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COMPARISON OF INVERTS CHART Phylum “Name Means:” Examples Symmetry Digestive System Respiration/G as Exchange Pore Bearer Sponges None asymmetric Choanocytes (Collar cells) trap food particles from water Stinging Celled Jelly Fish Corals Sea Anemone Radial Gastrovascular Cavity (GVC) Stationary form = polyp Floating form = medusa With one opening Porifera Cnidarian (stinging cells = cnidocytes) Nervous System Reproduction Gasses diffuse directly from environment to & from cells Water enters thru pores, into central cavity and out thru osculum none Asexual – budding & regeneration Sexual hermaphroditic Gasses diffuse into/out of body tissues Gastrovascular cavity Nerve net Asexual – budding & regeneration Sexual hermaphroditic With one opening Flatworms Tapeworms Flukes Planaria Bilateral Highly branched GVC With one opening Gasses diffuse into/out of body tissues Highly branched GVC With one opening Cephalization – cluster of nerve cells at anterior end of worm 2 Nerve Cords Asexual – regeneration Sexual – hermaphroditic (tapeworms make proglottids that house reproductive organs and fertilized eggs) Roundworms Hookworm Ascaris Trichinella Guinea Worm Bilateral Complete digestive tract – mouth anus Gasses diffuse into/out of body tissues (through cuticle) Pseudocoelom distributes nutrients Simple ring of nerve tissue at anterior end with a nerve cord Dioecious – separate sexes Platyhelminthes Nematoda Internal Transport/ Circulation Phylum “Name Means:” Examples Symmetry Little rings (segmented worms) Earthworms Sandworms Leeches Bilateral Annelida (shell produced by a mantle) Jointed Foot Athropoda Respiration Gas Exchange Internal Transport/ Circulation Nervous System Complete with specialized organs for breakdown and absorption Gasses diffuse into/out of body tissues Closed Circulatory System - Aortic arches (hearts) Surrounding esophagus Cerebral ganglia (“brain”) and ventral nerve cord Asexual (regeneration) & sexual Some are hermaphroditic Gasses diffuse into/out of body tissues Some have gills (bivalves) Closed cephalopods Open – Gastropods Bivalves Complex – some capable of learning Sexual – Dioecious (for most species) Open Circulatory system Dorsal Heart Simple central nervous system Metanephridia remove liquid wastes Soft Bodied Mollusca Digestive system (Jointed appendages with exoskeleton) Squid Octopi Nautilus Clams Mussels Oysters Snails Slugs Arachnids (spiders) Crustaceans (crabs) Insects (butterfly) Bilateral Complete with specialized organs for breakdown and absorption Trachea Bilateral with Complete (insects)– segmentaDigestive tubules that tion tract Insects carry gases have into/out of Malpighian body tubules to Book Lungs (spiders) excrete liquid Gills waste Echinodermata Sea Star Brittle Star Sea Cucumber Sand Dollars Bilateral – larva Radial - adult Primitive Gut – turn stomach inside out to digest Water Vascular System (no excretory system for liquid wastes) Water Vascular System Sexual – Dioecious Pheromones – (crustaceans) Spiny Skinned Reproduction Water Vascular System Simple – central nerve ring with branches chemicals to attract mates Internal fertilization Eggs have waterproof covering Asexual – regeneration Sexual – mostly dioecious