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Geoplanidae

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

Description
'' is a land planarian with dull colors. 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. At first they may be confused with slugs or leeches, 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 metre. 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. 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. == Anatomy ==
Anatomy
Epidermis 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. ==Diversity==
Diversity
The family Geoplanidae is composed of five subfamilies: 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. == Habitat ==
Habitat
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. Despite being sensitive to dehydration, some species are well adapted to considerably dry environments, such as savannas. 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. 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. == Feeding and predatory behavior ==
Feeding and predatory behavior
Land planarians are carnivorous and most species are active predators, but some are mainly scavengers. 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. Some may even feed on other land planarians. 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. 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. 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. Different species use different techniques for capturing and immobilizing their prey, such as entrapment with sticky mucus and immobilization by physical force. Cannibalism has been observed in land planarians. ==Phylogeny and systematics==
Phylogeny and systematics
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). • 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. The old subfamilies Caenoplaninae and Pelmatoplaninae have been included as tribes Caenoplanini and Pelmatoplanini inside Rhynchodeminae. Note that Spathula and Romankenkius belong to the family Dugesiidae. Their relocation inside Geoplanidae needs further investigation. ==Image gallery==
Image gallery
File:Bipalium adventitium close up.jpg|Bipalium adventitium close up under a rock, North California, USA. File:Geoplana ladislavi.jpg|Obama ladislavii from a garden in Porto Alegre, southern Brazil. File:Cephaloflexa araucariana.JPG|Cephaloflexa araucariana from the São Francisco de Paula National Forest, southern Brazil. File:Luteostriata ernesti.JPG|Luteostriata ernesti in the São Francisco de Paula National Forest. File:Notogynaphallia plumbea.jpg|Notogynaphallia plumbea from an Araucaria moist forest in Paraná, Brazil. File:Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Terricola, Atlantic forest, northern littoral of Bahia, Brazil (14617707721).jpg|Unidentified land planarian from Bahia, Brazil. File:Geoplaninae.jpg|Unidentified land planarian from the Valdivian Rainforest in southern Chile. File:Pseudogeoplana reticulata.jpg|Pseudogeoplana reticulata from the Valdivian Rainforest. File:Caenoplana coerulea.jpg|Caenoplana coerulea, the blue planarian. File:New Zealand flatworm 2.JPG|Arthurdendyus triangulatus, the New Zealand flatworm. File:Peerj-297-fig-1 Platydemus manokwari.png|Platydemus manokwari in France. File:Rhynchodemus sylvaticus.jpg|Rhynchodemus sylvaticus in the Iberian Peninsula. File:Microplana sp2.JPG|Microplana robusta in Portugal. File:Diversibipalium multilineatum from Italy - Fig 1 a - Body.png|Diversibipalium multilineatum in Italy. File:Bipaliinae 2.jpg|Species of subfamily Bipaliinae in Sarawak, Malaysia. File:Diversibipalium rauchi.png|Diversibipalium rauchi in Thomson Nature Park, Singapore. File:Bipaliumjavanum15062024.jpg|Bipalium Javanum in Java, Indonesia. ==References==
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