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Download II. Phylum Cnidaria [nettle]
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II. Phylum Cnidaria [nettle] Also called Coelenterata [hollow body] A. examples: (9,000 species) jellyfish, Man-of-War, hydra, sea, coral intro nemo B. radial symmetry No front or back simpler to keep track of, only 2 ends 1. Oral = mouth end 2. Aboral = not mouth end 3. sensory organs are evenly distributed so can respond to stimuli from all directions C. mostly marine 1. very important to formation of coral reef 2. ocean takes care of support (buoyant), diffusion of oxygen, removal of wastes, diffusion of carbon dioxide D. structure p. 271 1. diploblastic – made of only two layers of tissues, not three a. ectoderm - outer layer (epidermis) b. endoderm - inner layer (gastrodermis) c. mesoglea- not cell layer, filling between, jellylike fluid Simpliest type of tissue organization Structure (con’t) 2. gastrovascular cavity = one opening gut a. advantage: allows for rapid diffusion of nutrients/gases to cells (close proximity) b. disadvantage: less efficient digestion, food, digestive wastes, and gametes enter/leave cavity through mouth Structure (con’t) 3. tentacles ( not appendages) a. flexible, extendible b. “nerve net” in epidermis; most primitive nervous system; coordinates movement, response sensitive to touch and various chemicals c. cells called cnidocytes contain nematocysts (stinging cells) defense, food gathering, attachment the barb is coiled up inside a capsule. When a nematocyst touches something the barb uncoils and fires from the capsule along with venom. Nematocyst (video link is picture) eating •More than 100 species are toxic to humans. Jellyfish stings usually are mild, except those caused by species in the South Pacific, such as the box jellyfish or Portuguese man-of-war. Can cause: rashes abdominal muscle rigidity, vomiting, profuse sweating, and excessive shaking to cardiovascular and respiratory collapse. • described as feeling like being struck by a lightning bolt. Deadliest jellyfish box jellyfish Some are paralyzing, some are very toxic (box jelly of Indian Ocean near Australia fatal in matter of seconds) More people die from jellyfish stings than shark attacks box jellyfish Chironex fleckeri An extremely poisonous jellyfish - one individual has enough venom to kill 60 adult humans. Some animals like the sea turtles can eat the box jellyfish without being stung. WORD BANK Gastrovascular cavity Tentacle Cnidocyte Ectoderm Endoderm Mesoglea Ovary/Teste Bud Nematocyst Mouth Basal Disk d. after food is harpooned, tentacles contract to draw it in the mouth e. gastrodermal cells secrete enzymes to break the food down extracellular digestion – “pre”digestion; break food particles down small enough to diffuse into the cells then finish breaking them down in mitochondria or lysosomes E. locomotion 1. limited - some are primarily sessile, others can “swim” by contracting muscle tissue against hydrostatic skeleton to draw water in or push it out 2. some float passively on current using a “sail” 3. Polyp form can somersault or glide along substrate flexing F. Reproduction 1. most are dioecious [separate genders] 2. usually sperm & eggs are made inside the gastrovascular cavity 3. gametes usually released out the mouth 4. Some environmental trigger causes spawning. This increases the chance of success 5. a planula is a free swimming larva that disperses the species p. 272 G. two common body forms 1. medusa–dioecious stage, oral down [dangling tentacles like Medusa’s snakes] - free swimming 2. polyp – asexual, Sessile, attached at aboral end Body Plans in general medusa (more mesoglea) polyp (less) H. Alternation of Generations I. five (5) classes based primarily on which body forms are present or dominant 1. class Hydrozoa 2. class Scyphozoa 3. class Anthozoa 4. class Ctenophora 5. class Cubozoa