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3/31/2011 Section 4 S i Deuterostomia Ecdysozoa Lophotrochozoa Cnidaria and Ctenophora Porifera Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Protostomia Radiata Bilateria Professor Donald McFarlane Eumetazoa Parazoa Lecture 13 Invertebrates: Parazoa, Radiata, and Lophotrochozoa Ancestral colonial choanoflagellate 2 Traditional classification based on body plans Parazoa – Phylum Porifera Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 2. 3. 4. 3 Ecdysozoa Deuterostomia D Sponges Loosely organized and lack tissues Multicellular with several types of cells 8,000 species, mostly marine No apparent symmetry Adults sessile, larvae freeswimming Cnidaria and Ctenophora Lo ophotrochozoa 1 1. 4 main morphological and developmental features used Presence or absence of different tissue types Type of body symmetry Presence or absence of a true body cavity Patterns of embryonic development Porifera Parazoa Protostomia Bilateria Radiata Parazoa Eumetazoa Ancestral colonial choanoflagellate 4 1 3/31/2011 Water drawn through pores (ostia) into spongocoel Flows out through osculum Choanocytes line spongocoel Sexually and eat small particles and plankton Mesohyl between choanocytes and epithelial cells Most hermaphrodites p p producing g eggs gg and sperm p Gametes are derived from amoebocytes or choanocytes Asexually Amoebocytes absorb food from choanocytes, digest it, and carry to other cells Spicules (skeletal fibers) or spongin Small fragment or bud may detach and form a new sponge 5 6 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Radiata – Phylums Cnidaria and Ctenophora Water Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Choanocyte Fl Flagellum ll Osculum Epithelial cell Collar Nucleus Amoebocyte Spicule Ectoderm Spongocoel Ostium Radiata and endoderm Mesoglea Parazoa Ecdysozoa Bilateria Eumetazoa connects layers Mesohyl Spicule (c) Cross section of sponge morphology Protostomia Diploblastic Water Deuterostomia Radial symmetry Mostly marine Only O l 2 embryonic b i germ layers (b) Typical vase shape of sponges Lophotrochozoa Radiata Porifera Reproduce Cnidaria a and Ctenophora Trap 7 8 2 3/31/2011 Phylum Cnidaria First clade with true tissues Gastrovascular cavity for extracellular digestion g Allows Sessile polyp – tubular body with tentacles surrounding opening (mouth and anus) Motile medusa – umbrella-shaped body with a mouth th on th the underside d id surrounded d db by tentacles ingestion of larger food particles over sponge’s intracellular digestion Advance True nerve cells arranged in nerve net No 2 different body forms Cnidocytes contain nemotocysts Hairlike central control organ Some trigger – cnidocil sticky while other sting Simple muscles and nerves Not true muscles (not of mesoderm origin) 9 10 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 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Tentacle Mouth/ anus Phylum Ctenophora Bell Epidermis (from ectoderm) Mesoglea Gastrodermis (from endoderm) Gastrovascular cavity Mouth/ anus (a) Polyp Comb jellies Less than 100 species- all marine and look like jellyfish Eight Ei ht rows off cilia ili on surface f b beatt ffor propulsion 2 long tentacles without stinging cells Colloblasts secrete sticky substance First complete gut – mouth and anus Hermaphroditic Bioluminescent (b) Medusa Tentacle 11 12 3 3/31/2011 Lophotrochozoa 13 Flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, mollusks and annelids Traditionally, bilaterally symmetrical animals split into those with no coelom (platyhelminthes) (platyhelminthes), pseudocoleomate (nematodes and rotifers) and remaining coelomate phlya Molecular data suggests a different grouping with the deuterostomates separate and the protostomates divided into the Lophotrochozoa (Platyhelminthes, Rotifera, Lophophorata, Mollusca and Annelida) and the Ecdysozoa 14 Phylum Platyhelminthes Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 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Lophotrochozoa Flatworms Lack a specialized respiratory or circulatory system to transport gases Respire by diffusion Among first animals with active predatory lifestyle Bilaterally symmetrical with a head Annelida Ecdysozoa Deuterostomia D Rotifera Mollusca Lophophorata Porifera Platyhelminthes Cnidaria an nd Ctenophora Lophotrochozoa Protostomia Radiata Parazoa Bilateria Eumetazoa 15 First with 3 embryonic germ layers – triploblastic Mesoderm key innovation – led to more sophisticated organs Acoelomate – lacking fluid-filled cavity 16 4 3/31/2011 4 classes Turbellaria – Free-living, Planaria Monogenea – Fish flukes Cestoda – Tapeworms, parasitic Digestive system incomplete Distinct excretory system with protonephridia and flame cells Light sensitive eyespots or ocelli Cerebral ganglia receive input Retain nerve net with beginning of more centralized nervous system Sexual or asexual reproduction 2 separate host species in life cycle Trematoda – Flukes, parasitic More complex life cycle with multiple hosts liver fluke, Clonorchis sinensis Blood flukes, Schistosoma spp., most common parasitic trematode infecting humans Chinese hermaphroditic but do not self fertilize 17 18 Lophophorata Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 19 Annelida Ecdysozoa De euterostomia Mollusca Rotifera 3 closely related phyla Phoronida, Bryozoa, Brachiopoda All possess a lophophore – ciliary feeding device that also functions in respiration True coelom Lo ophophorata Platyhelminthes Porifera Lophotrochozoa Cnidaria an nd Ctenophora Most Lophotrochozoa Protostomia Radiata Parazoa Bilateria Eumetazoa 20 5 3/31/2011 Phylum Mollusca Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Foot, visceral mass and mantle Coelom confined to small area around heart Open circulatory system Metanephridia Radula – unique tongue-like organ Deuterostomia Annelida Ecdysozoa Rotifera Mollusca Porifera Lophophorata Platyhelminthes Over 100,000 species Soft body with, in many species, protective external shell Body ody has as 3 pa parts ts Cnidaria and Ctenophora Lophotrochozoa Lophotrochozoa Protostomia Radiata Parazoa Bilateria Eumetazoa 21 22 23 24 Most shells complex 3 layered and secreted by mantle Separate sexes although some hermaphroditic External fertilization – some internal ((key y to snails colonizing g land)) Trocophore larvae develops into veliger with rudimentary foot, shell and mantle 8 classes with 4 common Polyplacophorans, gastropods, bivalves and cephalopods 6 3/31/2011 Polyplacophorans – chitons Gastropods – snails, slugs and nudibranchs Phylum Annelida Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Most morphologically complex, fast-swimming marine predators, closed circulatory system Beaklike jaw, only nautilus has external shell, some have foot modified into muscular siphon for propulsion 1. 2. 3. 25 Repetition of components provides backup Coelom acts as hydrostatic skeleton Permits specialization Annelida Ecdysozoa E Rotifera Mollusca Deutterostomia Lophotrochozoa Lophophorata Bivalves – clams, mussels, oysters Cephalopods – octopuses, squids, nautiluses Rings are distinct segments separated by a septum Segmentation has advantages Porifera Platyh helminthes class, shells can be reduced or lost, most marine or freshwater but some colonized land Cnidaria and Ctenophora Largest Lophotrochozoa Protostomia Radiata Parazoa Bilateria Eumetazoa 26 Digestive system complete and unsegmented Sexual reproduction involves 2 individuals (sometimes separate sexes, others hermaphroditic) with internal fertilization Asexual reproduction by fission 15,000 species All annelids except leeches have setae on each segment Double transport system Circulatory system and d coelomic fluid carries nutrients, wastes and respiratory gases 27 28 7 3/31/2011 2 classes Polychaeta – marine worms Most species rich, many long setae Clittelata Subclass Oligochaeta – terrestrial and freshwater worms (earthworms) Role in conditioning soil through castings Subclass Hirudinea – leeches Primarily freshwater, hirudin (anticoagulant), may be used in reattachment surgeries, generally external parasites 29 30 8