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Kingdom Animalia Kingdom Animalia • • • • • • Eukaryotic (Domain Eukarya) All Multi-cellular (unlike Protists) All Heterotrophic (unlike Plants) No cell walls (unlike Fungi and Plants) Sexual reproduction Cells are organized into structurally-functional tissues Marine Animals Without A Backbone • There are two major groups of animals: the vertebrates, which have a backbone, and the invertebrates, those without a backbone • Of all the species of animals, ~97% are invertebrates! Marine Animals Without A Backbone • All major groups of invertebrates have marine representatives, and many are exclusively marine • Other than insects – one of the few invertebrate groups to invade land – most animals are marine! – ~8/10ths of all organisms are Arthropods! if Facebook existed years ago… Phylum Porifera • Sponges are the simplest of all animals; best described as aggregations of specialized cells • Sponges do not have true tissues or organs; cells are largely independent of one another • All are sessile (non-mobile) • Porifera means “pore bearer” • NO body symmetry Phylum Porifera • Tiny pores, or ostia allow water to enter and circulate through a series of canals where plankton and other organic debris are filtered out and eaten • Sponges are suspension feeders, animals that eat food particles suspended in the water column • Filter feeders; they actively filter out food particles Phylum Porifera • Water is pumped into a feeding chamber lined with collar cells, or choanocytes • Choanocytes have a flagella that generates a current, and a thin collar that traps food particles • Food is then ingested within the cell Phylum Porifera • As sponges get larger, they need structural support • Most have spicules, supporting structures of different shapes and sizes, made of silica or calcium carbonate • Many also have a ‘skeleton’ of tough, elastic fibers made of a protein called spongin Phylum Porifera • Wandering cells, or amebocytes secrete the spicules and spongin • Amebocytes also transport and store excess food particles, and can change into other cell types, quickly ‘repairing’ any damage to the sponge • ~80% of food particles are engulfed and ingested by choanocytes; smaller particles, inc. bacteria and dinoflagellates are eaten by amebocytes Sponges are filter-feeders You are what you eat… • The silica frustules of diatoms and other phytoplankton help make the glass spicules of sponges! Diatoms Sponge Sponges are boring! • A family of sponges known as boring sponges bore into shells by use of an enzyme produced by the amebocytes • Sponge larvae settle onto wood and/or shells and create burrows where they will grow Sponge worthy? • Unlike most animals, many sponges reproduce asexually • Branches or buds break off to form separate, but identical, sponges • Like all animals, however, sponges also reproduce sexually – Specialized coanocytes or amebocytes produce eggs and sperm – Sponge larvae is planktonic! Phylum Cnidaria • Cnidarians (phylum Cnidaria) are multicellular animals with tissues that perform specific functions • Cnidarians include the sea anemones, jellyfish, coral, and their relatives • Cnidarians have radial symmetry; in fact radial symmetry evolved in the Cnidarians! Cnidarians are rad! • Animals with radial symmetry look the same from all sides and have no head, front or back • Instead have an oral surface (where mouth is) and aboral surface Phylum Cnidaria • Cnidarians have a centrally-located mouth surrounded by tentacles, slender, finger-like projections used to capture and handle food • All possess stinging cells, or nematocysts • Nematocysts employ neurotoxins which paralyze prey; 7-17 different types • The mouth opens up to a gut, with only one opening Nematocysts http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BpKKGBivQo&feature=related Phylum Cnidaria • Cnidarians occur in two basic forms: a polyp, a sac-like attached form with its mouth and tentacles pointed upward, and a bell-like medusa, which resembles an upside-down polyp adapted to swimming • Some Cnidarians have both polyp and medusa stages; others spend their entire lives as either a polyp or a medusa Phylum Cnidaria, Class Hydrozoa • The Hydrozoans are a class of very small, predatory Cnidarians which can be solitary or colonial in form Class Hydrozoa, Order Siphonophora • Within class Hydrozoa, lies the Order Siphonophora, the Siphonphores – Siphonophores consist of colonies of medusa-like and polyp-like individuals, each specialized for a specific function – Specialized features include a gas-filled float, tentacles lined with nematocysts, and digestive cells – Very toxic! Portuguese Man o’ War: a siphonophore By-the-wind Sailors: a siphonophore Physophora: my nemesis! Actual size http://life.bio.sunysb.edu/marinebio/plankton.html Phylum Cnidaria, Class Scyphozoa • The Scyphozoans (class Scyphozoa) include most of the common medusa-like ‘jellyfish’ • Larger than Hydrozoans • Short polyp stage; Long medusa-stage NOAA Phylum Cnidaria, Class Scyphozoa • Scyphozoan polyps are very small and release juvenile medusa • Adult medusa have a rounded body, or bell • Scyphozoans swim with rhythmic contractions of their bell, but their swimming ability is limited – Planktonic! – Painful stings to swimmers Phylum Cnidaria, Class Anthozoa • The Anthozoans (class Anthozoa) include the corals, sea anemones, and sea fans • Anthozoans lack a medusa stage and exist as solitary or colonial polyps • Many corals excrete a skeleton of calcium carbonate, which forms reefs (‘reef-building corals’); very important for marine ecosystem • Anthozoans can sting and ‘attack’ each other! Class Anthozoa http://webs.lander.edu/rsfox/invertebrates/aiptasia.html Phylum Ctenophora • The comb jellies, or ctenophores are exclusively-marine • NO nematocysts (not Cnidarians); instead of stinging cells, ctenophores possess sticky cells, or colloblasts • 8 rows of cilia; Ctenophore literally means “comb bearer” • ‘Boom and bust’ population dynamics Phylum Ctenophora • Most species are bioluminescent • Voracious feeders on copepods, fish eggs, crab larvae, shrimp larvae and other meroplankton • Self-fertilizing hermaphrodites • Can double in size in 1 day! • Important secondary consumers in Long Island estuaries Peanut butter and jellyfish anyone? • Ctenophores are increasing in LI estuaries • During peak ctenophore abundance in Great South Bay (in 2006), one 2minute plankton tow yielded over 3,700 individuals (543.1 individuals m-3)! 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 M. leidyi mL m^-3 Mean mesozooplankton L^-1 Total mesozooplankton L-1 M. leidyi mL m-3 Ctenophores vs. Zooplankton 2009 Ctenophores on Long Island Spring: Sea gooseberry Summer: Sea walnut Fall: Beroe ovata Understanding my ctenophore research through Pac Man… Bivalve larvae (ctenophore food) Phytoplankton (clam food) Ctenophore Lots of ctenophores!!! GAME OVER (for the hard clam)