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Phylum Cnidaria
Sea anemones, jellyfish, coral

Approx. 10,000 species

Mostly marine

Radial symmetry

Carnivorous

Have a centrally located mouth
surrounded by tentacles

Mouth opens to a gut where food is
digested

Have only one opening that is used for
both feeding and excretion
Cnidaria
The Basics




Cnidarians get their name from the
cnidocytes that are located along their
tentacles
These structures are used for defense and
to capture prey
Each cnidocyte contains a nematocyst,
which is a poison-filled, stinging structure
that contains a tightly coiled dart
As prey brushes against the tentacles:
Thousands of nematocysts explode into the
animal
 Poison is injected and either paralyzes or kills
the prey
 The prey is then brought to the mouth by the
tentacles

Cnidaria
Cnidocytes and Nematocysts
Cnidaria
Cnidocytes and Nematocysts

Polyp
A
sac-like attached
stage with the mouth
and tentacles oriented
upward
 Anemones,

coral
Medusa
 An
upside down polyp
adapted for swimming
 Jellies
Cnidaria
Forms of Cnidarians

Many consist of feathery or bushy
colonies of tiny polyps

Can be attached or motile

The polyps can be specialized for
feeding, defense, or reproduction

Siphonophores are hydrozoans that
form drifting colonies of polyps
 Some
polyps may be specialized as floats,
others form tentacles
 Ex
– Portuguese Man of War
Cnidaria
Types of Cnidarians - Hydrozoans
Tall Tubularia
Herringbone Hydroid
Clapper Hydromedusa
Cross Jelly
Portuguese Man of War
Cnidaria - Hydrozoans
Ringed Tubularia
“True Jellies”
 Large medusa are the dominant life
cycle
 Polyps are very small and release
juvenile medusa
 Have a bell (rounded body) that can
reach a diameter of 10 ft
 Swim with rhythmic contractions of the
bell, but really rely on currents
 Some are extremely dangerous and
their stings can be fatal

Cnidaria
Types of Cnidarians - Scyphozoans
Moon Jelly
White Spotted Jelly
Helmet Jelly
Blubber Jelly
Lions Mane Jelly
Oceanic Jelly
Cnidaria - Scyphozoans
Sea Nettle


Solitary or colonial polyps that lack a medusa
stage
More complex than scyphozoans and hydrozoans







The gut contains septa which increase surface area for
digestion
Septa also provide increased support allowing these
organisms to grow larger
All (except anemones) are asymmetrical
Corals – mostly colonial; calcium carbonate
skeleton
Sea anemones – colorful; often have large polyps
Gorgonians (sea fans) – colonial; secrete a tough
branching skeleton made partially of protein
Soft corals, sea pens, sea pansies – form fleshy
colonies with large polyps and no hard skeletons
Cnidaria
Types of Cnidarians - Anthozoans
Cup Coral
Stony Coral
Green Mushroom Coral
Deepwater White Coral
Red Mushroom Coral
Sun Coral
Brain Coral
Cnidaria - Coral
Cup Coral
Green Anemones
Beadlet Anemone
Swimming Anemone
Horseman Anemone
Fireworks Anemone
Banded Tube Anemone
Cnidaria – Sea Anemones
Green Anemone
Orange Sea Fan
Bali Blue Sea Fan
Red Sea Fan with Polyps
Cnidaria – Gorgonia
Purple Sea Fan
Cnidaria – Soft Coral
Cnidaria – Sea Pens
Cnidaria – Sea Pansies
Box Jellies
 Most poisonous jellies
 Look similar to true jellies

 Main
difference is their shape – from above,
they have a box shape
Faster moving than true jellies
 Have eyes
 Typically have 4 tentacles or 4 groups of
tentacles
 20 species
 Found in tropical and subtropical waters

Cnidaria
Types of Cnidarians - Cubazoans
Cnidaria - Cubazoans




Most are carnivorous
Use tentacles to capture prey and bring to mouth
where ingestion occurs
Food passes into the gut where digestion occurs

Initial phase of digestion is extracellular, meaning it
takes place outside cells

After initial digestion, the partially digested food
enters into cells to complete digestion intercellularly
Anything that can’t be digested exits the animal
through the mouth
Cnidaria
Feeding and Digestion

Rely on diffusion for all three of these
processes

Diffusion occurs within and between
cells and through the body walls
Cnidaria
Respiration, Circulation, Excretion

Cnidarians lack a brain or
true nerves

However, they do have
specialized nerve cells
that connect to form a
nerve net

Some medusa have
primitive eyes and
statocysts, which give a
sense of balance
Cnidaria
Response
Asexual by budding and fission
 Sexual

 Sexes
are often separate
 Female
 Male
releases eggs into water
releases sperm into water
 External
fertilization – fertilization takes
place outside the body
 If species is a type of polyp, larvae will
attach to a hard surface and develop into
an adult
 If species is a medusa, larvae will continue
to move as it develops
Cnidaria
Reproduction
Cnidaria
Fission and Budding
Cnidaria
Spawning

Cnidarians: Life on the Move (15 min)
 http://www.shapeoflife.org/video/cnidari
ans-life-move

Cnidarians: Moon Jelly Life Cycle (3
min)
 http://www.shapeoflife.org/video/cnidari
ans-moon-jelly-life-cycle
Cnidaria
Videos –