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Marine Animals Chapter 5 Nutrition in Animals Minerals Water Sugars & starches Fats Proteins Vitamins Nutrition: process by which organisms use food to perform life acti activities. ities Metabolism: process by which animals break down and utilize nutrients. Carbohydrates: C H, H &O • Contain C, • Source of “quick” energy • Simple p sugar g is known as Glucose • When glucose is not being used in the body, it is stored as starch . • Starches can be changed back to glucose when the organism needs energy. Lipids: • High-energy nutrients known as Fats and oils • A molecule of fat contains more energy than does a molecule of carbohydrates • There are many more carbon-hydrogen carbon hydrogen bonds in a fat molecule than in a carbohydrate molecule Proteins: • Needed for growth and repair of their cells • Composed of smaller “building blocks” called Amino Acids • 2 amino acids joined together form a dipeptide 3 amino acids form a tripeptide many amino acids joined together form a polypeptide Minerals: • Elements and compounds found in water and soil that do not contain Carbon • Known as inorganic compounds • Plants absorb minerals from water • For animals, Calcium is needed for bone and tooth g growth • Iron is found in RBC’s and is used to carry oxygen to cells and carbon dioxide away from cells • Muscles and nerves require Na and Cl ions to function • Phosphorus is an essential element for ATP and DNA • Silica is found in the cell walls of diatoms • Iodine is found in thyroxin – hormone that regulates growth and metabolism in vertebrates Vitamins: • Organic compounds needed in small amounts to maintain good health g of enzymes y • Aid in the functioning • Vitamin C is found in fruits and vegetables and is needed to prevent vitamin deficiency di disease and d scurvy • Vitamin D is needed for healthy bone growth growth. Produced in small amounts in marine animals when UV light g reacts with fat located under their skin • Marine plants are rich source of vitamins: A: importance in vision and bone growth E: immune function, DNA repair K: clotting vitamin B: cell metabolism Scurvy: Scurvy leads to the formation of liver spots on the skin skin, spongy gums, and bleeding from all mucous membranes. Gingival Hemorrhage Periungual Hemorrhage Beriberi A nervous system ailment caused by a vitamin deficiency of Thiamin (vitamin B1) in the diet. Thiamin i involved is i l d in i the th breakdown b kd off energy molecules l l such as glucose and is also found on the membranes of neurons. Symptoms of beriberi include severe lethargy and fatigue, together with complications affecting the cardiovascular nervous, cardiovascular, nervous muscular, muscular and gastrointestinal systems Sponges Characteristics: • Classified in the phylum Porifera (pore bearing) • Considered benthic (bottom-dwelling) organisms • 2 layers of undifferentiated cells: endoderm d d – inner i layer l ectoderm – outer layer Mesenchyme – jellylike material in between the two layers • 2 major cell types in their tissues: collar cells – contain flagella and waft water into its epithelium ith li (tissue (ti that th t protects t t the th sponge’s ’ outer t surface). It has contractible pores through which water enters. amoebocytes – pick up nutrient particles from the incoming flow and distribute the nutrients throughout the sponge. sponge • Oscula: large openings that let filtered water exit • Considered filter feeders • Pores can get clogged with debris. They avoid this by: secreting ti large l quantities titi off mucous to t cleanse l their surface of debris and pathogens providing p g a niche for mutualistic worms,, sea cucumbers, and other organisms Spicules give shape to sponges. Rotifers • • • • • • Multicellular organisms (Wheel Bearer) Common in freshwater Phylum Rotifera Able to change the shape of their body Some are predatory predatory, others are scavengers Moving cilia create water current that pulls food towards their mouth • Male produces sperm in its testis • Female produces eggs in her ovaries • Have external fertilization and external development • C Can also l reproduce d through th h parthenogenesis th i – asexual process where female produces an egg that has a complete set of chromosomes. The egg develops into a female. Bryozoans • Name means “moss animal” • Belongs to phylum Bryozoa • Lives within a box- or vase-shaped compartment made of calcium carbonate or chitin • Two main types: encrusting and erect • Feed on plankton and organic debris • Reproduce both sexually and asexually • Most are hermaphrodites, self-fertilization actually occurs Phylum Cnidaria • Includes soft and hard corals,, sea anemones,, hydroids, sea fans, jellyfish, and siphonophores • Are radially symmetrical – symmetry around a point, lik pie like i slices li or a clock l k fface • Have a cup or umbrella shaped body made of 2 tissue layers that are separated by a layer of jelly known as mesoglea • Around the rim of the body are tentacles • A mouth opens into the gastrovascular cavity – space in the middle of the body • Cavity is used for digestion and reproduction • Take one of two body forms: 1. polyp – organisms that are attached normally soft Sea anemone Brain coral 2. medusa – free-floating mouth and tentacles typically point downward Jellyfish Jellyfish (Class Scyphozoa) • Move by contracting and pulsating their rounded body, or bell. • Nematocysts – structures on tentacles that sting. Are essentially coiled darts that remain loaded, ready to strike strike, and release toxins when triggered by contact with an animal • Cnidocytes – special cells that make up nematocysts Jellyfish Life Cycle • Life cycle y includes sexual and asexual reproduction p phases. • Testis produce sperm, which swim out of the male’s mouth th and d into i t the th female’s f l ’ mouth th and d digestive di ti tract. • Sperm fertilizes egg in the ovary. • First, becomes a zygote • Second, early stages are called embryos • Third, solid ball of cells form called morula • Fourth, morula becomes the blastula • Fifth, Fifth surface f cells ll off the th growing i blastula bl t l become b ciliated, forming a swimming larva. • Sixth, develops into a polyp which has a mouth, tentacles, and digestive cavity. • Immature jellyfish break off from the polyp from b ddi budding, which hi h is i the th asexuall phase h off reproduction. d ti Class Hydrozoa • Live in the intertidal and subtidal zones. • Colonial animals, made up many individual polyps that function together as a single organism. • Have a medusa and a planula phase. Portuguese Man-of-War Corals and Anemones (Class A th Anthozoa) ) • • • • Most coral are colonial; anemones are individual Coral colonies may grow for centuries Th can shape They h coastlines tli and d build b ild entire ti islands i l d The hard corals are made up of limestone (calcium carbonate) and can form massy stony structures. • Soft corals are composed of a fibrous protein, giving them flexibility. • Underwater, soft coral look more like plants than animals. Marine Worms Water column: the vertical zone of water that extends from the top of the ocean to its bottom. Flatworms • • • • Phylum Platyhelminthes Bodies are flat Both freshwater and saltwater species S Some are microscopic, i i other th can grow 20meters 20 t in i length Planarians • • • • • Feed on small organisms and organic debris Found in freshwater and marine environments Have a mouth on their lower, ventral, surface Mouth connects to a branched digestive cavity Food enters mouth, digested in the intestine, nutrients diffuse throughout the body, and undigested materials are discharged from the mouth • Glides along the bottom by moving its head side to side • Cilia are attached to cells on the its ventral side • Have two eyespots which are surrounded by ganglia (nerve clusters) • Ganglia act like a simple brain which sends nerve impulses along two ventral nerve cords to the rest of its body • Has bilateral symmetry • Possesses all three cell layers: ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm • Capable of sexual and asexual reproduction • Are hermaphroditic, self-fertilization does not occur Tapeworms and Trematodes Parasite: organism that obtains its food by living in or on the body of another organism. H t the Host: th organism i that th t is i fed f d on. • Tapeworms are found in the intestines of animals, including humans • Attaches itself to the intestinal lining of its host and absorbs nutrients directly through its thin body wall • Can grow to more than 18 meters in length What is the world's longest parasite? Tapeworm What is the world's longest tapeworm? The longest tapeworm ever removed from a human came out of Sally Mae Wallace on September 05, 1991. In all, doctors pulled 37 feet of tapeworm out of Sally Mae Wallace's body through her mouth. • Trematodes are also known as flukes • Lives in the bodies of mollusks,, fish,, birds,, and other animals • Accidentally eaten in raw fish may the reproduce in the digestive tract of people people. • Human wastes that are discharged into bodies of water may y contain trematode’s eggs. gg • Eggs develop into swimming larvae • Penetrate the soft skin of their first host – the snail • Larvae develop and discharged into the water seeking their second host – fish or birds even humans Ribbon Worms • Largest free-living worm in the sea • Phylum Nemertea • Are unsegmented g and ciliated,, have a milky y color,, and are thin and flat like ribbons • Have a more “highly” developed circulatory and di digestive ti systems t • Live in the intertidal zone • Average length is 1 meter but can grow up to 12 meters • Feed by using their proboscis – a sharp, sticky extension – by spearing their prey. • One way digestive tract – has a stomach and intestine – and waste exits through the anus • Simple closed circulatory system • Have both sexual and asexual reproduction • Nervous system consisting of ganglia Roundworms • • • • • • • • Most numerous of all worms in the sea More than 10,000 species Move by using whipping movements Head region has ganglia which connect to nerves that control muscle movements Phylum Nematoda Sexual reproduction Parasitic worms No circulatory or p y systems y respiratory Segmented Worms • • • • • Earthworm is best known Body is divided into segments Phylum Annelida (little rings) Many feed on organic matter in sediment Breathe through their skin • Another example is the clamworm • Live in muddy sands in both the intertidal and subtidal btid l zones off inland i l d bays b and d marshes h • Phylum Polychaeta (many bristles) • Captures its prey using two sharp hooks in their mouth, also has a proboscis • One-way digestive tube, food expelled through anus • Coelom: C l fl id fill d space that fluid-filled th t separates t the th digestive tract from the skin p paddle-like appendages p pp g used for • Parapodia: locomotion, located on each segment Sandworms • Each parapodia have hairlike bristles called setae • Has a nervous system to coordinate movement of its b d body • Eyelike receptors receive light stimuli • Breathe through their parapodia • Closed circulatory system, consists of dorsal blood vessel, arteries, veins, and capillaries • Dorsal blood vessel pumps the blood • Well developed excretory system; nephridia – coiled tubes in each body segment used for excreting waste products Bloodworms • Some are polychaetes. • Open circulatory system • Usually burrow in sand and hide in seaweed Leeches •Segmented worms without bristles •Some Some are free-living; free living; other are parasites •Attaches to its host using two suckers and sharp teeth in each sucker p pierce the host’s skin •Hirudin anticoagulant secreted by leeches Other Polychaetes • They live inside a tube • Worms are small and threadlike in appearance • They thrust feathery gills out of the tube and into the water to obtain oxygen, give off carbon dioxide, and eat plankton Giant Tube Worms • Ph Phylum l Pogonophora P h • Live near hot-water vents on the deep seafloor • Measure up to one meter long and live clustered in water rich in hydrogen sulfide. • Bacteria living in these worms use the hydrogen from the hydrogen sulfide and combine it with carbon dioxide from seawater to produce sugars. • Process known as chemosynthesis Arrow Worms • • • • Found near the surface of the ocean Tiny and transparent Just a few centimeters long H Have ti tiny fins fi for f swimming i i but b t mostly tl drift d ift as partt of the plankton community One-way way digestive tract • One • No circulatory or respiratory systems • Simple nervous system that let’s let s them respond to stimuli • Two eyes in the head region are sensitive to light • Papillae: sensory projections located along the worms surface and sensitive to touch • Are A h hermaphrodites; h dit sexuall reproduction d ti • External fertilization