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CHAPTER 33 LECTURE SLIDES Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Noncoelomate Invertebrates Chapter 33 Porifera • Parazoa – Animals lacking tissues (and therefore organs) and a definite symmetry • 7000 marine species; 150 freshwater species • Among the most abundant animals in the deep ocean Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) Brachiopoda Platyhelminthes Cycliophora Rotifera Micrognathozoa Acoela Ctenophora Cnidaria Porifera Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3 • Most members lack symmetry • Various growth forms – Larval sponges free-swimming – Adults remain attached – sessile • Cell types – Truly multicellular – 3 functional layers in “vase” 4 • 3 layers 1. Outer epithelium • Water comes in ostia, exits osculum 2. Mesohyl • Middle layer – gelatinous matrix • Spicules – needles of calcium carbonate • Spongin – reinforcing tough protein fibers 3. Choanocytes • • • • Collar cells Flagellated – contributes to water circulation Face internal cavity Engulf and digest food from passing water 5 6 • Sponge reproduction – Asexual • Fragmentation – Sexual • Choanocytes transform into sperm • Sperm captured and passed to egg cell in mesohyl • Development may occur within mother or in open water • Larva is planktonic; will settle and transform into adult 7 Eumetazoa • Animals with distinct tissues • Embryos have distinct layers – Inner endoderm forms the gastrodermis – Outer ectoderm forms the epidermis and nervous system – Middle mesoderm (only in bilateral animals) forms the muscles • True body symmetry – Radial symmetry – Bilateral symmetry 8 Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) Brachiopoda Platyhelminthes Cycliophora Rotifera Micrognathozoa Acoela Ctenophora Cnidaria Phylum Cnidaria Porifera Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. • Most marine, few fresh water species • Diploblastic • Bodies have distinct tissues but no organs – No reproductive, circulatory, or excretory systems • No concentrated nervous system – Latticework of nerve cells – Touch, gravity, light receptors 9 • Cnidarians use nematocysts to capture prey – Secreted within nematocyte – Mechanism of discharge unknown – Some carry venom 10 • 2 basic body forms – Polyps – cylindrical and sessile – Medusa – umbrella-shaped and free-living 11 • Body plan has single opening leading to gastrovascular cavity – – – – Site of digestion Most gas exchange Waste discharge Formation of gametes in many • 2 layers to body wall 1. Epidermis 2. Gastrodermis – Mesoglea between layers 12 • Gastrovascular space also serves as hydrostatic skeleton – Provides a rigid structure against which muscles can operate – Gives the animal shape • Many polyp species build an exoskeleton of chitin or calcium carbonate around themselves – Some build an internal skeleton 13 • Cnidarian life cycle – Some cnidarians occur only as polyps, and others exist only as medusae, but many alternate between these two phases • Both phases consist of diploid individuals – In general, in species having both polyp and medusa in the life cycle, the medusa forms gametes • • • • • Sexes separate Gonochorism – individual is either male or female Zygote develops into planktonic planula Metamorphosis into polyp Polyp produces medusae or other polyps asexually 14 • Major evolutionary innovation in cnidarians is extracellular digestion of food inside the animal – Digestion takes place partly in gastrovascular cavity – Cells then engulf fragments by phagocytosis 15 4 or 5 classes 1. Anthozoa – Sea anemones, most corals, sea fans – Solitary and colonial polyps – Symbiotic dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) photosynthesize and provide nutrients to reef coral – Coral reefs economically important 16 2. Cubozoa – Box jellies – Strong swimmers, voracious fish predators – Stings may be fatal to humans 3. Hydrozoa – Hydroids, Hydra, Portuguese man-of-war – Both polyp and medusa stages – Only class with freshwater members 17 4. Scyphozoa – Jellyfish – Medusa more conspicuous and complex – Ring of muscle cells allows for rhythmic contractions for propulsion 5. Staurozoa – Star jellies – Resembles a medusa in most ways but is attached to the substratum by a sort of stalk that emerges from the side opposite the mouth 18 Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) Brachiopoda Platyhelminthes Cycliophora Rotifera Micrognathozoa Acoela Ctenophora Cnidaria Phylum Ctenophora Porifera Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. • Known as comb jellies, sea walnuts, or sea gooseberries • 8 rows of comblike plates of fused cilia that beat in a coordinated fashion • Many bioluminescent • 2 tentacles covered with colloblasts – Discharge strong adhesive used to capture prey • Phylogenetic position unclear 19 The Bilaterian Acoelomates • Characterized by bilateral symmetry • Allowed for high levels of specialization • Bilaterians are traditionally classified by the condition of their coelom Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) Brachiopoda Platyhelminthes Cycliophora Rotifera Micrognathozoa Acoela Ctenophora Cnidaria Porifera – Acoelomates – Pseudocoelomates – Coelomates Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 20 Phylum Platyhelminthes • Flatworms are ciliated, soft-bodied animals • Bodies are solid aside from an incomplete digestive cavity • Many species are parasitic • Others are free-living – Marine, freshwater, moist terrestrial 21 • Only one opening to digestive cavity – Muscular contractions in the pharynx allows food to be ingested and torn into small bits • Lack circulatory system – Diffusion for gas transport – Gut functions in digestion and food distribution – Some particles digested extracellularly – Cells engulf particles by phagocytosis – Tapeworms (parasitic flatworms) lack digestive systems – absorb food directly through body walls 22 23 24 • Have an excretory and osmoregulatory system – Network of fine tubules runs through body – Flame cells located on the side branches • Flagella move water and excretory substances into the tubules and then to pores located between the epidermal cells through which the liquid is expelled – Metabolic wastes are excreted into the gut and eliminated through the mouth 25 • Simple nervous system – Anterior cerebral ganglion and nerve cords – Eyespot can distinguish light from dark • Reproduction – Most are hermaphroditic – Undergo sexual reproduction – Also have capacity for asexual regeneration 26 • 2 major groups – Free-living Turbellaria • Probably not monophyletic • Dugesia – common planarian in bio labs – Parasitic Neodermata • Trematoda – flukes – Attach within host body by suckers, anchors, or hooks – Life cycle may have 2 or more hosts – Clonorchis sinensis, oriental liver fluke • Cercomeromorpha – tapeworms 27 28 • One of most important trematodes to human health are blood flukes Schistosoma – Afflict 5% of world’s population – About 800,000 people die each year from schistosomiasis or bilharzia – Fertilized egg must break through the wall of the blood vessels in intestine or the urinary bladder to get out 29 • Cercomeromorpha – tapeworms – Adult hangs onto inner wall of host intestine using scolex 30 • Most of tapeworm body is proglottids – Complete hermaphroditic unit, containing both male and female reproductive organs – Formed continuously • Beef tapeworm, Taenia saginata – Frequent human parasite – From eating uninspected rare beef 31 Phylum Acoelomorpha • Acoel flatworms were once considered basal members of the phylum Platyhelminthes • Have a primitive nervous system and lack a digestive cavity • Based on molecular evidence, similarities are convergent 32 Phylum Cycliophora • Discovery reported in 1995 • Striking circular mouth surrounded by a ring of cilia • Anatomy and life cycle are very unusual • Live on the mouthparts of claw lobsters on both sides of the North Atlantic 33 Pseudocoelomates • Pseudocoelom – cavity that lies between tissues derived from the mesoderm and those derived from the endoderm • Pseudocoelomic fluid performs the functions carried out by a circulatory system in most coelomate animals • Not monophyletic Chordata Echinodermata Chaetognatha Onychophora Arthropoda Tardigrada Nematoda Kinorhyncha Loricifera Nemertea Mollusca Annelida Brachiopoda Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) Platyhelminthes Cycliophora Rotifera Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 34 Phylum Nematoda • Vinegar eels, eelworms, and other roundworms • Members of this phylum are found everywhere – abundant and diverse • Marine, freshwater, parasites, free-living 35 • Bilaterally symmetrical and unsegmented • Covered by a flexible, thick cuticle that is molted as they grow • Digestive system well developed – Stylets – piercing organs near mouth – Pharynx – creates sucking action – Anus 36 37 • Sexual reproduction – Most gonochoric – Sexual dimorphism – male smaller with hooked end – Internal fertilization – Indirect development – egg, larva, adult • Eutely – Adults consist of a fixed number of cells – Caenorhabditis elegans has only 959 cells – Important in genetic and developmental studies 38 • Lifestyles – Many are active hunters, preying on protists and other small animals – Others are parasites of plants – Still others live within the bodies of larger animals • Largest known nematode, which can attain a length of 9 m, parasitizes the placenta of sperm whales 39 • About 50 species cause human diseases • Hookworms – Common in southern U.S. – Produce anemia • Trichinella causes trichinosis – Forms cysts in muscles – Infection from eating undercooked meat 40 • Pinworms, Enterobius vermicularis – Infects 30% of children in U.S. – Causes itching of the anus • Ascaris lumbricoides – intestinal roundworm – Infects 1 in 6 worldwide – Adult female can be 30 cm long – Rare in areas with modern plumbing • Serious tropical nematode diseases – Filariasis – Elephantiasis 41 Phylum Rotifera • Bilaterally symmetrical, unsegmented pseudocoelomates • Highly developed internal organs • Corona – “wheel animals” – Conspicuous ring of cilia at anterior end – Used for locomotion and sweeping food into the mouth 42 43