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1. Animals are heterotrophic by ingestion. 2. Unlike fungi that use external digestion, animals usually digest food in a central cavity. 3. Animals produce heterogametes (eggs and sperm) and have a diplontic life cycle; adults are diploid. 1. Types of Symmetry 2. Germ layers refer to the number of layers of tissues. 3. Body Cavities Are Different . 3. They mostly live in coastal waters but there are oceanic jellyfish and freshwater hydras. 1. 13,000 species of flatworms belong to phylum Platyhelminthes. 2. Classification a. Planaria and relatives are freshwater animals in the class Turbellaria. b. Flukes are external or internal parasites in the class Trematoda. c. Tapeworms are internal parasites in the class Cestoda. 3. In addition to endoderm and ectoderm, a mesoderm layer gives rise to muscles and reproductive organs. 1. Turbellaria include freshwater planaria such as Dugesia. 2. Planaria live in lakes, ponds, and streams and feed on small living or dead organisms. 3. The head is arrow-shaped; side extensions (auricles) are sensory organs to detect food and enemies. 4. Two light-sensitive eyespots have pigmentation that makes them look cross-eyed. 1. As parasites, flukes and tapeworms have characteristic modifications. a. Loss of predation led to loss of cephalization; a head carries hooks and suckers to attach to a host. b. There is extensive development of reproductive system with loss of other systems. c. Well-developed nervous and gastrovascular systems are not needed; it does not seek out or digest prey. 1. The class Trematoda includes flukes. 2. Blood, liver, and lung flukes inhabit those organs. 3. Fluke bodies are generally oval and elongate. 4. At the "head" an oral is sucker surrounded by sensory papillae; another sucker helps attach. 1. A tapeworm scolex contains hooks and suckers for attachment to intestinal wall of host. 2. Behind the head is a short neck and then a long string of proglottids. 3. Each proglottid segment contains a full set of both male and female sex organs and little else. 4. There are excretory canals but no digestive system and only rudiments of nerves. 5. After fertilization, proglottids become a bag of eggs; mature proglottids break off and pass out with feces. 6. If eggs of tapeworms are ingested by pigs or cattle, larvae become encysted in the muscle of hosts. 7. The covering of ingested eggs is digested away and larvae burrow through intestinal wall and travel by bloodstream to lodge and encyst in muscle. 8. A cyst is a hard-walled structure sheltering a larval worm. 9. If humans eat meat of infected pigs or cattle and fail to cook it properly, they too become infected. 1. Pseudocoelom is a body cavity that is incompletely lined with mesoderm; support is provided by hydrostatic pressure of fluid in the pseudocoelom against a tough cuticle. 2. Perhaps 500,000 species of roundworms are in phylum Nematoda. 3. These worms are unsegmented, with a smooth outside wall. A. Over 110,000 living species of mollusks belong to the phylum Mollusca 1. Mollusks have a three-part body plan: a visceral mass, a mantle, and a foot. 2. Most are marine, but some are freshwater and terrestrial. 3. Visceral mass contains internal organs: digestive tract, paired kidneys, and reproductive organs. 4. Mantle covering partly surrounds visceral mass; may secrete a shell, help develop gills or lungs. 1. Class Bivalvia contains bivalves (clams, oysters, mussels, scallops). 2. "Bivalves" are two-part shells that are hinged and close by powerful muscles. 3. They have no head, no radula, and little cephalization. 4. Clams burrow with a hatchet-shaped foot; mussels use it to produce threads to attach to objects. 1. Class Cephalopoda ("head-footed") includes squids, cuttlefish, octopuses, and nautiluses. 2. Squids and octopuses squeeze water out of the mantle cavity; water forced out through a funnel propels them by jet propulsion. 3. Around the head are tentacles with suckers or adhesive secretions adapted for grasping prey. 4. A head equipped with a powerful beak can tear prey apart. 1. Class Gastropoda includes snails, land slugs, whelks, conchs, periwinkles, sea hares, and sea slugs. 2. Most are marine; some are freshwater or terrestrial. 3. Herbivores use a radula to scrape food from surfaces; carnivorous gastropods use the radula to bore through a surface, such as a bivalve shell, to obtain food. 4. A developed head with eyes and tentacles projects from a coiled shell that protects visceral mass. 1. About 12,000 species of segmented worms are in phylum Annelida. 2. Segmentation shows by rings that circle the body; septa partition the coelom. 3. A well-developed, fluid-filled coelom and tough integument act as a hydrostatic skeleton. 4. Segmentation may have evolved in conjunction with a hydrostatic skeleton. 1. Most polychaetes, marine worms, (class Polychaeta) are marine. 2. Polychaetes possess parapodia and setae. a. Parapodia are paddle-like appendages used in swimming and for respiration. b. Setae are bristles, attached to parapodia, that help anchor polychaetes or help them move. 3. Clam worms such as Nereis are active predators. 4. Many have well-developed cephalization; head has well-developed jaws, eyes and other sense organs. 5. Sedentary filter feeders possess tentacles with cilia to create water currents and select food particles. 6. Only during breeding do polychaetes have reproductive organs. 7. Marine worm zygotes develop larva similar to those of marine clams; this shows relatedness. 1. Class Oligochaeta includes earthworms with few setae, protruding in clusters directly from body. 2. Earthworms lack both a well-developed head and any parapodia. 3. Locomotion requires coordinated movement of body muscles and help of setae. a. As longitudinal muscles contract, segments bulge and setae protrude to anchor into soil. b. When circular muscles contract, a worm lengthens, setae are withdrawn and the segment can be pulled forward. 1. Leeches belong to the class Hirudinea. 2. Most are fresh water species but a few are marine or terrestrial. 3. They lack setae and each body ring has several transverse grooves. 1. Over 1,000,000 species are in phylum Arthropoda; they are highly successful 2. Arthropods have a rigid exoskeleton with freely movable jointed appendages. a. The exoskeleton is a strong but flexible outer covering composed of chitin. b. Chitin is a strong, flexible, nitrogenous polysaccharide. c. It serves as protection, attachment for muscles, locomotion, and prevention of desiccation. 1. About 40,000 species of crustacea belong to subphylum Crustacea. 2. Crustaceans are successful and mostly marine. 3. Head usually bears compound eyes and five pairs of appendages. a. First two are antennae and antennules; in front of the mouth, they have sensory functions. b. Three pairs (mandibles, first and second maxillae) lie behind mouth and are used in feeding. 1. Subphylum Uniramia includes millipedes, centipedes, and insects. 2. Uniramous appendages attached to thorax and abdomen have only one branch-the leg branch. 3. Head appendages include one pair of antennae, one pair of mandibles, one or two pairs of maxillae. 4. Uniramia live on land and breathe by air tubes called tracheae. 1. Over 900,000 species of insects are in superclass Insecta; this exceeds all other animal species combined. 2. Most insects live on land; some are secondarily aquatic. 3. Insect body is divided into a head, thorax, and abdomen. a. Head bears sense organs and mouthparts. b. Thorax bears three pairs of legs and one or two pairs of wings; wings provide advantages. c. Abdomen contains most of the internal organs. 1. Class Chilopoda includes about 2,500 species of centipedes. a. Body is composed of head and trunk with many segments; each segment has a pair of legs. b. They are carnivorous; the head bears antennae and mouthparts with jaws. 1. Chelicerates in subphylum Chelicerata include spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites, horseshoe crabs, etc. 2. First pair of appendages are chelicerae, second pair are pedipalps; next four pairs are walking legs. a. Chelicerae are appendages that function as feeding organs. b. Pedipalps are feeding or sensory structures. 3. Appendages attach to a cephalothorax, a fusion of head and thoracic regions.