Hydra vulgaris

Hydra vulgaris
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Eumetazoa
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Hydrozoa
Order: Anthoathecata
Family: Hydridae
Genus: Hydra
Species: H. vulgaris
Binomial name
Hydra vulgaris
Pallas, 1766[1]
Synonyms

Hydra attenuata

Hydra vulgaris is a small (12mm) freshwater hydroid.

Contents

General

The hydra have 4 to 12 tentacles that protrude from just outside the mouth.

They feed by extending their tentacles and waiting for food to touch the tentacles. They then bring the food to their mouth, ingest and digest the organism. Anything that cannot be digested is egested. Ingestion and egestion occur through the mouth.

Like other hydra, Hydra vulgaris cling to a base object with a "foot" pad, shaped like a disk. The Hydra moves by releasing its grip on its base and is carried away by the current. Hydra vulgaris can also move by bending over, grabbing a surface with its tentacles, releasing its grip with its "foot" and flipping over itself.

H. vulgaris as a Model organism

H. vulgaris is often used, like many hydra, as a model organism for morphallactic regeneration because they are easy to care for, requiring minimal direct care, and reproduce relatively quickly. Besides, they do not undergo Senescence, making them biologically immortal.[2] They don't die from getting old; they die from sickness or being eaten.

Reproduction

H. vulgaris can reproduce in three ways, sexual reproduction, budding, and indirectly through regeneration.

When hydra reproduce sexually, simple testes, ovaries, or both will develop on the bodies of an individual. Sperm released into the environment by the testes enters the egg within the ovary. The egg forms a chitinous exoskeleton and waits for favorable conditions before the organism will emerge.

Budding occurs when conditions are favorable; proper water temperature and enough food are the major factors. A miniature adult hydra will grow out of the body of the parent hydra, once fully developed it will separate from the parent and continue the life cycle. Hydras use this kind of reproduction more often because it is easier and will create more hydras than other methods.

The third method of reproduction is more of a survival mechanism than a reproduction mechanism, however it propagates the species. When a hydra is cut into segments, each segment, if large enough, will grow into an individual hydra sized relative to the size of the segment. This happens in other animals like the starfish.

References