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Monday, April 17th NO RTW • Objective: • I will be able to review and prepare for the marine science final. • Agenda: • Marine Science Final Review Packet • Homework: • None Tuesday, April 18th Pg. 118 RTW: Which animal phylum do you think has the most species? • Objective: • I will be able to cite examples and explain the adaptations to the marine environment of the invertebrate phyla: Arthropoda. • Agenda: • Arthropoda Foldable • Arthropoda group be ready to present tomorrow! • Homework: • None Arthropod Foldable Examples: insects, spiders, crabs, barnacles, copepods, shrimp and lobsters. Class Crustacea : mostly marine arthropods ○ Cirripedia- barnacles ○ Copepoda- Copepods ○ Malacostraca- shrimp, lobster, crab General Characteristics: Gill breathing Specialized appendages for feeding, walking, defense… (jointed appendages) Larvae is planktonic Grow via molting Bilaterally Symmetric Exoskeleton made of chitin hardened by CaCO3 Arthropod Foldable Diagrams: Reproduction: Sexual Some will carry eggs attached to abdomen until they hatch. Phylum Arthropoda Class Crustacea Largest phylum of animals w/ approx One million known species Includes: insects, spiders, crabs Barnacles, shrimp, & lobsters General characteristics • Bilaterally symmetric • Have jointed appendages (legs & mouth parts) • Exoskeleton made of chitin and hardened by CaCO3 • Grow by molting •Molting: •Old exoskeleton is shed leaving the animal soft •The animal brings in water to expand itself •A new exoskeleton is secreted by specialized tissue •Exoskeleton provides protection, support, & flexibility •Also imposes limitations to grow & size Class: Crustacea • 30,000 species primarily marine • Gill-breathing • 16-20 segments • Open circulatory system • Specialized appendages for food gathering, walking, fighting, defense, etc. • Start out life as a planktonic larvae • Ex: lobsters, crayfish, shrimp, crabs, copepods, barnacles, etc. • Giant King Crab = largest crustacean (~12ft) • Heaviest is the lobsters (up to 48 lbs!!) •Have two pairs of antennae (one pair smaller than the other) •Small, planktonic crustaceans include copepods, •barnacles, isopods, krill Barnacles • Chitin exoskeleton & secretes CaCO3 shell. • Feathery feet for filter feeding plankton • Some attach to docks or boats and a few on whales • Must close up with an operculum during low tide to avoid desiccation (drying up). •Other larger crustaceans include shrimp, lobsters & crabs •Considered decapods (5 pairs of legs) •Body consists of cephalothorax (fused head & thorax) & abdomen • Crabs have a compact abdomen & a broad cephalothorax • Abdomen usually tucked under Male Female Abdomen with eggs Videos • Horseshoe Crab • Molting Horseshoe Crab • Mantis Shrimp Lobsters http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=d5uQ317Osxw&NR=1&safety_mode=tr ue&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active Slipper lobster http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gBtsboSkOU&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 &safe=active Spiny Lobster http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2QDJwOIa7s&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 &safe=active Lobster Life Cycle: Safari Montage Giant Spider Crab King and Coconut Crabs Wednesday, April 19th No RTW: Arthropoda group be ready to present when the bell rings! • Objective: • I will be able to cite examples and explain the adaptations to the marine environment of the invertebrate phyla: Arthropoda. • Agenda: • Arthropoda Fish Food Presentation • Mollusca group be ready to present Friday! • Homework: • None Thursday, April 20th Pg. 118 RTW: What is one interesting fact about Arthropoda? • Objective: • I will be able to cite examples and explain the adaptations to the marine environment of the invertebrate phyla: Mollusca. • Agenda: • Mollusca Foldable • Mollusca group be ready to present tomorrow! • Homework: • None Mollusca Foldable Examples: Class Gastropoda- Snails Class Bivalvia- Clams Class Cephalopoda- Octopuses, Squids General Characteristics: Most numerous marine group, very diverse. Soft body covered in CaCO3 (bivalves & gastropods) One way digestion Some herbivores and some carnivores Mollusca Foldable Diagrams: (please label the class under your diagram) Reproduction: External fertilization- bivalves, chitons, & some snails Sperm & eggs are released into water Internal fertilization-cephalopods & most snails Cephalopods have modified arm (Hectocotylus) to transfer sperm to female Phylum Mollusca • Includes these classes: • Snails-class Gastropoda • Clams-class Bivalvia • Octopuses, Squids-class Cephalopoda • There are more species of mollusks in the ocean than any other group • Soft body protected by a shell of calcium carbonate • Very diverse in body structures and habits Mollusk Diversity Biology • Much more complex than Cnidarians or Sponges • Has a separate mouth and anus (1 way) • Has salivary and digestive glands • herbivores & carnivores (predators & filter feeders) • circulatory system transports nutrients and oxygen • Heart pumps blood to all tissues • Most have open circulatory system (leaky), cephalopods a closed circulatory system • Nervous system simple to complex • Most have separate sexes • Some species are hermaphrodites • External fertilization- bivalves, chitons, & some snails • Sperm & eggs are released into water • Internal fertilization-cephalopods & most snails • Cephalopods have modified arm to transfer sperm to female class Gastropoda • Snails-”stomach foot” • Largest group • Approx 90,000 species • Mostly marine • Body is coiled up inside shell • Shell sits on a ventral foot Nudibranch (sea slugno shell) Tulip snail (with shell) Body Structure Mantle • thin layer of tissue that produces the shell Foot Head • muscular, used in locomotion • some are well developed & have eyes • area with small teeth used in scraping algae or other food from surfaces, made of chitin Radula • hard plate used to close opening once head/foot retracts into shell Operculum • Gas exchange is through gills class Bivalvia • Oysters (cement themselves to hard surface) • Clams (burrow) • Mussels (attach to rocks using byssal threads), • Body compressed between two shells • Very large source of food for humans and other marine animals. class Cephalopoda-2 in to 30 ft • Cephalopods-most complex brain of all invertebrates • considered intelligent and capable of learning • Most cephalopods display color changes correlated to certain behaviors • Hectocotylus-Specialized arm transfers a spermatophore (packet of sperm) • After eggs hatch female usually dies Blue-ringed Octopus (Hapalochlaena) giant pacific octopus - Octopus dofleini Giant Squid • Cephalopoda Camouflage • Octopus vs Crab • Cone Snail Friday, April 21st No RTW: Mollusca group be ready to present when the bell rings! • Objective: • I will be able to cite examples and explain the adaptations to the marine environment of the invertebrate phyla: Mollusca. • Agenda: • Mollusa Fish Food Presentation • Homework: • None :)