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Marine Invertebrates 1 Marine Biodiversity • Bacteria • Unicellular algae • Heterotrophs – Protista/Protozoan phyla – Porifera – Cnidaria – Platyhelminthes – Mollusca – Annelida – Arthropoda – Echinodermata – Chordata – As well as numerous smaller phyla Domain Bacteria • Cell membrane, but no nucleus and most other organelles • Most abundant form of life, found in every marine environment o Breakdown of organic material – decay bacteria o Primary production, photosynthesis - cyanobacteria Domain Bacteria Unique marine functions Symbiosis - guts of many organisms Shipworms – are bivalve molluscs not worms Bacteria break down cellulose Domain Bacteria Unique marine functions Symbiosis - light production (bioluminescence) in some species Vibrio – found in high numbers in photophores, contain the oxidative enzyme Luciferin Luciferin + O2 = oxyluciferin + light - Are free living and are pulled in photophores when needed Domain Bacteria Unique marine functions Symbiosis - toxin production Tetrodotoxin – neurotoxin with no known antidote Blocks sodium channels Unicellular algae Diatoms Enclosed in cell walls made of silica Important primary producers in open water temperate and polar regions - Account of a large portion of O2 produced on Earth Unicellular algae Diatoms Large deposits = diatomceous earth/diatomite Many uses - fluid filters (beer, swimming pools), insecticides, stabilize dynamite, mild abrasives like toothpaste Unicellular algae Phylum Dinoflagellata - Dinoflagellates • ~ 1200 species, almost all are marine • Important primary producers in warm or tropical waters, some ingest food • Have two flagella, some with plate-like cell walls Unicellular algae Phylum Dinoflagellata - Dinoflagellates Zooxanthellae Unicellular algae Phylum Dinoflagellata - Dinoflagellates Some are light producing Luciferin + O2 = oxyluciferin + light “Bugler Alarm Theory” Unicellular algae Phylum Dinoflagellata - Dinoflagellates Algal blooms are source of “red tides” Can release toxic substances and contaminate fisheries Unicellular algae Phylum Dinoflagellata - Dinoflagellates Can release toxic substances and contaminate fisheries Accumulation in large predators can lead to ciguetera poisoning Phylum Porifera Approximately 5000 species worldwide, can dominate benthic habitats ( ~ 1000 species know from tropical reefs) One of the few groups that have nearly equal diversity in Carribean and Indio-Pacific regions Mostly marine (98%), some freshwater species (found in Illinois) Have multiple cell types, but lack tissue Phylum Porifera Get their shape from either calcareous spicules or spongin, some species have both Phylum Porifera Get their shape from either calcareous spicules or spongin possess specialized cells called choanocytes choanocyte Phylum Porifera Three basic body plans Asconoid Syconoid Leuconoid Phylum Porifera Can reach very large sizes reproduce both sexually and asexually sexual reproduction has larval stage = amphiblastula Evidence of self-recognition a few species are mobile some chemically dissolve and cause coral etching Phylum Cnidaria • a.k.a Coelenterata or Radiata hydras, jellyfish, sea anemones, corals • Approx. 10,000 species, found worldwide, mostly marine Cnidarian Classification • 3 Classes • Hydrozoa • Scyphozoa • Anthozoa - sea anenomes, corals - all marine Phylum Cnidaria Have radial symmetry Have 5 cell types and tissue level of organization Have rudimentary organs Usually have specialized stinging cells cnidocyte - whole cell nematocyst - stinging capsule within cnidocyte Phylum Cnidaria • The cnidarian body wall has 3 basic layers (2 tissue layers) – Epidermis- outer layer – Gastrodermis- lines the gastrovascular cavity – Mesoglea- between the two tissue layers; it is a noncellular gelatinous layer, not a tissue 5 Cell Types • Epithelio-muscle cells • Cover and protect • Can contract (muscular properties) • Interstitial cells • Production of gametes • Mucous secreting cells (Gland cells)mucous for attachment, feeding • Cnidocytes- protection, predation • Nerve cells- irritability Cnidarian life-cycle Two body forms • Polyp - Sessile Form Cnidarian life-cycle Two body forms – in most species • Medusa - Planktonic Form Cnidarian life-cycle • Both asexual and sexual reproduction • Larvae called Planula Phylum Cnidaria nematocysts Toxicity of cnidarian venom Over 10,000 different types of toxins identified Usually a mixture of hemotoxins, neurotoxins, cardiotoxins/musculotoxins Toxicity ranges from mild stinging to fatal in humans Lethality Concentration of venom Portuguese Man O’ War Physalia Responsible for numerous “attacks” every year off the US coast Rarely fatal due to low level of venom injected, intense cutaneous pain - most deaths due to drowning Toxicity of cnidarian venom Box jellyfish or sea wasp Chironex Can reach 3 m in length, found circumtropically, but most common in South Pacific If not treated immediately you’re toast - one individual contains enough venom to kill 60 humans Responsible for more deaths in Australia than sharks or snakes (one every two years) - 20-40 per year in other regions of Pacific Cnidarian Classification • 3 Classes •Hydrozoa - both polyp and medusa stage, freshwater and marine, polyp stage dominate • Fire corals - not true coral since the have both polyp and medusa stage