PHYLUM PLATYHELMINTHES 



4. CLASS III. CESTODA 



a. The Tapeworm - - Tania 



The tapeworm, Tcsnia soli-urn, is a common parasite which 

 lives as an adult in the alimentary canal of man. A nearly 

 related species, T. saginata, is also a parasite of man. Tcenia, 

 as shown in Figure 107, is a long 

 flatworm consisting of a knob-like 

 head, the scolex (Fig. 107, B), and a 

 great number of similar parts, the 

 proglottides, arranged in a linear 

 series. The animal clings to the 

 wall of the alimentary canal by 

 means of hooks (Fig. 107, B, 2) and 

 suckers (j) on the scolex. Behind 

 the scolex is a short neck (4) followed 

 by a string of proglottides which 

 gradually increase in size from the 

 anterior to the posterior end. The 

 worm may reach a length of ten feet 

 and contain eight or nine hundred 

 proglottides. Since the 

 proglottides are budded 

 off from the neck (Fig. 

 107, B, 4), those at the 

 posterior end are the 

 oldest. The production 

 of proglottides may be 



compared to the forma- FIG. 107. - The tapeworm. A, Tasnia 

 tion of enhvraj bv the sa Kinata. The approximate lengths of the 



portions omitted in the drawing are given, 

 hydra-tuba of Amelia At * the branched uterus and longitudinal 



(Fig Si) and is Called an< ^ transverse excretory vessels are shown. 



. . . B, head or scoiex of Tania solium. i, rostellum; 



Strobilization. 2, hooks; j, suckers; 4, neck; 5, commence- 



The anatomv of the ent of strobUization. (A from the Cam- 



bridge Natural History; B, from Shipley and 



tapeworm is adapted to MacBride.) 



