File: 
<rotifera.htm>                                                           <Index to Invertebrates>            <Bibliography>                   <Glossary>           Site Description      
<Navigate to Home>
 
 
|   Invertebrate
  Zoology   Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Rotifera (Contact)   
       CLICK on underlined file names and included illustrations to
  enlarge:               The Phylum: Rotifera derives its
  name from "Bearing a wheel" or "Wheel
  animacules."  There is a prominent circular array of cilia
  at the anterior end of the animal that looks like a rotating wheel.  This is known as the Trochal
  disc
  or Corona.  Rotifers occur primarily in freshwater and
  all are microscopic.  They possess a
  set of chewing structures called mastax with
  teeth, which is located down in the pharynx and used for food shredding.             A representative Genus is Hydatina,
  which is a common freshwater rotifer.             Body Plan.--
  There is bilateral symmetry and the mouth is located at the ventral edge of
  the trochal disc.  The trunk is the
  main part of the body, and there is a foot with two toes that is forked at
  the posterior end.  The anus is
  located mid dorsally.               Body Wall.--
  A cuticle is secreted by the epidermis. 
  The epidermis is a syncytium with no cell boundaries.  The muscles do not occur in distinct
  layers but are scattered around in bundles and individual fibers.  Thus they do not form a continuous layer.             Body Cavity.--
  This consists of a pseudocoelom.             Food & Digestion.--
  The food is of microscopic bacteria, protozoa and algae.  The food is collected by means of a water current
  set up by the trochal disc and carried down into the mouth.  The mouth empties into a pharynx where it
  is "chewed" by the mastax. 
  The food is then passed through a short esophagus and into a large
  stomach.  Digestion is aided by
  digestive juices, which are secreted by gastric glands located
  near the anterior end of the stomach. 
  Absorption occurs here also. 
  The stomach gives way to the intestines and finally enters the cloaca,
  which is a common cavity for excretory, reproductive and digestive systems.             Circulation, Respiration &
  Excretion.-- The distribution of
  materials through the pseudocoelom is accomplished by a simple
  "slopping" around and diffusion. 
  Respiration is by diffusion. 
  Flame cells perform excretion. 
  They occur in a definite number and pattern and empty into a coiled
  pair of excretory ducts, which join at the
  posterior end where they form an elaborate bladder that
  runs into the cloaca.              Support & Protection.--
  The cuticle supports the animal as do the muscles.  The fluid-filled sac also affords support.  They are able to avoid some hazards by
  movements away.             Locomotion.
  -- There are two kinds of locomotion: (1) ciliary activity on the corona and
  (2) crawling on vegetation by making particular use of the foot.  Pedal glands secrete
  adhesive material, which comes out on the foot.  It can thus adhere to surfaces.  The movement is of "inch-worm" type.  Some rotifers are sessile and live in a
  gelatinous case that is secreted around them and sometimes bound by their
  faeces.             Sensitivity.--
  Rotifers are sensitive all over their body and especially on the trochal
  disc.  There are some tactile
  structures on the corona and a dorsal feeler, eyespots and olfactory sensory
  areas.  These are all retractile and
  can be pulled back into the body.             Nervous System.-- A brain of
  fair size lies dorsal to the mastax. 
  One large nerve runs directly to the dorsal feeler, and small nerves
  run to various other body parts.             Reproduction.--
  The sexes are separate and there is considerable difference between them, the
  male being small and degenerate. 
  Males are also extremely rare. 
  They possess an underdeveloped trochal disc, the remnant of a
  digestive tract, but their muscles are well developed.  Excretory structures are present, but the
  main organs are reproductive.  They
  have a projected penis.             The female ovary has a germarium,
  which produces egg cells, and a vitellarium that
  produces yolk cells.  Both are
  entralecithal.  The oviduct leads away
  from the germarium and to the cloaca and outside.  It may be swollen over one area that is called the uterus.             Reproduction runs through a cycle
  in which at first only parthenogenesis occurs but which is terminated by
  sexual reproduction (see Life Cycle diagram below).             Copulation.--
  This is done by Hypodermic Impregnation,
  where the male's penis punctures the body wall of the female and introduces
  sperm directly into the pseudocoelom.             Life Cycle.
  -- There are three groups of Rotifera: 
  (1) separate sexes are all alike and occur in the marine environment,
  (2) there is alternation between parthenogenesis and fertilization and (3)
  only females are present that multiply by parthenogenesis.  Numbers 2 & 3 occur in freshwater.               Ecology. -- Rotifera
  are extremely resistant to environmental differences, particularly to
  desiccation.  They may survive for
  several years in the desiccated state. 
  The entire body shriveling up after which it may be blown around by
  the wind, carried by humans and animals, etc, accomplishes this.  Normal activity will resume upon coming
  into contact with water again.             Most species of Rotifera are
  worldwide in distribution, and their winter eggs are likewise resistant to
  extremes.             Economic Importance.
  -- There is no direct economic importance, but indirectly they live off of
  primary producers.             Variation
  in Body Plan. -- There is great
  variation in the body plan.  For
  example some species are sessile, other free living.  The corona is variously modified, some
  species are case builders and some are viviparous.  The Genus Asplanchna has a digestive tract that stops after the
  stomach.               Cell Constancy.
  -- This is like Acanthocephala in that there is a limited number of egg cells
                                            
  but not sperm.   ------------------------------------   Please see
  following plate for Example Structures of the Rotifera:   Plate 32
  = Phylum: Rotifera: Hydatina senta --
  Lateral view   ==============     |