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| Archiacanthocephala | |
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| Apororhynchus hemignathi | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Superphylum: | Platyzoa |
| Phylum: | Acanthocephala |
| Class: | Archiacanthocephala Meyer, 1931[1] |
| Orders | |
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Apororhynchida |
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Archiacanthocephala is a class within the phylum of Acanthocephala.[2] They are microscopic parasitic worms that attach themselves to the intestinal wall of terrestrial vertebrates, including man. They are characterised by the body wall and the lemnisci (which are a bundle of sensory nerve fibers), which have nuclei that divide without spindle formation or the appearance of chromosomes or it has a few amoebae-like giant nuclei. Typically, there are eight separate cement glands in the male which is one of the few ways to distinguish the dorsal and ventrals sides of these organisms.
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