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INVERTEBRATES Porifera, Cnidaria, Platyhelminthes, Nematoda Animals that lack vertebrae (classed by a characteristic they don’t have.) 97% of all species on Earth are invertebrates. PORIFERA: PORE BEARING AKA- SPONGES PORIFERA •Representatives Sponges, about 9000 species •Habitat Marine and freshwater, usually in shallow water, sensitive to pollution PORIFERA Sponges lack symmetry, lack nerves, lack muscles, lack tissues, lack cephalization, and lack a body cavity Sponges are so unlike other animals that early naturalists classified them as plants. Terminology PORIFERA • spongocoel one central body cavity • osculum – opening to the spongocoel •ostia – pores on the outside of the body through which water (containing food and oxygen) enters • choanocytes collar cells, flagellated cells that keep water currents moving through the spongocoel • amoebocytes digest and distribute nutrients •spicules – cells with silica or CaCO3 that gives the sponge some support Sponge Anatomy a body plan that enables them to “filter feed” PORIFIRA •Movement – sessile •Excretory System none •Digestion - filter feeders, water brought in through ostia (pores) and circulated in the spongocoel where choanocytes digest the food by phagocytosis (intracellular digestion) •Gas Exchange – diffusion, choanocytes (flagellated) cells keep a current of oxygenated water moving through the spongocoel •Nervous System none •Circulatory System none • Skeleton PORIFERA none structures called spongin (protein fibers) and spicules (made of either silicon dioxide or calcium carbonate) provide support • Reproductive System – Asexually by budding – Sexually by producing sperm and eggs. – Many sponges are hermaphrodites PORIFERA Class Calcarea Calcareous Sponges •Sponges are classified based on the presence of spongin and the type of spicules Class Hexactinellida Glass Sponges Class Demospongiae Demosponges CNIDARIA: STINGING CELLS AKA- JELLIES & CORALS CNIDARIA • Representatives - Over 10,000 species – Class Hydrozoa – hydra, Obelia, polyp is dominant – Class Schyphozoa – jellyfish, medusa is dominant – Class Anthozoa– sea anemones and corals, only polyp • Habitat Mostly marine • Cnidarians have radial symmetry • No cephalization • The digestive cavity is called a gastrovascular • • cavity (gastro= stomach; vascul= a little vessel) The one opening in the gastrovascular cavity serves to ingest food and expel wastes. The bodies of cnidarians are described in one of two ways, depending on whether the opening of the gastrovascular cavity is ventral or dorsal CNIDARIANS that have the opening and surrounding tentacles at the top of their bodies have a body shape called a polyp (polyp = many footed). CNIDARIANS that float and have the opening and surrounding tentacles at the bottom, have a body form called a medusa (medusa = a jellyfish). • Terminology CNIDARIA – gastrovascular cavity – central body cavity – polyp - sessile with mouth up – medusa – medusa is floating, flattened, with mouth-down – basal disc – sticky bottom end of the animal that attaches to surface and allows it to glide – planula – larvae – tentacles – structures that capture prey and shove them into the mouth – cnidocytes – capsule cell containing a fine coiled thread, which, when discharged, functions in defense and prey capture – nematocysts – small barbed harpoon, the stinging component of cnidocytes CNIDARIA Symmetry Skeleton - radial - none - supported by water Body Cavity/germ layers - one opening - diploblastic two tissue layers - has a mesoglea but that isn’t a true germ layer CNIDARIA • Movement – Polyp is sessile or free-floating. Medusa is free-floating or can move by weak contractions • Digestion – tentacles grab and push prey into the gastrocoel where it is digested extracellulary. Note that even though the gastrocoel functions like stomach, it can’t be called that because it has only one opening. • Gas Exchange – Diffusion, no specialized organs • Excretory System CNIDARIA none • Circulatory System none • Nervous System none • Reproductive System Some asexual reproduction by budding, some sexual reproduction with sperm and eggs. Asexual CNIDARIA Hydra will periodically develop lumps on the sides of their bodies that are either testes or ovaries. These make and release sperm or eggs, which then join to form a zygote, which eventually grows into a new hydra. Hydra also reproduce asexually by a process known as budding in which a new, small Hydra begins to grow from the side of a large Hydra, eventually pinching off when it is fully formed Class Hydrozoa Hydrozoa Lifecycle Class Scyphozoa Class Anthozoa PLATYHELMINTHES: FLATWORMS FLATWORMS • Flatworms are the • • simplest of the worm groups. There are about 20,000 species. They are found many places and can be free living or parasitic. FLATWORMS • Example organisms include planaria FLATWORM ANATOMY This is not a body cavity Single opening to G. cavity Use cilia to move FLATWORMS • tapeworms, FLATWORMS • and flukes Schistosoma, a Fluke Complex life cycle, but still a flatworm FLATWORMS • This phyla is the first to demonstrate bilateral symmetry and cephalization • Flatworms can reproduce asexually (regeneration) and sexually (hermaphrodites) • The digestive tract of flatworms has only one opening FLATWORMS Endoderm Ectoderm Digestive Cavity Mesoderm •Though flatworms have a tissue layer of ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm, they do not have a body cavity (acoelomate) NEMATODA AKA: ROUNDWORMS ROUNDWORMS • Roundworms are slightly more advanced than flatworms and are about 15,000 species strong • Roundworms can be found in terrestrial habitats, marine water, and freshwater. Due to their ability to live in a large number of environments, they are one of the most abundant animals on Earth ROUNDWORMS Pseudocoelomate; they have a body cavity between the outer body wall and gut (yet the mesoderm does not completely line the body cavity) body cavity intestine ROUNDWORMS • Other characteristics of this phyla include cephalization and bilateral symmetry • The digestive tract of roundworms has 2 openings; this is the first group to display such an advancement • Many roundworms are parasitic and cause diseases: ROUNDWORMS • Trichinosis is a food borne disease caused by an intestinal roundworm (not common in the U.S.). It is contracted through raw or undercooked meat of infected animals. Symptoms include muscle soreness and pain, swelling of the upper eyelids, sweating, chills, fever, diarrhea. ROUNDWORMS • Hookworm- usually in tropical third-world • • areas, contracted by exposure to human waste The larvae of hookworms can enter through broken skin (usually the feet) Hookworm is easily treatable ROUNDWORMS •Pinworm- symptoms include itching near rectum at night due to egg laying; young school age children at risk • Microfilaria- causes elephantitis and is transmitted by a mosquito; affects lymph system and leads to severe swelling ROUNDWORMS • African eye worm: contracted through a fly bite •Canine and feline heartworm ROUNDWORMS • Guinea worm: contracted through contaminated water; after growing for about a year it creates a blister on the skin surface and emerges from it; the worm can’t be pulled out (can take months or years) ROUNDWORMS • Ascaris: often, no • symptoms or abdominal pain When body is stressed, the worm will try to escape Stay tuned for Part Two INVERTEBRATES