The body plan of hemichordates is characterized by a muscular organization. The
anteroposterior axis is divided into three parts: the anterior prosome, the intermediate mesosome, and the posterior metasome. The body of acorn worms is worm-shaped and divided into an anterior proboscis, an intermediate collar, and a posterior trunk. The proboscis is a muscular and
ciliated organ used in locomotion and in the collection and transport of food particles. The mouth is located between the proboscis and the collar. The trunk is the longest part of the animal. It contains the pharynx, which is perforated with gill slits (or pharyngeal slits), the oesophagus, a long intestine, and a terminal anus. It also contains the gonads. A post-anal tail is present in juvenile members of the acorn worm family
Harrimaniidae. The prosome of pterobranchs is specialized into a muscular and ciliated cephalic shield used in locomotion and in secreting the coenecium. The mesosome extends into one pair (in the genus
Rhabdopleura) or several pairs (in the genus
Cephalodiscus) of tentaculated arms used in filter feeding. The metasome, or trunk, contains a looped digestive tract, gonads, and extends into a contractile stalk that connects individuals to the other members of the colony, produced by asexual budding. In the genus
Cephalodiscus, asexually produced individuals stay attached to the contractile stalk of the parent individual until completing their development. In the genus
Rhabdopleura, zooids are permanently connected to the rest of the colony via a common
stolon system. Some species
biomineralize in
calcium carbonate. They have a
diverticulum of the foregut called a
stomochord, previously thought to be related to the chordate
notochord, but this is most likely the result of
convergent evolution rather than a
homology.
Nervous system The nervous system is a sub-epidermal diffused nerve net that is thickened in the mid-dorsal and mid-ventral regions. A hollow dorsal nerve cord (exists in some species) is present in the collar region that consists of concentrated nerve plexuses. It is considered as the most advanced part and is probably a primitive trait that they share with the common ancestor of
Chordata and the rest of the deuterostomes. There is no centralized brain but the nerve plexus and
ganglia in anterior regions function as key information processing centers. Because the nervous system is largely in the epidermis, it acts as a "skin brain" with many cells acting as both sensory and motor controllers. Hemichordates lack complex sense organs but posses
photoreceptor cells, such as pigmented eyespots at the apical ganglion, and chemoreceptive pre-oral organs. No evidence of
neuromuscular junctions suggests that movement of the organism is regulated by the action of
neurotransmitters that are released in the muscular tissues. The nervous system of adult
enteropneusts consists of: • the basiepidermal nerve net • the
dorsal nerve cord • the
ventral nerve cord • the prebranchial nerve ring • the apical ganglion
Circulatory system Hemichordates have an
open circulatory system, that is without any capillaries. The vascular system itself is quite peculiar, consisting of lacunae and channels without
endothelium. Central sinus lies over the
stomochord and is surrounded by a closed vesicle of contractile walls called the pericardium. The heart, located dorsally in the proboscis region, consists of a sinus but the blood does not actually enter the heart so it is not a heart in the strict sense. By the pulsating movement of the pericardial vesicle, the blood is driven into two longitudinal blood vessels, dorsal and ventral, and a series of sinuses where the tissues bathe in blood. The dorsal vessel leads the blood to the gill-slits(when present) ,where it is oxygenated, and then it returns through the ventral vessel. The blood is colourless and has no respiratory pigments. In
Enteropneusta, blood enters the glomerulus, a vascular complex on either side of the anterior part of stomochord, from where it accomplishes its excretion.
Digestive system The digestive system in Hemichordates is composed of a rudimentary tube-like gut that ends into a terminal anus. Food enters into the mouth and passes through the buccal cavity into the pharynx, where it gets separated from water that enters gill slits for respiration. The pharynx leads into an esophagus which opens into the intestine, the main site of digestion and absorption. The intestine is the longest portion of their alimentary canal, extending through the trunk to the terminal anus. It acts as a straight, ciliated tube responsible for the digestion of organic material within the mud or detritus consumed by the animal. It breaks down food particles, which are pulled through the tract primarily by cilia rather than muscular contraction. The intestine often exhibits characteristic
hepatic caeca or liver sacs in the middle trunk region, as dorsolateral swellings. The undigested food and waste is ultimately discarded via the anus. == Development ==