Page:The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms (1881).djvu/51

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Chap. I.
FOOD AND DIGESTION.
37

Léon Frédéricq states[1] that the digestive fluid of worms is of the same nature as the pancreatic secretion of the higher animals; and this conclusion agrees perfectly with the kinds of food which worms consume. Pancreatic juice emulsifies fat, and we have just seen how greedily worms devour fat; it dissolves fibrin, and worms eat raw meat; it converts starch into grape-sugar with wonderful rapidity, and we shall presently show that the digestive fluid of worms acts on starch.[2] But they live chiefly on half-decayed leaves; and these would be useless to them unless they could digest the cellulose forming the cell-walls; for it is well known that all other nutritious substances are almost completely withdrawn from leaves, shortly before they fall off. It has, however, now been ascertained that cellulose, though very little or not at all attacked by the gastric secretion of the higher animals, is acted on by that from the pancreas.[3]

  1. 'Archives de Zoologie expérimentale,' tom. vii. 1878, p. 394.
  2. On the action of the pancreatic ferment, see 'A Text-Book of Physiology,' by Michael Foster, 2nd edit. pp. 198–203. 1878.
  3. Schmulewitsch, 'Action des Sucs digestifs sur la Cellulose.' Bull. de l'Acad. Imp. de St. Pétersbourg, tom. xxv. p. 549. 1879.