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
Invertebrates I: Porifera, Cnidaria, Tree of Life Figure CO 7 Invertebrates - Background Kingdom Animalia I. • • • • • 97% of all animal species are invertebrates Animals without a backbone All major groups have marine representatives (some are exclusively marine) (3-15 million species) Phylum Porifera (Sponges) II. Simplest multicellular animals Most are marine (~9000 species) Sessile (attached to substrate) Diversity of shapes, sizes, colors, habitats • • • • • Found from low tide line to 3.5 miles deep Shapes: Tiny cups, broad branches, tall vases, encrusting round masses III. Phylum Cnidaria Big steps from simple sponges to evolution of tissues > 10,000 species All are aquatic, mostly marine • • • • • • Sea anemones Corals Jellies III. Phylum Cnidaria Radial symmetry- similar parts of body are arranged and repeated around central axis. Look the same from all sides and have neither head or tail, front or back Oral surface (mouth) Aboral surface (opposite) Fig. 7.5 III. Phylum Cnidaria 2 basic forms Polyp: anemone, tube with a mouth surrounded by tentacles, specialized in sedentary (sessile) life attached to substrate Medusa: jellyfish, bell-shaped free-floating, swim by pulsating contractions III. Phylum Cnidaria-feeding No true organs Tube/sac with single opening (mouth) Mouth opens to gut Tentacles capture food • • • • • CNIDOCYSTS (stinging cells, NOTE NAME) Defense Prey capture Contain NEMATOCYSTS =thread bag (stinging capsule) Simple nervous system Trap food using mucus secreted at mouth and tentacles Some with symbiotic zooxanthellae, provides host with nutrients, O2, use up CO2 III. Phylum Cnidaria 4 Classes of cnidarians Class Hydrozoa (includes hydras, hydroids, hydromedusae, chondrophorans, siphonophores, hydrocorallines) Feathery, bushy colonies of tiny polyps attach to pilings, shells, surfaces Alternate between polyp and medusa form III. Phylum Cnidaria Class Scyphozoa-jellyfishes • All marine species, few hundred • Medusae large (dominant stage) E.g. – Cyanea capillata (Lion’s Mane) • • • • • Desmonema glaciale Bell > 2 m Tentacles 60+ m Swim by contracting bell rhythmically, pulsing contraction, at mercy of currents Stings *, sometimes fatal Aurelia Cyanea capillata III. Phylum Cnidaria Class Anthozoa (most are) Polyp (more complex than hydrozoan, scyphozoan Sexes usually separate Oviparous (egg-bearer) and viviparous (young bearing) Passive suspension feeders Solitary forms • • • • • • Colonial forms • • • • • • Anthopleura xanthogrammica Sea anemones Corals • Stony corals – branching and massive • - Some build reefs • Soft corals Gorgonians Sea pens Sea pansies (Drawings: Brain coral and Gorgonian specimen) Branching Corals Doming Corals Sea Pen Soft Corals Sea Pansy Gorgonians (Sea Whips) Gorgonians (Sea Fans) III. Phylum Cnidaria Class Cubozoa, “scyphozoa cubed” • • • • Sea wasps, Box jellyfish square bell-cuboidal swimming bell 4 tentacles or bunches Highly toxic IV. Phylum Ctenophora (comb-bearing) Exclusively Marine (100 species) Aka comb jellies Resemble Cnidarians Most primitive Biradial symmetry (radial + bilateral symmetry) • 8 rows of ciliary combs (ctenes) • Equally spaced on body surface • Each row is a ridge, paddle of fused cilia • Beat aboral to oral, propels mouth forward • Organ system: Digestive system-mouth to pharynx to stomach • Predatory and Carnivorous • Lack nematocysts • Capture prey with sticky colloblasts • May occur in swarms • Heavy predators • (consume lots of fish larvae) Pleurobrachia Beroe