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Invertebrates I: Porifera, Cnidaria, Ctenophora, Platyhelminthes, Annelida Tree of Life Figure CO 7 I. Invertebrates - Background • Kingdom Animalia • 97% of all animal species are invertebrates II. Phylum Porifera (Sponges) • Simplest multicellular animals • Most are marine (~9000 species) • sessile (attached to substrate) • Diversity of shapes, sizes, colors, habitats •Cellular organization-complex aggregation of specialized cells •No true tissues/organs, cells largely independent from each other •No organs, movable parts, appendages •Thus, cells are plastic, can change from one type to another Fig. 7.2 Shapes: Tiny cups, broad branches, tall vases, encrusting round masses II. Phylum Porifera (Sponges)-Gr. “pore-bearers” Complex sponge many chambers, oscula Simple sponge 1 chamber, 1 osculum Body Plan (Structure)- Asymmetrical Ostia – water enters-pumped through these pores Choanocytes – Collar cells; line chambers Beat flagella to pump water through sponge traps food particles Osculum – water exits (driven by collar cells acting in synch) Spongin – Elastic protein (spongy texture) Spicules – Calcareous or siliceous structures, structural support, discourage predators Amebocytes (wandering cells)– Secrete spongin and spicules, transport and store food particles, transform into other types of cells, repair Water-OUT through osculum II. Phylum Porifera (Sponges) B. Feeding • Suspension feeders • Filter feeders (active suspension feeders) C. Reproduction • • Asexual Sexual • Water/food IN through ostia Broadcast spawning Fig. 7.3 II. Phylum Porifera 3 classes – defined by internal skeleton Class Calcarea • CaCO3 spicules • Shallow tropical waters Class Demospongiae • Bath sponge Class Hexactinellida • Glass sponges, silica spicules • Deep waters II. Phylum Porifera 3 classes – defined by internal skeleton Class Calcarea • CaCO3 spicules • Shallow tropical waters (Leucosolenia, Scypha, Leucandra, Leucilla) • (drawing of Scypha slide) II. Phylum: Porifera Class Hexactinellida • Glass sponges, silica spicules • Deep waters • (Euplectella specimen-Venus’s flower basket sponge, spicules slide) Gr. Plecta = lace, this genus is known for lace-like skeleton fused glass spicules II. Phylum: Porifera Class Demospongiae • Silica, spongin, or both, or lack skeleton • Bath sponge, rounded, spongin fibers • Encrusting forms, bright colors on rocks and corals • Boring types, through CaCO3 • (Spongia specimen, note siliceous spiculation, internal budding) III. Phylum Cnidaria • 9000+ species • • • Sea anemones Corals Jellies A. Body Plan • Body forms • • • Polyp - sessile Medusa – free floating Radial symmetry • • Oral surface Aboral surface Fig. 7.5 III. Phylum Cnidaria A. Body Plan • Cnidocytes (stinging cells) • • • • • • Defense Prey capture • Contain nematocysts (stinging capsule) Simple nervous system No true organs Single opening Mucus traps food Trigger hair fluid coiled thread Undischarged < 0.1 mm Discharged www.calacademy.org/research/izg/nematocyst.htm III. Phylum Cnidaria B. Class Hydrozoa • Polyp forms • • • Millepora species colonial Specialized polyps (zooids) • Gastrozooid - Feeding • Gonozooid – Reproduction • Dactylozooid – Defense (tentacles) Medusa forms • Siphonophores – Colonial (e.g.- Portugese man of war) III. Phylum Cnidaria, Class Hydrozoa gastrozooid gonozooid Fig. 7.7 III. Phylum Cnidaria C. Class Scyphozoa • Desmonema glaciale Medusae large • • • E.g. – Cyanea capillata (Lion’s Mane) • Bell > 2 m • Tentacles 60+ m Swim by contracting bell rhythmically, pulsating contraction Stings * Cyanea capillata III. Phylum Cnidaria D. Class Anthozoa • • Polyp Passive suspension feeders 1. Solitary forms • 2. Anthopleura xanthogrammica Sea anemones Colonial forms a. b. c. d. Corals • Stony corals – branching and massive - Some build reefs • Soft corals Gorgonians Sea pens Sea pansies Branching Corals Doming Corals Sea Pen Soft Corals Sea Pansy Gorgonians (Sea Whips) Gorgonians (Sea Fans) III. Phylum Cnidaria E. Class Cubozoa • • • • Sea wasps, Box jellyfish square bell 4 tentacles or bunches Highly toxic IV. Phylum Ctenophora (comb jellies) • • Biradial symmetry 8 rows of ciliary combs (ctenes) • swimming • Carnivorous • Lack nematocysts • Capture prey with sticky colloblasts • May occur in swarms • Heavy predators Pleurobrachia Beroe V. Phylum Platyhelminthes • Flatworms Dorsoventrally flattened • Bilateral symmetry • Simplest organism with organs and organ systems • Digestive tract has 1 opening • No circulatory, respiratory, skeletal systems • Hermaphroditic V. Phylum Platyhelminthes A. Class Trematoda (Flukes) • • Parasitic – Feed on tissues, blood, gut contents Complex life cycles • • • • B. Adults in vertebrate Larvae in invertebrates Vertebrate eats intermediate host Body covered with cuticle resistant to digestion Cestoda (Tapeworms) • • Parasitic Live in vertebrate intestines – (uncooked meat) • • • Head attaches w/4 suckers or hooks Gutless – absorb nutrients through body wall 50 feet!! (sperm whales) V. Phylum Platyhelminthes C. Class Turbellaria • Mostly free-living carnivorous species • • • commensal animals inside invertebrates (oysters, crabs, etc.) Most commonly seen (Why?) Label ocelli=eyespots VI. Phylum Annelida • Segmented worms (1mm-3m) – flex/move more easily • Internally and externally, internal structures in tandem • Protective elastic cuticle • Body composed of repeated segments • Gut runs through all segments in body cavity (coelom-space around gut) • Coelom filled with fluid – hydrostatic skeleton • Coelom divided with septa-correspond to segments Leech Sabella pavonina Nereis sp. Lumbicus terrestris VI. Phylum Annelida A. • Class Polychaeta – tube worms, feather dusters Body segments have pairs of parapodia • Parapodia for locomotion, feeding, gas exchange, protection • tipped with setae (bristles), often 4 pairs • Respiration: some with gills, exchange through body VI. Phylum Annelida A. Class Polychaeta • Larva = Trochophore • • Band of cilia around body Diverse lifestyles • • • Free-living predators Burrowing Tube building Fig. 7.14 VI. Phylum Annelida B. Class Oligochaeta - earthworms • • • • C. © 2004 Amanda Demopoulos Few marine species Benthic – mud and sand (deposit feeders) No parapodia Locomotion – expansion and contraction Class Hirudinea (Leeches) • • • • Freshwater mostly No parapodia One anterior/one posterior sucker to attach Hirudin – anticoagulating chemical so blood does not clot