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Lower Invertebrates
Dr. Christine Palmier
Biology 120 Lab
Lower Invertebrates
Lower Invertebrates
Animals
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Invertebrates
Vertebrates
(More abundant)
(Less Abundant)
Evolution and Development of
Bilateral symmetry
Appearance of a head (cephalization)
Digestive system
True coelum (body cavity)
Segmentation
Lower Invertebrates
Sponges (Porifera)
P. Porifera = sponges
most primitive
did not give rise to other animals
asymmetrical, some radial symmetry
sessile (immobile) adults, free-swimming larvae
2 cell layers
• 1) outer = epidermal
• 2) inner = flagellated collar cells
˜ (bring water and food inside thru osculum filter-feeding)
skeleton composed of spicules (Calcium carbonate and
spongin) and secreted by amoeba-like cells
Lower Invertebrates
Sponges (Porifera)
Lower Invertebrates
P. Cnidaria
P. Cnidaria = corals, hydra, sea anemones, jelly fish
radial symmetry (advancement vs. some sponges)
2 body forms
• a) sedentary polyp (hydra)
• b) motile medusa (jelly fish)
Sac-like gut, one opening (no anus)
2 cell layers
• a) epidermis
• b) gastrodermis, jelly to separate layers and allow buoyancy for
floating of medusa
Stinging nematocysts to capture prey/food and defense
Lower Invertebrates
Hydra ,Jelly Fish, Sea anemones Coral,
(Cnidaria)
Lower Invertebrates
Hydra ,Jelly Fish, Sea anemones Coral,
(Cnidaria)
Lower Invertebrates
1) Hydrozoans—marine and colonial
Polyp is predominant (sessile, immobile)
Use polyps for feeding, sting prey and for reproduction
2) Jellyfish “true”
polyp form is reduced or absent
horse-shoe shaped gonads
3) Corals and sea anemones
Only polyp form is present
Stinging tentacles to capture drifting food
secrete calcium carbonate coral reefs
Sea anemones do not have calcium carbonate
contain symbiotic algae
Lower Invertebrates
Jelly fish medus and polyp
Lower Invertebrates
Coral and Sea Anemone
Lower Invertebrates
P. Platyhelminthes
P. Platyhelminthes –“flat worms”
Still only one opening for digestive system (no anus)
Advances include
• 1) more specialized tisses
• 2) several, well-developed organ systems
• 3) bilateral symmetry (first time)
head development/cephalization
localization of sense organs
Lower Invertebrates
P. Platyhelminthes –“flat worms”
Lower Invertebrates
Free Living Parasitic
Planaria—feed on small animals or scavenge (dead, organic matter)
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cilia for movement
flukes—parasitic; in liver, lungs, bladder, or blood vessels of vertebrates
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suckers for attachment to host
monoecious/hermaphroditic or dioecious
primary host for adult fluke = vertebrate
intermediate host for larvae = usually a snail
tapeworms—specialized parasites for life in intestine (pre-digested food)
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attach to host by scolex (suckers & hooks)
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proglottids follow scolex
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formed by budding, reproductive unit (1000s/1 proglottid)
leave host thru feces new hosts (muscle of cattle & pigs) poorly
cooked human intestine
Lower Invertebrates
Planaria
Lower Invertebrates
Flukes
Lower Invertebrates
tapeworm
Lower Invertebrates
P. Nematoda
P. Nematoda
• Most widespread of organisms
• complete digestive system (mouth and anus)
• False body cavity present (filled w/ reproductive
organs)—no protective lining around organs, but
some separation of organs
• Some parasites of plants and animals
Lower Invertebrates
Nematodes (round worms)
Ascaris
Lower Invertebrates
Vinegar eel
Lower Invertebrates
Trichnia
Lower Invertebrates
Today’s Lab
Look at:
• Models and diagrams of sponges
• prepared slide of spicules
• bath sponge vs. basket sponge
• specimens of Cnidaria and identify radial symmetry, tentacles, mouth,
sac-like cut, polyp, medusa
• Portuguese man-of-war (Cnidaria, hydrozoan)—specimens and
pictures
• Obelia (Cnidaria, hydrozoan)—life cycle, demo slides of colony and
medusa
• For hydrozoa, draw reproductive polyp, feeding polyp, and medusa
• Moon jelly—life cycle, tentacles, medusa, 4 oral arms, gonads
• Coral—development of coral reefs, specimens, pictures
• Sea anemones—pictures and preserved specimen
• hydra—feed them, cause discharge of nematocysts, slide or picture of
nematocyst, model
Lower Invertebrates