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Protostome The Deuterostomes Echinoderms and Chordates Ch 35 Deuterostomes The SECOND opening of the digestive system (in the gastrula stage) becomes the mouth Deuterostomes Characteristics: • Bilaterally symetrical • Coelomate • Blastopore fate (anus) – Second opening in the gastrula becomes the mouth – This developmental similarity between echinoderms and chordates is supported by DNA sequence data Phylum Echinodermata (Gk: echin = spiny; derma = skin) Why are Echinoderms considered to be bilaterally symmetrical? • 5 Classes: Sea stars, brittle stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers • A thin skin covers an endoskeleton of hard calcareous plates • 7,500 species – all marine 1 Echinoderm larvae are bilateral Starfish larvae Adults - Pentaradial Sea Urchin larva Sea Cucumber Some species are commercially harvested for human food Echinoderm Features • Unique “water vascular system” • A network of hydraulic canals used in: • • • • locomotion feeding gas exchange excretion 2 Sea Star anatomy • Muscle and nervous tissue, but no cephalization in adults • Endoskeleton of hard calcareous plates • Complete (but short) digestive system • No specialized respiratory, circulatory, or excretory systems • Separate male and female individuals • External fertilization Tube feet of a sea cucumber Sea Star feeding on a bivalve Everts stomach into the bivalve to digest it INSIDE ITS OWN SHELL!! Sea stars = Keystone predators • Keystone species - plays a unique role in the way ecosystems function – greater than what their biomass would suggest. • Sea stars eat shell fish (urchins, mussels, etc) that most others do not eat • If sea urchins and/or mussels (herbivores) take over what will happen? Crown-of-thorns sea star • Feed on the living cnidarians that produce coral reefs • Population explosions of the crown-of-thorns sea star can severely damage coral reefs • Causes of outbreaks appear to be removal of natural predators and increased nutrient levels in the water (both due to human activities) • Control efforts include injection of individual starfish with chemical toxins 3 Phylum Chordata Phylum Chordata This phylum includes the animals that are most familiar to us - and includes humans. • Divided into 3 subphyla, which include 11 major groups of chordates • Some of the 11 groups are defined as “Classes” by biologists • Others of the 11 groups are currently considered to be “clades”, i.e. formal taxonomic level has not been agreed upon Chordates Fig 35.12 • Chordate does NOT = Vertebrate All chordates have four characteristics (at some developmental stage) 1. Pharyngeal slits • Openings to the outside of the body at the pharynx (region just behind the mouth) 1. Pharyngeal gill slits – Allows water that enters the mouth to exit without passing though the gut in invertebrate chordates 2. Dorsal hollow nerve cord – Modified for gas exchange or other functions in vertebrates 3. Notochord 4. Post-anal tail Fig. 34.3 Pharyngeal slits 4 2. Dorsal hollow nerve cord • Unique to chordates – Other animals have a solid nerve cord that is usually ventrally located 2. Dorsal hollow nerve cord • Nerve cord develops into the central nervous system – Brain and spinal cord Dorsal hollow nerve cord Ventral solid 3. Notochord • A flexible rod located between nerve cord and gut – Provides skeletal support for muscle attachment – Only remnants of embryonic notochord found in most adult vertebrates 4. Muscular post-anal tail • Skeletal elements (notochord) and muscles • Lost during embryonic development in many species – Non-chordates have a digestive tract that extends the length of the body Notochord Post-anal tail Phylum Chordata Three Subphyla: 1. Cephalochordata 2. Urochordata Subphylum Cephalochordata • Called “lancelets” because of their blade-like shape • Chordate characteristics persist into adulthood • Globally rare, but some places have high population density (e.g., Tampa Bay, Florida) 3. Vertebrates 5 Lancelet Anatomy Suspension feeders that use their pharyngeal slits to filter out small food particles Typically present buried tail-first in sand Subphylum Urochordata • Tunicates (“sea squirts”) Adult tunicates don’t look much like a “chordate” • No notochord, nerve cord or tail • Filter feeders with incurrent and excurrent siphons Adult tunicates don’t look much like a “chordate” Some tunicate species are colonial • But these features are present in the tunicate larval form… 6 The Vertebrates Subphylum Vertebrates • Chordates with a skull (either bone or cartilage) • Includes all of the animals we call “vertebrates” Finally - something we’ve heard of!! All vertebrates have the same characteristics as chordates (at some developmental stage), plus • Pronounced cephalization – With a skull (cranium) • Includes some large and rather obvious animals that are quite familiar to us • But remember that vertebrates represent less than 5% of the known animal species on Earth • Vertebral column that encloses the nerve cord – Replaces the notochord function • Endoskeletons that grows with the animal • Closed circulatory system • Lampreys 7 Hagfish (Clade Myxini) Jawless Lost vertebrae through evolution (ancestors had vertebrae) 8