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Invertebrate Diversity I Porifera, Cnidaria, Ctenophora, Platyhelminthes, Rotifera, Nematoda Kingdom Animalia • Heterotrophic ingesters • Multicellular – “higher” groups have tissues – tissues arranged into organs in some groups • No cell walls – flexible • Nervous tissue & Muscle tissue • No alternation of generations • Common early embryological development 2 Sub-kingdoms in Animalia • Parazoa: • Eumetazoa: – no symmetry – all symmetrical • radial or bilateral – no true tissues or organs – almost all have tissues – 1 phylum: Porifera – all other animal phyla (~35 phyla) Bases for traditional invertebrate taxonomy 1 Tissue specialization – Aggregates – Diploblastic – 2 germ layers – Triploblastic – 3 germ layers Choanoflagellate Colony (Protist) Bases for traditional invertebrate taxonomy 2 Body symmetry None Radial Bilateral Bases for traditional invertebrate taxonomy 3 Body Cavity Bases for traditional invertebrate taxonomy 4 Early embryology Cleavage spiral, determinate radial, indeterminate Coelom formation schizocoelous enterocoelous Fate of blastopore protostome deuterostome mouth anus Two alternative family trees morphological, developmental Biochemical, molecular Vertebrates vs. Invertebrates • Invertebrates – “animals without backbones” – 35.001 modern animal phyla – origin of all modern phyla in Cambrian Explosion (~540mya) • Vertebrates – “animals with backbones” – one diverse subphylum of Ph. Chordata – staggered evolution of vertebrate classes Q1: Which of the following is NOT a common feature of the eumetazoan animals 1) 2) 3) 4) cell walls multicellular heterotrophic tissues Q2: Which of the following is NOT a basis for traditional animal taxonomy 1) 2) 3) 4) tissue specialization/number of germ layers body symmetry molecular similarities early embryology Ph. Porifera: the sponges Anatomy of a Sponge Spicules Classes of Poriferans • Calcarea – small, calcium spicules • Demospongae – larger, silica spicules – the includes the bath sponges and flower baskets • Hexactinellidae – hexagonal spicule array – the “glass sponges” Some poriferans . . . Ph. Cnidaria formerly Colenterata (bag animals) • • • • • • true tissues - diploblastic (2 layers) no organs radially symmetric gastrovascular cavity with single opening cnidocytes, nematocysts, and tentacles 2 main body forms: polyp & medusa Polyp sessile, asexual Medusa motile, sexual Cnidocytes: stinging cells Classes of Cnidarians: • Cl. Hydrozoa: hydroids (dominant polyp stage) • Cl. Scyphozoa: true jellyfish (dominant medusa stage) • Cl. Anthozoa: sea anemones, corals (no medusa stage) Class Hydrozoa • The polypoid body form dominates • Hydra • Portuguese man o’ war Man o’ war A colonial hydroid! Cl Scyphozoa: jellyfish Cl Anthozoa -anemone Class Anthozoa: Coral Coral Polyps Ph. Ctenophora: comb jellies • 8 rows of ciliary plates • digestive tube – 2 openings • colloblasts (adhesive structures on tentacles) Comb jelly Retractable tentacles! Ctenophore Comb Jelly (“Sea gooseberry”) Q3: Phylum Cnidaria is named for the characteristic 1) 2) 3) 4) bag-like structure medusa and polyp life stages two germ layers stinging cells Q4: True jellyfish belong to the class 1) 2) 3) 4) Hydrozoa Scyphozoa Anthozoa Ctenophora Ph. Platyhelminthes: flatworms • • • • • Bilaterally symmetric 3 tissue layers; organs no body cavity: are acoelomates dorsoventrally flattened (thus the name . . . ) primitive cephalization (but not in Class Cestoidea) • blind-ended gut (also not in Cl. Cestoidea) • hermaphroditic (mostly) 4 classes of flatworms: • Cl .Turbellaria: free-living flatworms, e.g., Planaria • Cls. Trematoda & Monogenea: flukes • Cl. Cestoidea: tapeworms Planaria Class Trematoda: flukes (digenetic – intermediate and definitive hosts) Life Cycle of the Blood Fluke (Schistosoma) & (or, what do politicians and parasites have in common?) Political Cycle of the Blood Fluke (Schistosoma mansoni) Class Cestoidea: tapeworms Tapeworm encysted in muscle Q5: Cestodes (tapeworms) differ from the other flatworms in that they 1) 2) 3) 4) lack digestive organs lack a cephalized nervous system have a segmented body plan all of the above Ph. Rotifera: the rotifers • Pseudocoelomates • Mostly freshwater, but also on moss, lichens • very small! But have complete digestive tract • have a “crown of cilia” that draws food in toward their jaws Rotifers Rotifer Ph. Acanthocephala – spiny-headed worms: • • • • barbed proboscis rudimentary gut intestinal parasites genomics suggests they are giant, modified rotifers Ph. Nematoda: • • • • Unsegmented roundworms pseudocoelomates hydrostatic skeleton many are animal parasites, e.g., pinworms, hook worms, Trichinella, Ascaris • many are plant parasites Nematode Trichinella Filariasis (Elephantiasis) Microfilarial nematodes Transfer via mosquitoes Adults live in blood stream & large lymphatic vessels Larvae infest peripheral lymphatic capillaries - crepuscular Body’s reaction is overgrowth of connective tissue Q6: Pseudocoelomate phyla include the 1) 2) 3) 4) Protista and Porifera Cnidaria and Ctenophora Platyhelminthyes and Chordata Rotifera and Nematoda Q7: All of the eumetazoan invertebrates we have discussed so far are 1) 2) 3) 4) acoelomates protostomes segmented secretly vertebrates