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a i r a d i n C Phylum aul P d n a , h s o J , in t By Jus n o i t c u d o Intr Phylum Cnidaria also called Coelenterata is a phylum containing over 10,000 species of animals found exclusively in aquatic and mostly marine environments. Their distinguishing feature is cnidocytes, specialized cells that are mainly used for capturing the prey.Their bodies consist of mesoglea, which is a non-living jelly-like substance. They have two basic body forms swimming medusae and sessile polyps, both are radially symmetrical. a i r a d i n C f o s e l p m a x E The phylum Cnidaria are group of aquatic animals. They are large phylum composed of the most beautiful of the salt and freshwater organisms that include: - Jellyfish - Hydra - Sea Anemones s e i c e p S e h t n e e w t e B s e i t i r a l i m i S - All are radially symmetrical. - Has a U-shaped body along with two layers of cells, an outer epidermis, and an inner gastrodermis layer, which makes them diploblastic. - Has a fibrous jelly that fills the space between the two layers called mesoglea. - Has a simple net-like nervous system and has a single cavity that both serves as the food consumption and excretion of waste. Jellyfish - Jellyfish are semi-transparent and they are only 5% of solid matter and form the remaining percent is all water. - Jellyfish live in the sea and are found in all oceans and some even live in fresh waters. Jellyfish can be large and brightly coloured. Some jellyfish can be very hard to see and invisible to the naked eye. Jellyfish use their tentacles to sting. Most are harmless but stings can can kill humans. Jellyfish are carnivores and feed on plankton, fish eggs, small fish, and other jellyfish. Both the tentacles and mouth are located on the bottom Hydra Hydra are small aquatic animals. Most hydra are tiny, reaching a maximum of only 30 mm long. They are barely visible to the naked eye. A microscope is needed to be able to see them properly. Hydra can be found in freshwater ponds and slow moving rivers, where they usually attach themselves to plants or rocks. They are green in colour, with shades of brown. Hydra are carnivores and feed mainly on small crustaceans (water fleas) and small worms. Both the mouth and the tentacles are located on the top of the body. s e n o m e n A Sea Sea anemones usually spend most of their lives in one place. Some have the ability to move, but they can only travel three to four inches an hour. Sometimes they have rides on crabs,or they float around in the water. They eat small fish and shrimp and it captures its prey with its deadly tentacles. Both the mouth and the tentacles are located on the top of its body. n o i t a z i n a g r O f o s l e v e L ● Cnidarians have two main layers of cells that sandwich a middle layer of jelly-like material, this part is called mesoglea in Cnidarians. ● Since Cnidarians only have two layers so they have been labeled as diploblastic along with sponges. This means the condition of the blastula only have two layers, the outer layer being ectoderm and the inner layer being endoderm. ● This allows the Cnidarians to have true tissues. n o i t a z i l a h Cep Cephalization is considered an evolutionary trend. Goes around the nervous tissue, over many generations, and then it becomes concentrated toward one end of an organism. This process eventually produces a head region with sensory organs. - Cephalization does not take place in Jellyfish - The Hydra show some degree of cephalization. They have a "head" and that is where the mouth, photoreceptive cells and a concentration of neutral cells are located. - The Sea Anemones have a gastrovascular cavity with a single opening to the outside is both the mouth and the behind. t n e m p o l e v e D m o l e o C ● Cnidaria have no coelom but they have a gastrovascular cavity (digestive sac) with only one opening, they have no complex organs. ● Cnidarians are NOT a protostome nor a deuterostome, they are from a group called Radiata, which develop differently than those in Bilateria. y r t e m m y S Cnidarians are radially symmetrical. Feeding Cnidarians have only one digestive opening, which means it's both the mouth and the anus. The opening is surrounded by tentacles and leads to an internal digestive cavity called the gastrovascular cavity. They feed by using tentacles that are placed with stinging nematocysts. n o i t a r i p s e R - Respiration is accomplished through diffusion - There are no respiration organs, and both cell layers absorb oxygen from carbon dioxide in the water. - When the water in the digestive cavity becomes stale it must be replaced, and nutrients that have not been absorbed will be expelled with it. t r o p s n a r T Internal ● Cnidarians do not have any defined circulatory system that being said there is no organized internal transport. ● Instead most have long gastrovascular cavities that help carry partially digested food throughout their body. n o i t e r c x E ● The excretion process that the Cnidarians do to get rid of wastes is accomplished through diffusion. ● The wastes go out of the gastrovascular cavity after the nutrients go directly to the body. n o i t c u d o r Rep ● ● All known Cnidaria have to be both be using sexual reproduction and asexual reproduction through various means. http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp32/32020.html y t i l i t o M d n a e s n o p s e R ● ● ● They have muscle-like fibers in their two cell layers but no true muscles. They can move with their tentacles. Most Cnidarians do not have a central nervous system, they rely on sense organs to determine whether they are near a predator, moving up or down, and towards or away from light a d i l e n n A Phylum aul P d n a , h s o J , in t By Jus n o i t c u d o Intr Annelids are an important group of animals that lives just about everywhere on earth. Most can be found in wet environments, while some live in moist soil underground. There are still many species within this phylum that we are not familiar with and yet to be discovered. a d i l e n n A f o e l p m a x E - Earthworms: Land/Aquatic s m r o w h t Ear Earthworms are a tube-shaped, segmented animal usually found living in soil,that feeds on living and dead organic matter. Its digestive system runs through the length of its body. There are about 2,700 species of earthworms around the world. Earthworms are invertebrates which means they don't have backbones. n o i t a z i n a g r O f O s l e v e L Annelida are made up of segments that are formed by subdivisions that partially transect the body cavity. The body wall of annelids is characterized by being made up of both circular and long muscle fibers surrounded by a moist acellular cuticle. Annelids have three tissue layers; the ectoderm, the endoderm and the mesoderm they also have a closed circulatory system. The annelida is triploblastic meaning they have all three primary germ layers which all higher and intermediate animals only have. n o i t a z i l a h Cep Their nervous system shows a degree of cephalization, where tissues begins to produce a "head area" over many generations. Annelids have a nervous system made up of two ventral nerve cords and one relatively big cell concentration in its anterior portion resembling a primitive brain called a ganglion. t n e m p o l e v e D m o l e o C ● Annelids are protostomes and have their coelom in between their outer body and the gut. ● They also have a coelom which makes them coelomates. y r t e m m y S The symmetry for the Phylum Annelida is bilateral. n o i t c u d o r Rep Earthworms are hermaphrodites where each earthworm contains both male and female sex organs. The male and female sex organs can produce sperm and egg. Even though earthworms are hermaphrodites they still need a mate to reproduce. They reproduce sexually. Feeding Earthworms feeds on decaying matter since they live underground. The material enters the mouth, passes through the worm's digestive system, and exits behind. The decaying matter is what earthworms need for nutrients and for energy. n o i t a r i p s e R - Many polychaetes (marine annelids) have gills associated with most segments. - Earthworms have no special respiratory organs. Gases are exchanged through the moist skin and capillaries, where the oxygen is picked up by the hemoglobin dissolved in the blood plasma and carbon dioxide is released. - Water, as well as salts, can also be moved through the skin by active transport. t r o p s n a r T Internal In a earthworm, the circulation system is in a series of closed vessels. There are two main vessels, one is the dorsal vessels and the other one is the ventral blood vessels. In the dorsal vessel the blood moves towards the anterior and in the ventral vessel moves towards the posterior. n o i t e r c x E Annelids produce two kinds of wastes, solid and metabolism. The solid wastes are excreted behind and the wastes that comes from the metabolism are excreted by nephrida. The excretory system in earthworms consists a pair of nephridia for each segments. y t i l i t o M d n a e s n o p s e R Annelids move by using the two (major) sets of muscles they have. The set of muscles that run from the anterior of the worm to the posterior are called longitudinal muscles, while the other set is like a coil inside of the worm. The fluid-filled coelom acts as a hydrostatic skeleton which helps in locomotion by supporting the coil inside. a t a m r e d o n i h c E m u l Phy aul P d n a , h s o J , in t By Jus n o i t c u d o Intr The Phylum Echinodermata is an extremely large and well-known phylum such as the star fish. They all have several things in common, making this phylum easily recognizable. All the echinoderms live in the ocean. They can be found in every ocean living on the ocean floor. Starfish eat after a sea star locates potential prey by smell, it usually traps the animal or plant beneath its body. The sea star might use an arm to carry the prey to its mouth, which is located on the underside of its body. Sea stars that eat bivalves use their powerful arms to force the shells open, then extend their stomachs into the shells and release digestive enzymes that help them absorb the prey. a t a m r e d o n i h c E f o s e l Examp Phylum Echinodermata is a Phylum of marine animals such as: - Starfish - Sea urchins - Brittle stars Starfish Marine scientists have had a difficult task of replacing the starfish's common name with sea star because, the starfish is not a fish, it is an echinoderm. Some starfish have a different number of arms, some have 5, 10, 20, and some even have 40. They have bony, and hard skin, which protects them from predators. n o i t a z i n a g r O f o s l e v e L Echinoderm starts out as a bilateral larvae but they eventually take a radical change and become radial with a five-part symmetry. The bodies of the echinoderms are made up of hard, calcium-based plates that are often spiny and is covered by a thin skin. The echinoderms also have all three germ layers meaning they triploblastic. n o i t a z i l a h Cep Unlike other bilaterian phyla, echinodermata lack any cephalization meaning they have no specialized sense organs. t n e m p o l e v e D m o l e o C Echinoderms are deuterostomes meaning in their embryonic development the first opening (blastopore) was the anus, along with the chordates. y r t e m m y S The symmetry for the Phylum Echinodermata is Radial. Feeding Starfish mainly eat on mussel, snail, oyster,claims, and bivalves. Since they are opportunistic, they will take every chance they get for feeding. They have a unique ability to digest food outside of the body as well. This provides the starfish with the chance to be able to take in food sources that are several sizes larger than they are. n o i t a r i p s e R The starfish has a water vascular system in which the exchange between oxygen and carbon dioxide occurs. The tube feet of the starfish act like gills. t r o p s n a r T Internal Water enters the system through a sieve-like structure called the madreporite. This overlies a small sac connected to a duct termed the stone canal. This runs to a circular ring canal, from which radial canals run outwards along the ambulacral grooves. n o i t e r c x E The starfish excretes through the anus or the water vascular system. The starfish excretes its nitrogenous waste through its tube feet. Starfish have no excretory organs. They have cells that engulf waste particles and move it through tiny openings. n o i t c u d o r Rep Starfish can reproduce asexually or sexually. Most species have both male and female parts that allows them to create offspring without the aid of another. For those aren't able to create both eggs and sperm, they will deposit one or another. The females can lay eggs and a male will come along to release sperm on them. Maturity for mating takes place around 5 years of age. The average lifespan for a starfish is 35 years y t i l i t o M d n a e s n o p s e R - Echinoderms use tubes and thin layers of muscle latched onto the plates of the endoskeleton to move around. - Echinoderms have a very uncomplicated nervous system. - They have a nerve ring that surrounds the mouth with radial nerves that connect the central ring to other parts of the body, which have sensory cells that recognize chemicals released by potential prey s e c n e r e f e R http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cnidaria http://www.ask.com/question/examples-of-phylum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalization http://tolweb.org/articles/?article_id=57 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annelid http://faculty.clintoncc.suny.edu/faculty/michael.gregory/files/bio%20102/bio%20102%20lectures/animal%20diversity/lower% 20invertebrates/sponges.htm http://www.mesa.edu.au/cnidaria/ http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Annelida/ http://biology.unm.edu/ccouncil/Biology_203/Summaries/SimpleAnimals.htm http://cnidarianh.blogspot.ca/2007/02/internal-transport.html http://userwww.sfsu.edu/biol240/labs/lab_16animalbodyplan/pages/bodyplan.html http://www.biosciweb.net/animal/pdf/annel.pdf http://biology.unm.edu/ccouncil/Biology_203/Summaries/SimpleAnimals.htm http://annelidsf.blogspot.ca/2007/03/interesting-facts-about-annelids.html http://www.thecephalopodpage.org/MarineInvertebrateZoology/Cassiopeaxamachana.html http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Cnidaria/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_anemone s e c n e r e f e R https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jellyfish http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_cephalization_take_place_with_jellyfish https://www.google.ca/imghp?hl=en&tab=wi http://library.thinkquest.org/J001418/anemone.html http://www.ehow.com/info_8417486_difference-between-jellyfish-other-cnidarians.html http://www.sciencekids.co.nz/sciencefacts/animals/jellyfish.html http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Cnidaria.aspx http://cnidariaf.blogspot.ca/2007/02/movement.html http://library.thinkquest.org/28751/review/animals/2.html http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Annelida/ http://www.ask.com/question/what-is-the-phylum-annelida-s-cephalization http://annelidsh.blogspot.ca/2007/03/movement-motile-or-sessile.html http://www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/worms.htm http://tolweb.org/articles/?article_id=57 http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~rlenet/Earthworms.html http://www.esu.edu/~milewski/intro_biol_two/lab__12_annel_arthro/Annelida.html http://annelidsh.blogspot.ca/2007/03/excretion.html http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/invertebrates/starfish/ s e c n e r e f e R http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_do_earthworms_eat http://animals.pawnation.com/starfish-diets-1866.html http://bioexpedition.com/starfish/ http://wiki.hicksvilleschools.org/groups/hsbiology/wiki/6fcaa/ http://starfishswag.weebly.com/respiration--circulation.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_vascular_system http://www.biology-questions-and-answers.com/echinodermata.html http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/177910/echinoderm/25731/Reproduction-and-life-cycle#toc25732 http://echinodermsg.blogspot.ca/2007/04/general-anatomy.html http://www.pbs.org/kcet/shapeoflife/animals/echinoderms.html http://www.life.illinois.edu/ib/104b/6-ToChordates.pdf http://www.chacha.com/question/are-echinoderms-cephalized