Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Echinodermata - Are radially symmetric -not related to cnidarians, because the bilaterally symmetic larval stage becomes a radially symmetric organism. In this group, the coelom forms three distinct spaces, found in all deuterostomes including us. They are mobile but not very fast. Phylum Echinodermata BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 1 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa ! Deuterostomia ! (autapomorphies) • Blastopore becomes the anus • Tripartite coelom • Dipleurula larval stage 11:24 Porifera Placozoa Cnidaria Ctenophora Platyhelminthes Gastrotricha Gnathostomulida Cycliophora Rotifera Annelida Mollusca Sipuncula Nemertea Brachiopoda Phoronida Bryozoa Arthropoda Tardigrada Onychophora Nematomorpha Nematoda Priapulida Kinorhyncha Loricifera Echinodermata Hemichordata Chordata DEUSTEROSTOMIA 1- Blastopore becomes the anus: 2- Tripastite coelom: made of three separate coelomic spaces: the anterior protocoel, the middle mesocoel and the posterior metacoel. These 3 regions are often visible as the : prosome, mesosome and metasome. 3- Dipleurula larval stage: an anscestral characteristic for the deuterostomes. - As you move up in specialiazition, you develop 2 epithelial layers (inner, out)- happened by invagination, and the result is the 2 layers of the gut. Blastopore (Gastrulation) Ectoderm Blastocoel Endoderm Blastopore BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 3 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 1 Echinodermata - In the deurostome line ALL of them have a ENTEROCOELOUS COELOM- bubbles from the gut expanded in the space in between - Bryozoans have this, but are not deurostome. - Blastopore becoming the mouth is not connected with shizocoel. Enterocoelous coelom Ectoderm Endoderm Mesoderm 2135 Animal Form & Function In BIO deuterostomes, the coelom typically forms through enterocoelous development. In enterocoelous 4 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa development, the mesoderm of the gastrula forms as two outgrowths of the endoderm. As they grow larger, the two mesodermal pouches grow toward each other. Eventually, they meet and merge. The space between the mesodermal layers forms the embryonic coelom. 11:24 Tripartite coelom Mesocoel Protocoel Metacoel Mouth Anus BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 5 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa - Proto, mesocoel and metacoel- bryozoans have this. - In bryozoans the protocoel was reduced -The tripartite coelom forms by enterocoelic (Archenteric) pouching from the wall of the primitive gut, the archenteron, which forms during gastrulation. As the pouches pinch off from the gut and detach, they are now mesodermal, and the opening in the centre becomes the coelomic cavity. As its name suggests, the still list thetripartite coelom is made of three separate coelomic spaces: the anterior protocoel, the middle mesocoel, and the posterior metacoel. 11:24 - Ciliated band, for locomotion (propels the organism fordward). Mouth in the middle - The gastrula develops into a basic larval type called a dipleurula larva, characterized by bilateral symmetry; - This larvae undergoes metamorphosis to become radially symmetrical - characteristic larvae found in echinoderms Dipleurula larva Preoral lobe Mouth Ciliated band Esophagous Stomach Anus BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 6 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 2 ECHINODERMATA (sea stars) Echinodermata 1)PENTARAMOUS SYMMETRY: radial symmetry based on 5s. 2)WATER VASCULAR SYSTEM: unique mechanism to move sea water into the body to use as a hydrostatic skeleton to move their tube feet. The water in the system is the same as sea water plus tideman's bodies which remove small Porifera bacteria from water. No pumping system associated with W.V.S, Placozoa cilia around the walls slowly mix water thorughout the system Cnidaria Ctenophora Tube feet- locomotion, feeding, exchange surface for Platyhelminthes Gastrotricha Gnathostomulida gases and nutrogenous wastes. Tube feet can be Cycliophora Spicule: needle like hydrsotatically isolated fromthe rest of the system, Rotifera Annelida structure Mollusca acting like a small hydrsotatic skeleton. Muscle Sipuncula Nemertea contractions in the wall of the tube foot, and the Brachiopoda Phoronida ampula, combined with suction cup action of the Bryozoa Arthropoda podum allow each tube feet to pull the echinoderm Tardigrada ! Echinodermata Onychophora along. (Autapomorphies) Nematomorpha Nematoda • Pentaramous symmetry Priapulida 3)STEROM SPICULES: starfish secrete calcareous • Stereom spicules Kinorhyncha • Water vascular system Loricifera secretions to make spongy spicules, and this forms the ! Echinodermata • Mutable connective tissue Hemichordata Chordata calcareous endoskeleton. These spicules is porous and spongy. Spicules of calcite microcrystals formed from calcium carbonate are arranged in 3D hollow arrays referred to as the stereom. Sclereocytes produce the original spicules 4) Mutable connective tissue:These spicules are connected with connective tissue, and the tissue that holds it can change consistency (mechanical properties): from stiff to rigid and vice versa- this is under Parazoa (1.2%) Extantcontrol, Animalia controls wether nervous Radiataits (0.9%)loose or rigid NOT seen in anywhere in the word. ~1,300,000 species Protostomia (3.9%) Platyzoa (2.2%) Platyhelminthes (1.9%) Others (0.3%) Lophotrochozoa (9.8%) Mollusca (8.5%) It is not a big group -Not a lot of them because it returned to be radially symmetric Annelida (0.9%) Others (0.5%) - There was a huge advantage to be bilaterally symmetric, this group took a step back Ecdysozoa (82.0%) Crustecea (3.1%) Chelicerata (7.6%) Atelocerata(70.3%) Others (1.1%) Deuterostomia (4.0%) Chordata (3.5%) Others (0.4%) 8 11:24 Star fish BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 9 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 3 Echinodermata Sea urchins BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 10 11:24 Sand dollars BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 11 11:24 - drops its arm, and regenerates Brittle stars BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 12 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 4 Echinodermata - slow movement. Defense themselves by throwing his gut out, so the predator is happy because it has food. Sea cucumber BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 13 11:24 Ancient Echinoderms BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 14 11:24 -This group returned to radial symmetry- secret is in the fossils - When the echinoderms appeard they were sessile, arms pointing up, with their tube feet up catching debree that fell from water colum and moving it to the mouth in the center. This made them sucessful at the time, because they could feed on that debree, and the animals at the bottom (mollucs, etc) could not get a hold on that food. This was their advantage, and in order to do this and be effective they had to be radially symmetric - most of them are not stationary, they move by their tube feet. - They were first sessile, arms extending from the outside, mouth facing up, tube feet extending from the arms, used to propel food towards the central mouth wen food fell down. They still have this architecture but most have turned themselves upsidedown. -Radially symmetric animal dont have dorsal ventral,-have ABORAL AND ORAL. - When the echinoderm becomes mobile they detach from the substrate and flip the other way (mouth poiting down), and tube feet are used to pull the echinoderm across the susbtrate Ancestral echinoderms FOSSIL BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 15 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 5 Echinodermata - Hundreds of tube feet- part of water vascular system. Filled with sea water Echinoderm surfaces Tube feet and ambulacral groove Aboral surface Oral surface BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 16 11:24 - tube feet are hydrostatic skeletons used for locomotion. Water vascular system (Ambulacral system) BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 17 11:24 - Cirulatory system: sea water that circulates in the tube feet as a transport fluid, to move o2, wastes.. - Tube feet are thin- large S.A to V ratio to use for gas exchange. - Use simple ammonia as a metabolic waste because of the high surface to volume ratio of the tube feet. - this system locks them into the marine environment (no metanephridia, etcc) . Role of the water vascular system Locomotion Circulation Respiration Excretion BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 18 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 6 Echinodermata Water vascular system Madreporite Stone canal Ring canal Tiedemann’s bodies Polian vesicles Radial canal Lateral canal Tube feet BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 19 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 11:24 -external opening- MADREPORITE is where sea water comes in (regulates the water) - Tidemann body add few cells to the water that eat bacteria and keep it healthy - Water is not being pumped in/out- ITS JUST A GIGANT PUDDLE OF WATER, theres cilia moving water around, but not pumped. It is not a circulatory system, it just a passive reservoir of water (exam question) - This system is NOT a circulatory system because the excretory and circulatory systems was lot in this group (AKA no heart or functional anus)- just a passve system that is 100% reliant on sea water. - Purely sea water (most part), some cells- tie demanns bodies that help with bacteria - tube feet extend down- there are miniature hydrostatic skeleton with a suckition cup - tube feet extend through the body wall. Ampulla at the top, muscles contract in there to extend the foot. Tube feet BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 20 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa Tube foot 11:24 Ampulla Lateral canal Body wall Tube foot Retractor muscles Podial muscle Sucker ANATOMY OF TUBEFEET - valve shuts and becomes an isolated hydrostatic skeleton. -Reservoir at the top- the AMPULLA -at the bottom there are muscles, and when they contract they change the direction -At the base of the foot, theres a sucker that pulls the base up. This allows for the tube feet to suck into the substrate BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 21 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 7 Echinodermata - tube feet constatly being lifted and attach againt to the susbtrate to move and capture prey. - Not fast - All the start fish are carnivorous- they chase after other animals, like corals, clams, and other start fish. When feeding upon a clam, tube feet attatch to it and opens the clam with its arms, inverts its stomach and releases digestive enzymes than then drinks. - These are social animals, they are are socializing at a very slow speed. Movement of tube feet BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 22 11:24 - covered in spines and cilia that sweeps away any debris on the surface. Body wall BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 23 11:24 - Pedicellaria- in the surface of star fish -prevents other animals to settle in the surface of the star fish. They do this because they need this side for gas exchange. - the whole outer surface of the organisms is covered in cilia, creating water movement to flush animals away. Pedicellaria Spine Pedicellaria Dermal branchia BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 24 11:24 -Dermalbranchia: on the aboral side, thse are small projections on the body wall used for gas exchange. - metacoel-made the water vascular system -mesocoel- makes the body cavity. BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 8 Echinodermata Digestive system Anus Pyloric stomach Cardiac stomach Digestive gland (Pyloric cecum) BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 25 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 11:24 Sea star Gonad Anus Pyloric stomach Cardiac stomach Mouth Pyloric cecum BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 26 11:24 - They have 2 pairs of glands that go into each arm. -Pyloric cecae- digestive glands (where digestion happens). Two digestive glands that extend to each arm, here, there are big sacs that extend to each arm where final digestion occurs. - cardiac (outside) and pyloric stomach (inside). - There is little waste, because food is very liquidly and there is not hard waste so there is no functional anus. - When feeding the cardiac stomach can be everted, wedged in btw of the crack of the clam, and sends stomach inside. Releases digestive enzymes inside the clam, and cilia causes a current to pull the food into the stomach. Cilia carry it to the digestive glands (pyloric cecum) to the digested. - Food travels to the cardiac stomach, then to the pyloric stomach and sends out to cecae , extended into both arms -When this animal is reproductive, gonads poliferate, expands and gonads then are sitting adjentitly to the digestive gland. Digestive glands are within the arms - cardiac stomach can be squeezed out, this is the major way in how starfish feed.When starfish finds a meal, turns the stomach insideout and digest the meal. -Carnivorous- prey on corals and clams. Only predators on animals that are sessile or move slower than them. -type of digestion: extracorporal digestion. Spiders do this. Feeding BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 27 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 9 Echinodermata - Arms- digestive ceca, pyloric ceca, and gonads, and tube feet. Reproductive system Gonad BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 28 11:24 The metacoel creates the standard body cavity. Comes out as the little fingers of the dermal branchia. Wraps around the ampulae of the tube feet, so theres 2 coelomic spaces re conneted to each other in these of the emmbrane of the ampulae. So there is a big difussive surface, 2 coelomic cavities are all involved in diffusive roles. - Tube feet gets things from coelomic fluid, all of them aer enlarged and SA is increased by dermal branchia. Water vascular cavity is the mesocoel. - Madreporite replenishes the sea water. - The water vascular system prominent features are: tube feet, ampulla, suction cups. This is the metacoel -The mesocoel, contains the digestive glands and the gonads, Sea star arm Spine Dermal branchia Ossicle Digestive gland Coelom Gonad Tube foot BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 29 11:24 - very long spines that helps them move across the susbtrate - Sea urchin fold all the fins upwards so that they made a sphere there is one pore at the bottom. - The starfish with oral side down and ambulacrual groove and tube feet. Echinoidea Sea urchins BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 30 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 10 Echinodermata -Hervivore. -Digestive track is lengthned. - Digestive track is long because its a hervivore and the food is poor in nutrients. So they keep the food long enough to extract all the nutrients. - inside: gigant digestive tract, and on top : gonads. -5 pairs of gonads- food source, delicacy. - same structures as starfish, but radial cannals are projected upwards. Echinoidea Water vascular system Madreporite Axial organ Ring canal Radial canal Tube feet BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 31 11:24 - tube feet are long because have to extend along the spines. - Set of muscles tilt and tip the spines, coordinated by the nervous system. It can crawl into a cavity and spread its spines out and anchor them. Nothing can pull it out to feed on. Echinoid spines and pedicellaria BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 32 11:24 FEEDING MECHANISM - has 5 sets of little teeth, aligned with 5 row of tube feet. - In the very center of the membranoeus area is the feedin strcuture. The tube feet are modified into branched puffy structures called gills. - Aristotles lantern Echinoidea Oral surface “Gill” Ambulacrum Openings for tube feet Teeth of lantern Peristomial membrane BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 33 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 11 Echinodermata - Aristotle lantern: suspended by muscles that can push the lantern up or back, or tilt. 5 pyramidal teeth that are associated with the feeding apparatus can be pushes back, in little spread apart and close (biting motions). -the mouth is equipped with five teeth operated by a complex system of plates and muscles called Aristotle’s lantern. Aristotle’s lantern Epiphysis Tooth Pyramid Lantern retractor Lantern protractor BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 34 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 11:24 - the pyramid part of the tooth has another tooth inside of it. this little tooth does the cutting, and its constantly regenerating. - organism can process large amounts of plant material Echinoidea Aristotle’s lantern Tooth Pyramid Compass Epiphysis Dental sac that forms tooth BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function 35 Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa 11:24 Echinoidea Digestive system Esophagus Aboral intestine Aristotle’s lantern Siphon Anus Tube feet Gonad - Siphon:as the food enters into the oral intestine, water is pulled out to concentrate the food to extract all the nutrients. -In the aboral intestine, water is put back into the dehydrated food, so it doesnt tear the digestive tracktand now it can be excreted. -aristotles lanthern shoves food into the intestine. Spirals through the organism. Goes to the large intestine. Oral intestine BIO 2135 Animal Form & Function Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa (stomach) 36 11:24 BIO2135 Animal Form and Function Page 12