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The organs of excretion in flatworms are contractile vacuoles. Flatworms are invertebrates that do not have any specialized excretion organs.

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The excretory organs in an earthworm Excretory organs in FLAT & are called ... In the life cycle of the beef tapeworm, Planaria, flukes, and tapeworms are.

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Q: The excretory organs in a planaria or fluke are called?
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Continue Learning about Biology

What are the characteristics of Fasciola hepatica?

The effects of liver fluke are referred to as fascioliasis, and includeanaemia, weight lossand sub-mandibularoedema. Diarrhea is only an occasional consequence of liver fluke. Liver fluke is diagnosed by yellow-brown eggs in thefeces.


How does the schistosoma fluke affect humans?

They cause schistosomiosis which is a serious disease that forms when the schistosoma eggs clog blood vessels, causing swelling and tissue decay in the lungs, liver, spleen, or intestines


What are all the classes of flatworms?

Planaria, tapeworms and flukes are all classic examples of flatworms. Planaria live in the creeks, flukes live in the livers of sheep, and tapeworms live in the intestines of cows, dogs and even humans.


What is the life cycle of a blood fluke?

Male deposits Sperm in the female worm. lays her eggs in the host. Egg leaves host in Urine and Feces. If egg lands in water infects snails. After they leave the snail, the young worms burrow into the skin of a new host, such as a human, while he or she is standing or swimming in water.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Inside their human host, the blood flukes grow, become sexually mature, and mate. After mating, the newly fertilized eggs are passed out of the host in their feces. Upon leaving the host, each egg hatches into a ciliated, swimming larva, called miracidium. This larva infects a certain type of freshwater snail and reproduces asexually inside it. In time, fork-tailed swimming larvae develop and leave the snail, swimming about until they contact human skin. Upon finding a human host, the fork-tailed larvae burrow into their human host. Once inside, they migrate to the host’s intestinal veins and begin the cycle anew.