterior part of the body, such as sensory pits and epidermal folds which serve as chemical radars for detecting their food. The mucus trails from the slime of slugs, snails and other planarians orient planarians towards their prey.[29][30] Different species use different techniques for capturing and immobilizing their prey, such as entrapment with sticky mucus and immobilization by physical force.[3][31]

Cannibalism has been observed in land planarians.[citation needed]

Phylogeny and systematics edit

 
Assorted land planarians from Southeast Asia

Until very recently, land planarians were classified as a suborder within Tricladida, named Terricola. However, recent phylogenetic studies revealed that they are actually the sister-group of Dugesiidae, a family of freshwater planarians (at that time part of the suborder Paludicola).[1] The most recent classification puts both land and freshwater planarians within a single suborder called Continenticola, with land planarians forming a single family, Geoplanidae.

The following phylogenetic supertree after Sluys et al., 2009[1] presents the current classification of planarians:

In the former suborder Terricola, land planarians were separated into three families according to morphological features:[32][33]

  • Bipaliidae: head expanded in a spatula-like shape and multiple eyes;
  • Rhynchodemidae: non-expanded head and a single pair of eyes. It included two subfamilies: Rhynchodeminae, with subepithelial longitudinal muscular fibers grouped into large bundles, and Microplaninae, with weaker subepithelial longitudinal muscular fibers not forming bundles;
  • Geoplanidae: non-expanded head and multiple eyes. It included three subfamilies: Geoplaninae, with dorsal testicles and strong subepithelial longitudinal muscles, Caenoplaninae, with ventral testicles and strong subepithelial longitudinal muscles, and Pelmatoplaninae, with ventral testicles and weak subepithelial longitudinal muscles.

Recent phylogenetic analyses, however, revealed that Rhynchodeminae and Microplaninae are not closely related and that Caenoplaninae is closer to Rhynchodeminae than to Geoplaninae. The current classification of land planarian subfamilies is shown in the following phylogenetic tree after Álvarez-Presas et al., 2008.[34] The old subfamilies Caenoplaninae and Pelmatoplaninae have been included as tribes Caenoplanini and Pelmatoplanini inside Rhynchodeminae.[1] Note that Spathula and Romankenkius belong to the family Dugesiidae. Their relocation inside Geoplanidae needs further investigation.[34]

Image gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Sluys, R.; Kawakatsu, M.; Riutort, M.; Baguñà, J. (2009). "A new higher classification of planarian flatworms (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida)". Journal of Natural History. 43 (29–30): 1763–1777. doi:10.1080/00222930902741669. S2CID 85174457.
  2. ^ Winsor, L.; Johns, P. M.; Yeates, G. M. (1998). "Introduction, and ecological and systematic background, to the Terricola (Tricladida)". Pedobiologia. 42 (5–6): 389–404.
  3. ^ a b c Ogren, R. E. (1995). "Predation behaviour of land planarians". Hydrobiologia. 305 (1–3): 105–111. doi:10.1007/BF00036370. S2CID 31413150.
  4. ^ a b c Sluys, R. (1999). "Global diversity of land planarians (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Terricola): a new indicator-taxon in biodiversity and conservation studies". Biodiversity and Conservation. 8 (12): 1663–1681. doi:10.1023/A:1008994925673. S2CID 38784755.
  5. ^ Carbayo, F.; Leal-Zanchet, A. M.; Vieira, E. M. (2002). "Terrestrial flatworm (Platyhelminthes: Tricladida: Terricola) diversity versus man-induced disturbance in an ombrophilous forest in southern Brazil". Biodiversity and Conservation. 11 (6): 1091–1104. doi:10.1023/A:1015865005604. S2CID 5912963.
  6. ^ Álvarez-Presas, M.; Sánchez-Garcia, A.; Carbayo, F.; Rozas, J.; Riutort, M. (2014). "Insights into the origin and distribution of biodiversity in the Brazilian Atlantic forest hot spot: a statistical phylogeographic study using a low-dispersal organism". Heredity. 112 (6): 656–665. doi:10.1038/hdy.2014.3. PMC 4023448. PMID 24549112.
  7. ^ Justine, Jean-Lou; Winsor, Leigh; Gey, Delphine; Gros, Pierre; Thévenot, Jessica (2014). "The invasive New Guinea flatworm Platydemus manokwari in France, the first record for Europe: time for action is now". PeerJ. 2: e297. doi:10.7717/peerj.297. PMC 3961122. PMID 24688873.  
  8. ^ Justine, Jean-Lou; Winsor, Leigh; Barrière, Patrick; Fanai, Crispus; Gey, Delphine; Han, Andrew Wee Kien; La Quay-Velázquez, Giomara; Lee, Benjamin Paul Yi-Hann; Lefevre, Jean-Marc; Meyer, Jean-Yves; Philippart, David; Robinson, David G.; Thévenot, Jessica; Tsatsia, Francis (2015). "The invasive land planarian Platydemus manokwari (Platyhelminthes, Geoplanidae): records from six new localities, including the first in the USA". PeerJ. 3: e1037. doi:10.7717/peerj.1037. ISSN 2167-8359. PMC 4485254. PMID 26131377.  
  9. ^ a b c Seitenfus, Ana Lúcia Ramos; Leal-Zanchet, Ana Maria (2004). "Uma introdução à morfologia e taxonomia de planárias terrestres (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Terricola)". Acta Biologica Leopoldensia (in Portuguese). 26 (2): 187–202.
  10. ^ Schirch, P. F. (1929). "Sobre as planarias terrestres do Brasil". Boletim do Museu Nacional (in Portuguese). 5: 27–38.
  11. ^ Sluys, Ronald; Mateos, Eduardo; Riutort, Marta; Álvarez-presas, Marta (2016). "Towards a comprehensive, integrative analysis of the diversity of European microplaninid land flatworms (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Microplaninae), with the description of two peculiar new species". Systematics and Biodiversity. 14 (1): 9–31. doi:10.1080/14772000.2015.1103323. ISSN 1477-2000. S2CID 87583502.
  12. ^ Ball, Ian R.; Reynoldson, T. B. (1981). British Planarians. Platyhelminthes: Tricladida. Keys and notes for the identification of the species. Cambridge University Press.
  13. ^ Kawakatsu, Masaharu; Makino, Naoya; Shirasawa, Yasuko (1982). "Bipalium nobile sp.nov. (Turbellaria, Tricladida, Terricola), a New Land Planarian from Tokyo". Annotationes Zoologicae Japonenses. 55 (4): 236–262.
  14. ^ a b c Sluys, Ronald (1989). "Phylogenetic relationships of the triclads (Platyhelminthes, Seriata, Tricladida)". Bijdragen tot de Dierkunde. 59 (1): 3–25. doi:10.1163/26660644-05901001.
  15. ^ von Graff, Ludwig (1899). Monographie der Turbellarien. II. Tricladida Terricola (in German). Leipzig: Engelmann. p. 540.
  16. ^ Hyman, Libbie H. (1951). The invertebrates. II. Platyhelminthes and Rhynchocoela. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 550.
  17. ^ Schockaert, E. R.; et al. (2008). "Global diversity of free living flatworms (Platyhelminthes, "Turbellaria") in freshwater" (PDF). Hydrobiologia. 595: 41–48. doi:10.1007/s10750-007-9002-8. S2CID 21471933.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Beauchamp, P. (1913). "Planaires des Broméliacées de Costa Rica Recueillies par Mr C. Picado". Archives de Zoologie Paris (in French). 51: 41–52.
  19. ^ Cumming, Meg S. (1995). "Activity patterns of termite-eating land planariansMicroplana termitophaga(Platyhelminthes: Tricladida)". Journal of Zoology. 237 (4): 531–542. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1995.tb05013.x. ISSN 0952-8369.
  20. ^ Ogren, Robert E. (1955). "Ecological Observations on the Occurrence of Rhynchodemus, a Terrestrial Turbellarian". Transactions of the American Microscopical Society. 74 (1): 54–60. doi:10.2307/3223842. ISSN 0003-0023. JSTOR 3223842.
  21. ^ Jones, H.D.; Boag, B. (2007). "The distribution of New Zealand and Australian terrestrial flatworms (Platyhelminthes: Turbellaria: Tricladida: Terricola) in the British Isles—the Scottish survey and MEGALAB WORMS". Journal of Natural History. 30 (7): 955–975. doi:10.1080/00222939600770511. ISSN 0022-2933.
  22. ^ McDonald, Jillian C.; Jones, Hugh D. (2007). "Abundance, reproduction, and feeding of three species of British terrestrial planarians: Observations over 4 years". Journal of Natural History. 41 (5–8): 293–312. doi:10.1080/00222930701219149. ISSN 0022-2933. S2CID 85830660.
  23. ^ Boll, Piter Kehoma; Leal-Zanchet, Ana Maria (2014). "Predation on invasive land gastropods by a Neotropical land planarian". Journal of Natural History. 49 (17–18): 983–994. doi:10.1080/00222933.2014.981312. ISSN 0022-2933. S2CID 85280766.
  24. ^ Prasniski, Maria E. T.; Leal-Zanchet, Ana M. (2009). "Predatory behavior of the land flatworm Notogynaphallia abundans (Platyhelminthes: Tricladida)". Zoologia (Curitiba). 26 (4): 606–612. doi:10.1590/S1984-46702009005000011. ISSN 1984-4670.
  25. ^ Boll, Piter K.; Rossi, Ilana; Amaral, Silvana V.; Leal-Zanchet, Ana (2015). "A taste for exotic food: Neotropical land planarians feeding on an invasive flatworm". PeerJ. 3: e1307. doi:10.7717/peerj.1307. ISSN 2167-8359. PMC 4614845. PMID 26500817.
  26. ^ Santoro, Giulio; Jones, Hugh D. (2001). "Comparison of the earthworm population of a garden infested with the Australian land flatworm (Australoplana sanguinea alba) with that of a non-infested garden". Pedobiologia. 45 (4): 313–328. doi:10.1078/0031-4056-00089. ISSN 0031-4056.
  27. ^ Murchie, Archie K.; Gordon, Alan W. (2012). "The impact of the 'New Zealand flatworm', Arthurdendyus triangulatus, on earthworm populations in the field". Biological Invasions. 15 (3): 569–586. doi:10.1007/s10530-012-0309-7. ISSN 1387-3547. S2CID 7041377.
  28. ^ Sugiura, Shinji; Yamaura, Yuichi (2008). "Potential impacts of the invasive flatworm Platydemus manokwari on arboreal snails". Biological Invasions. 11 (3): 737–742. doi:10.1007/s10530-008-9287-1. ISSN 1387-3547. S2CID 44641680.
  29. ^ Fiore, C.; Tull, J. L.; Zehner, S.; Ducey, P. K. (2004). "Tracking and predation on earthworms by the invasive terrestrial planarian Bipalium adventitium (Tricladida, Platyhelminthes)". Behavioural Processes. 67 (3): 327–334. doi:10.1016/j.beproc.2004.06.001. PMID 15518983. S2CID 23159802.
  30. ^ Iwai, N.; Sugiura, S.; Chiba, S. (2010). "Prey-tracking behavior in the invasive terrestrial planarian Platydemus manokwari (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida)". Naturwissenschaften. 97 (11): 997–1002. Bibcode:2010NW.....97..997I. doi:10.1007/s00114-010-0717-4. PMID 20853096. S2CID 23021634.
  31. ^ Boll, Piter Kehoma; Leal-Zanchet, Ana Maria (2014). "Predation on invasive land gastropods by a Neotropical land planarian". Journal of Natural History. 49 (17–18): 983–994. doi:10.1080/00222933.2014.981312. ISSN 0022-2933. S2CID 85280766.
  32. ^ Ogren, R. E.; Kawakatsu, M. (1988). "Index to the species of the family Rhynchodemidae (Turbellaria, Tricladida, Terricola) Part I: Rhynchodeminae". Bulletin of Fuji Women's College. 26 (2): 39–91.
  33. ^ Ogren, R. E.; Kawakatsu, M. (1991). "Index to the species of the family Geoplanidae (Turbellaria, Tricladida, Terricola) Part II: Caenoplaninae and Pelmatoplaninae". Bulletin of Fuji Women's College. 29 (2): 35–58.
  34. ^ a b Álvarez-Presas, M.; Baguñà, J.; Riutort, M. (2008). "Molecular phylogeny of land and freshwater planarians (Tricladida, Platyhelminthes): From freshwater to land and back". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 47 (2): 555–568. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2008.01.032. PMID 18359250.

External links edit

  • Video of juvenile Land Planarian in Borneo

geoplanidae, family, flatworms, known, commonly, land, planarians, land, flatworms, obama, burmeisteri, from, atlantic, rainforests, southern, brazilscientific, classificationdomain, eukaryotakingdom, animaliaphylum, platyhelminthesorder, tricladidasuperfamily. Geoplanidae is a family of flatworms known commonly as land planarians or land flatworms 2 GeoplanidaeObama burmeisteri from the Atlantic rainforests of southern BrazilScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum PlatyhelminthesOrder TricladidaSuperfamily GeoplanoideaFamily GeoplanidaeStimpson 1857Subfamilies 1 See textSynonymsTerricola Hallez 1857These flatworms are mainly predators of other invertebrates which they hunt attack and capture using physical force and the adhesive and digestive properties of their mucus 3 They lack water retaining mechanisms and are therefore very sensitive to humidity variations of their environment 4 Because of their strict ecological requirements some species have been proposed as indicators of the conservation state of their habitats 4 5 They are generally animals with low vagility dispersal ability and with very specific habitat requirements so they can be also used to accurately determine the distribution of biogeographic realms Today the fauna of these animals is being studied to select conservation priorities in the Atlantic rainforest in Brazil 6 At the other extreme one species in this family Platydemus manokwari has become an invasive species in both disturbed and wild habitats in the Pacific Islands and has damaged the endemic land snail fauna This species has been found in Europe France in 2013 for the first time 7 and in 2015 in New Caledonia Wallis and Futuna Islands Singapore Solomon Islands Puerto Rico first record in the Caribbean and Florida USA 8 Contents 1 Description 2 Anatomy 2 1 Epidermis 2 2 Nervous system 3 Diversity 4 Habitat 5 Feeding and predatory behavior 6 Phylogeny and systematics 7 Image gallery 8 References 9 External linksDescription edit nbsp Obama anthropophila is a land planarian with dull colors nbsp A colorful species of the subfamily Bipaliinae Land planarians are distinguished from their marine and freshwater relatives by their terrestrial habits as well as by morphological distinctions Some species have dull colors including shades of brown and grey that make them inconspicuous in their environment but most species are marked by very colorful patterns 9 At first they may be confused with slugs or leeches 10 but they lack the anterior tentacles of slugs and the segmentation of leeches Their size vary greatly from a few millimeters in length to about one meter 11 12 13 The most distinguishing feature that characterizes land planarians is the presence of a creeping sole a highly ciliated region on the ventral epidermis that helps them to creep over the substrate 14 The creeping sole may be wide and flat occupying most of the ventral surface or narrow and pronounced being easily distinguished from the rest of the ventral surface 15 Anatomy editEpidermis edit The epidermis of land planarians is composed by a simple epithelium of cubic or columnar cells The cells are ciliated only on a ventral region called creeping sole which the animal uses to glide over surfaces 9 Numerous secretory cells open throughout the epidermis the most characteristic ones being the rhabditogen cells which produce a secretion in the form of small rod like structures the rhabdites Rhabditogen cells are very numerous on the dorsal epidermis but rare on the ventral side 9 Nervous system edit The nervous system of land planarians has the longitudinal nerve cords reduced to one ventral pair that is located much deeper in the body than in other triclads These ventral cords are usually connected by many comissures so that they fuse into a single ventral nerve plate 14 Additionally land planarians have a highly developed ventral nerve plexus just below the epidermis that is probably associated to the presence of a creeping sole 14 Contrary to aquatic planarians land planarians do not have a distinct brain i e there is no clear frontal cluster of nerve cells other than the ventral nerve plate 16 Diversity editThe family Geoplanidae is composed of five subfamilies 1 Bipaliinae Geoplaninae Microplaninae Rhynchodeminae TimyminaeAlthough there are over 830 known species of Geoplanidae in the world 17 the diversity of land planarians is still poorly known The highest diversity occurs in tropical forests in South America Asia and Australia Europe and North America are relatively species poor while the diversity of Africa may be as high as that of other tropical regions but is highly understudied 4 Habitat edit nbsp Polycladus gayi from the Valdivian rainforests of southern ChileMost species of land planarians live at the soil of forests especially in the leaf litter layer but some may inhabit galleries constructed by other invertebrates or be found on vegetation such as bromeliads 18 Despite being sensitive to dehydration some species are well adapted to considerably dry environments such as savannas 19 During unfavorable conditions such as dry seasons land planarians tend to seek shelter by burrowing in the soil or building a cyst composed of soil particles united by mucus 20 Some species are well adapted to human disturbed environments and many of those have been introduced in areas outside of their native range In some localities such as the United Kingdom the number of introduced land planarian species greatly surpass the number of described native species 21 Feeding and predatory behavior edit nbsp A group of land planarians of the species Endeavouria septemlineata feeding on a land snail Bradybaena similarisLand planarians are carnivorous and most species are active predators but some are mainly scavengers 22 All planarians feed through a muscular and eversible pharynx located slightly posteriorly to the middle of the body length and opening through a ventral mouth The pharynx is an extensible tube like organ bearing a complex muscular coat It specializes as a penetration organ for those planarians that feed on arthropods or as a grasping organ for those planarians that feed on other soft bodied invertebrates such as earthworms All geoplanidae pharynxes are equipped with glandular secretions that externally digest and dissolve their prey 3 As part of the soil ecosystem land planarians feed mainly on other invertebrates such as earthworms snails slugs nemerteans velvet worms woodlice millipedes insects and arachnids 23 24 Some may even feed on other land planarians 25 Some species of land planarians have become invasive pest species The New Zealand flatworm Arthurdendyus triangulatus and the Australian flatworm Australoplana sanguinea alba have been introduced in the British Isles and are considered to be pest species because they prey upon earthworms and thus may negatively affect soil structure and fertility 26 27 Another species Platydemus manokwari has been used as an agent of biological pest control of the introduced giant African snail Achatina fulica in Hawaii the Maldives Irian Jaya and Guam but has become an even worse pest and today threatens several native snail populations in the Pacific 28 Some land planarians show hunting behaviour using chemical signals to detect their prey Most land planarians have chemical sensory organs in the anterior part of the body such as sensory pits and epidermal folds which serve as chemical radars for detecting their food The mucus trails from the slime of slugs snails and other planarians orient planarians towards their prey 29 30 Different species use different techniques for capturing and immobilizing their prey such as entrapment with sticky mucus and immobilization by physical force 3 31 Cannibalism has been observed in land planarians citation needed Phylogeny and systematics edit nbsp Assorted land planarians from Southeast AsiaUntil very recently land planarians were classified as a suborder within Tricladida named Terricola However recent phylogenetic studies revealed that they are actually the sister group of Dugesiidae a family of freshwater planarians at that time part of the suborder Paludicola 1 The most recent classification puts both land and freshwater planarians within a single suborder called Continenticola with land planarians forming a single family Geoplanidae The following phylogenetic supertree after Sluys et al 2009 1 presents the current classification of planarians Tricladida MaricolaCavernicolaContinenticola Planarioidea PlanariidaeKenkiidaeDendrocoelidaeGeoplanoidea DugesiidaeGeoplanidae In the former suborder Terricola land planarians were separated into three families according to morphological features 32 33 Bipaliidae head expanded in a spatula like shape and multiple eyes Rhynchodemidae non expanded head and a single pair of eyes It included two subfamilies Rhynchodeminae with subepithelial longitudinal muscular fibers grouped into large bundles and Microplaninae with weaker subepithelial longitudinal muscular fibers not forming bundles Geoplanidae non expanded head and multiple eyes It included three subfamilies Geoplaninae with dorsal testicles and strong subepithelial longitudinal muscles Caenoplaninae with ventral testicles and strong subepithelial longitudinal muscles and Pelmatoplaninae with ventral testicles and weak subepithelial longitudinal muscles Recent phylogenetic analyses however revealed that Rhynchodeminae and Microplaninae are not closely related and that Caenoplaninae is closer to Rhynchodeminae than to Geoplaninae The current classification of land planarian subfamilies is shown in the following phylogenetic tree after Alvarez Presas et al 2008 34 The old subfamilies Caenoplaninae and Pelmatoplaninae have been included as tribes Caenoplanini and Pelmatoplanini inside Rhynchodeminae 1 Note that Spathula and Romankenkius belong to the family Dugesiidae Their relocation inside Geoplanidae needs further investigation 34 Geoplanoidea DugesiidaeGeoplanidae BipaliinaeGeoplaninaeCaenoplaninaeRhynchodeminaeMicroplaninae Spathula Romankenkius Image gallery edit nbsp Bipalium adventitium close up under a rock North California USA nbsp Obama ladislavii from a garden in Porto Alegre southern Brazil nbsp Cephaloflexa araucariana from the Sao Francisco de Paula National Forest southern Brazil nbsp Luteostriata ernesti in the Sao Francisco de Paula National Forest nbsp Notogynaphallia plumbea from an Araucaria moist forest in Parana Brazil nbsp Unidentified land planarian from Bahia Brazil nbsp Unidentified land planarian from the Valdivian Rainforest in southern Chile nbsp Pseudogeoplana reticulata from the Valdivian Rainforest nbsp Caenoplana coerulea the blue planarian nbsp Arthurdendyus triangulatus the New Zealand flatworm nbsp Platydemus manokwari in France nbsp Rhynchodemus sylvaticus in the Iberian Peninsula nbsp Microplana robusta in Portugal nbsp Diversibipalium multilineatum in Italy nbsp Species of subfamily Bipaliinae in Sarawak Malaysia nbsp Diversibipalium rauchi in Thomson Nature Park Singapore References edit a b c d e Sluys R Kawakatsu M Riutort M Baguna J 2009 A new higher classification of planarian flatworms Platyhelminthes Tricladida Journal of Natural History 43 29 30 1763 1777 doi 10 1080 00222930902741669 S2CID 85174457 Winsor L Johns P M Yeates G M 1998 Introduction and ecological and systematic background to the Terricola Tricladida Pedobiologia 42 5 6 389 404 a b c Ogren R E 1995 Predation behaviour of land planarians Hydrobiologia 305 1 3 105 111 doi 10 1007 BF00036370 S2CID 31413150 a b c Sluys R 1999 Global diversity of land planarians Platyhelminthes Tricladida Terricola a new indicator taxon in biodiversity and conservation studies Biodiversity and Conservation 8 12 1663 1681 doi 10 1023 A 1008994925673 S2CID 38784755 Carbayo F Leal Zanchet A M Vieira E M 2002 Terrestrial flatworm Platyhelminthes Tricladida Terricola diversity versus man induced disturbance in an ombrophilous forest in southern Brazil Biodiversity and Conservation 11 6 1091 1104 doi 10 1023 A 1015865005604 S2CID 5912963 Alvarez Presas M Sanchez Garcia A Carbayo F Rozas J Riutort M 2014 Insights into the origin and distribution of biodiversity in the Brazilian Atlantic forest hot spot a statistical phylogeographic study using a low dispersal organism Heredity 112 6 656 665 doi 10 1038 hdy 2014 3 PMC 4023448 PMID 24549112 Justine Jean Lou Winsor Leigh Gey Delphine Gros Pierre Thevenot Jessica 2014 The invasive New Guinea flatworm Platydemus manokwari in France the first record for Europe time for action is now PeerJ 2 e297 doi 10 7717 peerj 297 PMC 3961122 PMID 24688873 nbsp Justine Jean Lou Winsor Leigh Barriere Patrick Fanai Crispus Gey Delphine Han Andrew Wee Kien La Quay Velazquez Giomara Lee Benjamin Paul Yi Hann Lefevre Jean Marc Meyer Jean Yves Philippart David Robinson David G Thevenot Jessica Tsatsia Francis 2015 The invasive land planarian Platydemus manokwari Platyhelminthes Geoplanidae records from six new localities including the first in the USA PeerJ 3 e1037 doi 10 7717 peerj 1037 ISSN 2167 8359 PMC 4485254 PMID 26131377 nbsp a b c Seitenfus Ana Lucia Ramos Leal 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Sluys Ronald 1989 Phylogenetic relationships of the triclads Platyhelminthes Seriata Tricladida Bijdragen tot de Dierkunde 59 1 3 25 doi 10 1163 26660644 05901001 von Graff Ludwig 1899 Monographie der Turbellarien II Tricladida Terricola in German Leipzig Engelmann p 540 Hyman Libbie H 1951 The invertebrates II Platyhelminthes and Rhynchocoela New York McGraw Hill p 550 Schockaert E R et al 2008 Global diversity of free living flatworms Platyhelminthes Turbellaria in freshwater PDF Hydrobiologia 595 41 48 doi 10 1007 s10750 007 9002 8 S2CID 21471933 permanent dead link Beauchamp P 1913 Planaires des Bromeliacees de Costa Rica Recueillies par Mr C Picado Archives de Zoologie Paris in French 51 41 52 Cumming Meg S 1995 Activity patterns of termite eating land planariansMicroplana termitophaga Platyhelminthes Tricladida Journal of Zoology 237 4 531 542 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1995 tb05013 x ISSN 0952 8369 Ogren Robert E 1955 Ecological Observations on the Occurrence of Rhynchodemus a Terrestrial Turbellarian Transactions of the American Microscopical Society 74 1 54 60 doi 10 2307 3223842 ISSN 0003 0023 JSTOR 3223842 Jones H D Boag B 2007 The distribution of New Zealand and Australian terrestrial flatworms Platyhelminthes Turbellaria Tricladida Terricola in the British Isles the Scottish survey and MEGALAB WORMS Journal of Natural History 30 7 955 975 doi 10 1080 00222939600770511 ISSN 0022 2933 McDonald Jillian C Jones Hugh D 2007 Abundance reproduction and feeding of three species of British terrestrial planarians Observations over 4 years Journal of Natural History 41 5 8 293 312 doi 10 1080 00222930701219149 ISSN 0022 2933 S2CID 85830660 Boll Piter Kehoma Leal Zanchet Ana Maria 2014 Predation on invasive land gastropods by a Neotropical land planarian Journal of Natural History 49 17 18 983 994 doi 10 1080 00222933 2014 981312 ISSN 0022 2933 S2CID 85280766 Prasniski Maria E T Leal Zanchet Ana M 2009 Predatory behavior of the land flatworm Notogynaphallia abundans Platyhelminthes Tricladida Zoologia Curitiba 26 4 606 612 doi 10 1590 S1984 46702009005000011 ISSN 1984 4670 Boll Piter K Rossi Ilana Amaral Silvana V Leal Zanchet Ana 2015 A taste for exotic food Neotropical land planarians feeding on an invasive flatworm PeerJ 3 e1307 doi 10 7717 peerj 1307 ISSN 2167 8359 PMC 4614845 PMID 26500817 Santoro Giulio Jones Hugh D 2001 Comparison of the earthworm population of a garden infested with the Australian land flatworm Australoplana sanguinea alba with that of a non infested garden Pedobiologia 45 4 313 328 doi 10 1078 0031 4056 00089 ISSN 0031 4056 Murchie Archie K Gordon Alan W 2012 The impact of the New Zealand flatworm Arthurdendyus triangulatus on earthworm populations in the field Biological Invasions 15 3 569 586 doi 10 1007 s10530 012 0309 7 ISSN 1387 3547 S2CID 7041377 Sugiura Shinji Yamaura Yuichi 2008 Potential impacts of the invasive flatworm Platydemus manokwari on arboreal snails Biological Invasions 11 3 737 742 doi 10 1007 s10530 008 9287 1 ISSN 1387 3547 S2CID 44641680 Fiore C Tull J L Zehner S Ducey P K 2004 Tracking and predation on earthworms by the invasive terrestrial planarian Bipalium adventitium Tricladida Platyhelminthes Behavioural Processes 67 3 327 334 doi 10 1016 j beproc 2004 06 001 PMID 15518983 S2CID 23159802 Iwai N Sugiura S Chiba S 2010 Prey tracking behavior in the invasive terrestrial planarian Platydemus manokwari Platyhelminthes Tricladida Naturwissenschaften 97 11 997 1002 Bibcode 2010NW 97 997I doi 10 1007 s00114 010 0717 4 PMID 20853096 S2CID 23021634 Boll Piter Kehoma Leal Zanchet Ana Maria 2014 Predation on invasive land gastropods by a Neotropical land planarian Journal of Natural History 49 17 18 983 994 doi 10 1080 00222933 2014 981312 ISSN 0022 2933 S2CID 85280766 Ogren R E Kawakatsu M 1988 Index to the species of the family Rhynchodemidae Turbellaria Tricladida Terricola Part I Rhynchodeminae Bulletin of Fuji Women s College 26 2 39 91 Ogren R E Kawakatsu M 1991 Index to the species of the family Geoplanidae Turbellaria Tricladida Terricola Part II Caenoplaninae and Pelmatoplaninae Bulletin of Fuji Women s College 29 2 35 58 a b Alvarez Presas M Baguna J Riutort M 2008 Molecular phylogeny of land and freshwater planarians Tricladida Platyhelminthes From freshwater to land and back Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 47 2 555 568 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2008 01 032 PMID 18359250 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Geoplanidae Video of juvenile Land Planarian in Borneo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geoplanidae amp oldid 1192913774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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