Hammerhead Worm: Difference between revisions

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=== Habitat and Range ===
=== Habitat and Range ===
Hammerhead [[flatworms]] thrive in moist environments, including forests and agricultural fields. They are found amongst the upper [[soil]] layers and in leaf litter [2]. Although these worms prefer warm, wet environments, they are highly adaptive to different environments, including temperate forests in midlatitudes. This element allows hammerhead worms to invade higher latitudes than that of which they are native to. In their native range of Southeast Asia, hammerhead flatworms live in soils.  
Hammerhead [[flatworms]] thrive in moist environments, including forests and agricultural fields. They are found amongst the upper [[soil]] layers and in leaf litter [2]. Although these worms prefer warm, wet environments, they are highly adaptive to different environments, including temperate forests in midlatitudes. This element allows hammerhead worms to invade higher latitudes than that of which they are native to. In their native range of Southeast Asia, hammerhead flatworms live in soils.  


=== Life Cycle ===
=== Life Cycle ===

Revision as of 17:30, 17 April 2025

Scientific Classification
caption
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Platyhelminthes
Class: Turbellaria
Order: Tricladida
Family: Geoplanidae
Genus: Bipalium
Source: County of Brant [4]

Description

Bipalium, also known as the hammerhead worm, land planarian, or shovel-head garden worm, is a genus of invasive flatworm found in moist terrestrial environments in the northeastern United States [2]. The hammerhead worm is native to southeast Asia, and was introduced in 1891 [1]. This is easily identifiable by its distinct flattened body and oblong hammerhead. The worms are most often yellow, orange, or light brown, with a varying number of darker brown stripes running the length of the body [2]. Hammerhead worms pose a threat to natural ecosystems, as there are at least three species that have been found to feed exclusively on earthworms. They also pose a potential threat to agricultural operations, especially those operating in warm, moist environments [3].


Bipalium preying upon an earthworm [5]

Behaviors

Habitat and Range

Hammerhead flatworms thrive in moist environments, including forests and agricultural fields. They are found amongst the upper soil layers and in leaf litter [2]. Although these worms prefer warm, wet environments, they are highly adaptive to different environments, including temperate forests in midlatitudes. This element allows hammerhead worms to invade higher latitudes than that of which they are native to. In their native range of Southeast Asia, hammerhead flatworms live in soils.


Life Cycle

Impact as an Invasive Species

A map of where Bipalium has been found in the United States [6]

Bipalium has the ability to reproduce through binary fission. This means that a single worm can spontaneously split into two, and each half will regrow the missing half in approximately a week.


References

[6] EDDMapS. 2025. Early Detection & Distribution Mapping System. The University of Georgia - Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health. Available online at http://www.eddmaps.org/; last accessed April 17, 2025.