What is Tymhlosole?
Typhlosole is a fold on the dorsal or upper side of the inner intestinal wall of the earthworm, which leads along most of the length of the earth's body. An important part of the gastrointestinal system, tyflosol increases the surface area available to effectively absorb the necessary nutrients from the food they spend. Tyflosol is not physically identical in different earthworms and in fact some earthworms do not have at all. In addition, earthworms are not the only animals that have tyflosol; Other animals that show tyflosol include molluscs and oysters. These sections include pharynx, esophagus and crop, as well as stomach and intestine. The common earther has a high intake of organic materials as a primary source of food including soil, vegetation and even folding bodies of dead animals. Inorganic materials can also spend the same time. The types of foods that earthworms are important because they determine the nutrients that the animal absorbs and the waste it excludes.
When he eats eats, the pharynx is part of the body that swallows her food. After the food passes through the pharynx, it passes through the esophagus, where the body of the earthworm gets rid of any excess calcium. When this process takes place, the crop stores food until it moves to the stomach. Gizzard completely crushes food with stones that the earthworm also spent. Then the ground meal passes into the intestines, where tyflosole works, among other things, on nutrient absorption.
Earthworms can consume up to its own body weight daily and therefore needs the right digestive system to effectively absorb nutrients. With atyphlosole, the earthworm is better equipped to perform this task. While nutrient absorption is important, it is also waste secretion. In fact, waste secretion is beneficial for both earthworms and its environment.
The digestive system of the earthworm is related to the healthy life of soil and plants. Like the earthworm, it absorbs its nutrients, plants need their own nutrients to survive. Becomes so thatAfter the earthworm absorbs its nutrients, it excludes waste into the soil. Nitrogen exists in the secretion of earthworms and is an important nutrient for plants.