Title: Phylum Nemata Nematoda
1Phylum Nemata (Nematoda)
2Phylum Nemata (Nematoda)
Numerous. Wide variety of habitats. Free-living
and parasitic.
3What do nematodes look like?
Covered with thick cuticle. Epidermis thickened
to house nerve cords and excretory
canals. Obliquely striated longitudinal muscles.
4How do nematodes support themselves and move?
Support comes from cuticle and muscles.
5How do nematodes support themselves and move?
No circular muscles. Pseudocoelom acts as a
hydroskeleton and cuticle used as well.
6How do nematodes support themselves and move?
Cerebral ganglion is a circumespophogeal nerve
ring. Motor and sensory nerves. Tactile papillae.
7How do nematodes feed themselves?
Many feeding modes. Complete digestive
tract. Initial digestion extracellular. Microvilli
in intestine for nutrient uptake,
8How do nematodes circulate nutrients and
osmoregulate?
Pseudocoelom aids in nutrient and gas
exchange. Aerobic and anaerobic
metabolism. Renette cells connect directly to an
excretory pore for osmoregulation and water
removal. Nitrogenous waste lost across intestine.
9How do nematodes reproduce and develop?
Most gonochoristic with sexual dimorphism. Male
thread-like testes. Sperm germinate in distal
end and mature in proximal end near sperm duct.
Travel to seminal vesicle leading to
anus. Females have elongate ovaries widening to
oviducts widening to uteri which lead to vagina
and gonopore.
10How do nematodes reproduce and develop?
Internal fertilization. Zygotes covered in shells
and deposited. Direct development. Holoblastic
cleavage, not spiral or radial. Stereoblastula,
gastrulation by epiboly.
11How do nematodes reproduce and develop?
12How do nematodes reproduce and develop?