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Transcript
Flatworms and Roundworms
Section 28.3
Flatworms
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The largest group of acoelomate worms
Contain a mesoderm
Has tissues organized into organs
Bilaterally symmetrical
Flat, ribbon-like body
Have a highly branched gastrovascular cavity
Dissolved substances move through the body by
diffusion
Most do not have a respiratory or circulatory system
Flatworms, continued…
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Turbellaria
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Cestoda
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Free-living
Mostly marine
Planarians – freshwater turbellarians
Parasitic tapeworms
Anterior end contains suckers and hooks
Body increases in length by producing segments called
proglottids that break off during reproduction
Trematoda
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Flukes
Endoparasites (inside) or ectoparasites (outside)
May have complex life cycles with more than 1 host
Planaria
Marine Flatworm
Tapeworm
Fluke
Roundworms
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Also called nematodes
Pseudocoelomates – fluid movement
acts as a simple circulatory system
Have a one-way digestive tract
Parasitic roundworms
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1.
2.
3.
Three sources of human infection:
Ascaris – eggs in human waste end up in
soil, enter through ingestion, end up in
respiratory system
Trichinella – passed to humans through
undercooked pork, causes a disease called
trichinosis
Necator (hookworms) – larvae can
penetrate the soles of bare feet and enter
the bloodstream
Ascaris
Trichinella
Hookworms