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Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005

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Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005 Chapter 22 Phylum Gastrotricha and Phylum Nematoda Phylum Gastrotricha 500 species Found in all three habitat types ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biology 320 Invertebrate Zoology Fall 2005


1
Biology 320Invertebrate ZoologyFall 2005
  • Chapter 22
  • Phylum Gastrotricha and Phylum Nematoda

2
Phylum Gastrotricha
  • 500 species
  • Found in all three habitat types
  • Marine and FW - interstitially or on plants
  • Terrestrially - in water film covering soil
    particles
  • Microscopic to 4mm long
  • Eutelic
  • Genetically predetermined and constant number of
    cells
  • Cell size increases, but not cell number

3
Body Form
  • Bowling-pin-shaped
  • Name means hairy belly
  • Locomotory cilia on ventral surface
  • Adhesive tubes located near head and/or on
    lateral body
  • Adhesive organs at posterior
  • All are similar to duo-glands of turbellarians

4
Body Wall
  • Cuticle
  • Not chitinous
  • Not molted
  • Epidermis
  • Musculature
  • Circular
  • Longitudinal

5
Organ Systems
  • No hemal system
  • Acoelomate, so dont even possess a hemocoel
  • No respiratory system
  • Nervous system
  • Brain
  • Pair of ventrolateral nerve cords
  • Sensory organs
  • Cerebral organs possess all three types of
    receptors
  • Sensory bristles found on body surface
  • Excretory system
  • One to several pairs of protonephridia
  • Nephridiopores open ventrolaterally
  • Osmoregulatory in function
  • Ammonotelic, so ammonia diffuses across body
    surfaces

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7
Movement
  • Ciliary gliding for forward movement
  • Rapid rearward withdrawal as an escape response
  • Can use a combination of adhesion and muscular
    contractions to
  • Inchworm
  • Somersault

8
Nutrition
  • Gut lacks stomach
  • Large muscular pharynx
  • Y-shaped in some
  • Possess pharyngeal pores that open to surface and
    release excess ingested water
  • Feed on small organic particles (live or dead)
  • Bacteria and protozoans

9
Reproduction
  • Hermaphroditic with indirect sperm transfer
  • Posterior copulatory organ that is loaded with
    sperm from anterior male gonopore
  • Spermatophore transferred to seminal receptacle
    via posterior female gonopore
  • Internal fertilization

10
  • Fertilized eggs are released by rupturing body
    wall
  • Some species are parthenogenic
  • Can produce two types of eggs
  • Summer
  • Winter (resting)
  • Direct development
  • Sexual maturity is reached in about three days
  • Life span is approximately 40 days

11
Phylum Nematoda
  • Roundworms
  • 20,000 described species
  • May be the largest animal phylum
  • Found worldwide and live in all habitat types
  • Interstitially
  • Inside of animals and plants
  • 53C hot springs
  • Epiphytic bromeliads
  • Very abundant
  • One cubic meter of mud off of the coast of
    Holland contains over 4,000,000 nematodes

12
  • Ecologically important
  • Link between decomposers and higher trophic
    levels
  • Some are excellent decomposers and nutrient
    cyclers
  • 90,000 nematodes in one rotting apple
  • Caenorhabditis elegans is an important model
    organism for genetics / development studies
  • Eutelic
  • C. elegans has 1031 cells

13
Body Form
  • Vermiform
  • Tapered at both ends
  • Important adaptation for living interstitially
  • Microscopic to 50 cm
  • One mm is typical
  • Mouth at anterior end, with three to six lips
    that bear sensilla
  • Caudal gland on posterior that is similar to a
    duo-gland
  • Lack cilia

14
Body Wall
  • Cuticle
  • Not chitinous
  • Often annulated
  • Must be molted
  • Molted four times while growing
  • Molting ceases upon reaching adulthood
  • Ecdysone controls molting
  • Epidermis
  • Secretes cuticle
  • Stores nutrients
  • Endoparasites may absorb nutrients with
  • Has four longitudinal extensions called epidermal
    cords
  • Longitudinal nerve cords housed here
  • Musculature
  • Four bands of longitudinal fibers separated by
    epidermal cords
  • No circular muscles

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16
Locomotion
  • Use sinusoidal undulations of dorsoventral plane
    to move forward
  • Alternate contractions of dorsal and ventral
    longitudinal muscles
  • Efficient movement requires a substratum to act
    against
  • Removing worms from natural substratum hinders
    locomotion
  • Many swim or are capable of swimming
  • Some crawl like earthworms or inchworms

17
Organ Systems
  • Hemal system
  • Large nematodes have a hemocoel (pseudocoel)
  • Fluid filled and fluid may contain hemoglobin
  • Functions as hydrostat
  • Small varieties are acoelomate
  • No respiratory system
  • Nervous system
  • Collar-like brain surrounds pharynx
  • Dorsal, ventral, and lateral longitudinal nerve
    cords in epidermal cords
  • Sensory organs
  • Papillae low projections of cuticle on lips and
    head
  • Tactile setae
  • Ocelli one on each lateral aspect, near pharynx

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19
Nutrition
  • Will eat just about anything
  • Carnivorous, herbivorous, or omnivorous
  • Will eat bacteria, protists, fungi, other
    nematodes, and plant cells
  • Some are deposit or detritus feeders
  • Actually feed on bacteria associated with these
    types of organic matter
  • Some fungi actually prey on nematodes
  • Trap them with hyphal threads

20
Digestive System
  • Similar to that of gastrotrichs
  • Cuticle of foregut contains teeth, ridges, rods,
    or plates
  • Varies according to feeding habits
  • Example Mononchus uses teeth to latch onto
    other nematodes
  • Body contents are pumped out
  • Will eat over 1000 nematodes over its 14 week
    life span
  • Diagnostic tool for taxonomists
  • Herbivores have a stylet for piercing plant cells
  • Some parasites use body surface to absorb
    nutrients

21
Excretory System
  • Ammonotelic
  • All have one or more excretory glands
  • Some also have an excretory canal system
  • Interestingly, is formed from one huge H-shaped
    cell
  • Pore opens midventrally near pharynx
  • The canal system is osmoregulatory in C. elegans,
    but other nematodes secrete different substances
  • Gelatinous matrix for eggs
  • Glycoprotein coat for cuticle
  • Digestive enzymes to erode host tissue in animal
    parasites
  • Molting fluid

22
Reproduction
  • Most gonochoric
  • Some hermaphroditic
  • Some parthenogenic
  • Internal fertilization with copulation
  • Sexually dimorphic
  • Males smaller than female
  • Male has curled posterior that resembles a hook
  • Male has a cloaca, as where vagina is located
    midventrally on the middle of the females body
  • Male has copulatory spicules (resemble curved
    blades) that are used to hold female gonopore open

23
  • Both male and female have C-shaped gonads
  • Females produce pheromones to attract males
  • Sperm are aflagellate and amoeboid
  • Eggs have characteristic shapes, and experts can
    diagnose infections
  • Some free-living types, such as Turbatrix, are
    viviparous

24
  • Hermaphroditic varieties typically self-fertilize
    and rarely cross-fertilize
  • Little genetic recombination
  • Egg numbers vary greatly between species
  • 50 in some marine species
  • 200,000 per day in the parasite Ascaris
  • Eutelic
  • Around 1000 cells
  • Number of cells in individual organs is also
    constant
  • Cells grow in size, not in number
  • Direct development
  • Egg, three juvenile instars, and adult
  • Four molts (first two of which may occur in egg
    before hatching)
  • Molting ceases upon reaching adulthood

25
Parasitism
  • Can be ectoparasites or endoparasites
  • Can have one host or multiple hosts
  • Can infect plants, animals, or both
  • Juveniles, adults or both can be infective

26
  • Ascaroid nematodes
  • Ascaris, hookworms, pinworms, and Trichinella
  • Infect one host humans, cats, dogs, pigs, cows,
    etc.
  • Infection occurs when eggs or juveniles are
    ingested
  • Eggs hatch in intestine
  • Juveniles penetrate intestinal wall
  • Juveniles enter hemal system
  • Juveniles break through alveoli in lungs
  • They migrate up respiratory tree
  • Are coughed up in sputum
  • If sputum is swallowed, end up in intestine

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  • Ascaris
  • Human intestinal worm Ascaris lumbricoides
  • Can reach 50 cm in length
  • Widely distributed, but is found in SW US
  • Eggs found in soil and are resistant to harsh
    environmental conditions
  • Children are susceptible to infection because
    they put things in their mouths
  • Feeds on fluid gut contents of host
  • Can cause malnutrition and death in the event of
    intestinal blockage
  • Secrete substances which inhibit host digestive
    enzymes from harming them

29
  • Hookworms
  • Necator americanus
  • Juveniles enter through skin of foot
  • Follow typical ascaroid path
  • Attach to intestinal lining with hooks
  • Feed on hosts blood
  • Infections of more than 25 worms can lead to
    serious blood loss and tissue damage
  • Common in tropics
  • 380 million infected worldwide

30
  • Pinworms
  • Enterobius vermicularis
  • Typically infect humans
  • Worldwide distribution
  • Adults live in intestine
  • At night, female crawls out anus and deposits
    eggs
  • Scratching traps eggs under fingernails

31
  • Trichinella spiralis
  • Infects mammals with a condition known as
    trichinosis
  • Juveniles are carried to skeletal muscles by
    blood
  • Form calcified cysts in muscle
  • Transmitted when undercooked flesh is eaten
  • Example humans eating undercooked pork
  • Severe infection causes pain and stiffness

32
  • The following groups of parasitic nematodes have
    two hosts (intermediate and definitive)
  • Filarioids
  • Dracunculoids
  • Filarioids
  • Elephantiasis, heart, and eye worms
  • Thin, threadlike worms that inhabit the lymphatic
    system or other tissues
  • Intermediate host is typically a blood sucking
    insect
  • Definitive host is usually a bird or mammal

33
  • Wuchereria bancrofti
  • Found mainly in Africa and Asia
  • Intermediate host is a mosquito, definitive host
    is a human
  • Threadlike adults live in lymph glands
  • Blockage of lymph vessels causes edema
  • Long term blockage causes a condition known as
    elephantiasis
  • Enlargement of appendages, breasts, scrotum, etc
  • Life cycle
  • Eggs hatch into microfilariae that migrate to
    surface blood vessels at night (when mosquitoes
    are biting)
  • Microfilariae migrate from mosquito gut lumen to
    proboscis
  • Injected into definitive host

34
  • Dirofilaria immitis
  • Canine heartworm
  • Loa Loa
  • African eye worm
  • Sometimes crosses cornea

35
  • Dracunculus medinensis
  • A dracunculoid
  • Guinea worm
  • Intermediate host is a FW copepod and definitive
    host is human
  • Adult female lives below skin of human and
    produces an ulcer
  • Juveniles released in water
  • Ingested by a copepod
  • Humans ingest copepod by drinking contaminated
    water
  • Worms removed surgically or by winding on a stick
  • Caduceus (symbol of medical profession) is really
    a nematode curled around a stick
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