Planaria - marvel of nature (video attached)

Free-living flatworms like the planaria are grouped into the Class Turbellaria. The most common species studied in the lab is the brown planaria, Dugesia. The animal has an acoelomate body (no internal cavity to hold organs), no anus and lacks a circulatory system. Most are scavengers and will eat other animals that have sank to the bottom of their ponds, hence why you can use liver to capture them.
The Dugesia does have a simple nervous system that includes a ganglia located in its anterior region to serve as a brain. As such, the dugesia exhibits the trait of cephalization, where the majority of its sense organs are located in the anterior region. It has a triangular head with two prominent eyespots. Upon closer inspection of the eyes, you can see that they have a curious cross-eyed expression to them. The presence of the two eyes and lateral horns on the head indicate that the planarian has bilateral symmetry.

The planarian will swim in a shallow petri dish by undulating its body across the surface of the dish. Most will stay close to the bottom or the edge of the dish. If given a choice, the planarian will actively seek an area of the dish that is dark or has some kind of cover. The eyespots can in fact, detect changes in light in the planarian's environment. If you shine a flashlight on the planarian, it will attempt to move out of the light.
The planarian does not have gills or lungs, it obtains its oxygen by simple diffusion over its flat body. The dugesia cannot survive outside of the water, so biologists studying it must make sure that the specimen has plenty of water that is aerated. The dugesia does have an excretory system to remove wastes. Tiny cells, called flame cells, line the lateral edge of the organism and function to remove waste.