Title: MARE 171
1Marine Invertebrates, Pt 2
MARE 171
2Phylum Mollusca
3Phylum Mollusca
- 2nd largest phylum (110,000 spp)
- Body Plan
- Visceral Mass
- Mantle
- Foot
- Radula
- Nephridia nephrostome
- Gills
4Phylum Mollusca
Rudy, you're like school during summer
vacationYeah, no class. - Russell Cosby
Class Polyplacophora - Chitons Class Gastropoda
- Gastropods, snails their relatives Class
Bivalvia - Bivalves Class Cephalopoda -
Cephalopods, squids octopuses
5Class Polyplacophora
Phylum Mollusca
Chitons Exclusively Marine Have an external
shell w/ 8 overlapping plates They normally live
on rocks scrape algae w/ their radula (A
flexible tonguelike organ in certain mollusks,
having rows of horny teeth on surface) Because
the mantle secretes these 8 plates, chitons can
bend to fit their home
6Phylum Mollusca
Class Gastropoda
- Largest group of mollusks -
40,000 75,000 spp - Only mollusks that live on land
- Lack gills, use the mantle as a makeshift
lung for extracting oxygen breathing - Most species have coiled shells, evolved
tentacles eyes - Marine?sea slug Terrestrial? slug snail
7Class Gastropoda
Phylum Mollusca
- Cone Shells
- powerful sting used to
- capture prey
- Some humans have been fatally wounded
- especially those that feed upon mollusks fishes
- at least 500 spp in world's warm waters
- Animal inside shell often w/ distinctive
coloration
8Class Gastropoda
Phylum Mollusca
- Hawaiian limpet (Cellana sandwicensis)
- On boulders in high intertidal zone
- Has coarse ribs animal's foot is yellow
- Shell interior is light gray 2.5 in
- All spp are endemic but rare in accessible areas
- Highly prized for food, but 5 annual drownings
associated w/ fishing practices
9Class Gastropoda
Phylum Mollusca
- Cowries
- animals' mantle is on outside
- secreting the shell from the top-down keeping
it protected most other shells secreted from
inside-out - hence glossy interior of many shells
- remain hidden during day
- emerge at night to feed
- Empty but intact shells are usually the result of
predation by cone shells - Algal or sponge grazers
10Class Gastropoda?Subclass Opisthobranchia
Phylum Mollusca
- Nudibranchs, Bubble Shells, Sea Hares
- Evolutionary process of abandoning shells in
favor of chemical/biological defenses - Name means gills behind?
- gills are near anus
- Eggs are huge coiled masses
- Larvae begin w/out shells (trochophore)?develop
into shelled planktonic larvae (veliger) ?then
settle lose their shell to form adult
11Phylum Mollusca
Class Bivalvia
12Phylum Mollusca
Class Bivalvia
Marine invertebrates w/ hinged shell divided into
2 halves The hinge is held together by a ligament
1 or 2 adductor muscles Live in sand or mud,
use their foot for digging anchoring to
surfaces Use the hinges to take in food, are
also able to jet some distance away (scallops
file shells) by closing the hinged shell
squirting water taken in out of the mantle
cavity Filter feeders, some have
zooxanthellae clams, oysters, scallops, mussels
13Scallop on the runRun Scallop, Run!
Scallop
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14Class Bivalvia
Phylum Mollusca
- Pearl Oysters
- Blacklipped Pearl Oyster (Pinctada margaritifera
) - Uncommon in quiet bays shallow reefs
- Attached to reef at the hinge end w/ byssal
threads NOT TRUE OYSTER - Easily identified by the fringed opening of
valves - Produces high-quality pearls cultured
extensively outside Hawaii - Nearly exterminated locally at the beginning of
the 1900's - Illegal to collect
15Phylum Mollusca
Class Cephalopoda
Ah, Squiddy! I got nothing against ye. I just
heard there was gold in yer belly. Ha ha har, ha
ha ha har! - Sea Captain McCallister
Cephalopods a class of Mollusks that have an
elaborate nervous and muscular system are
carnivorous e.g. squid, octopods, cuttlefish,
nautilus
Squid
Octopus
Nautilus
Cuttlefish
16Phylum Mollusca
Class Cephalopoda
- modification of the mollusk foot
- muscular hydrostat, into the form of arms or
tentacles - Ejects ink defense
17Squid Movement Defense
18Class CephalopodaThe Squid and the Whale
- Predators Sperm Whales
- Battles leave sucker marks on skin
- Cameras have been placed on sperm whales in hopes
of seeing the squid
19Class CephalopodaThe Squid and the Whale
Beached in New Zealand, 1996
December 2006
- Discovery!
- First Giant Squid (Architeuthis)
ever photographed LIVE
(9/05) - North Pacific Ocean in
Japanese waters - 25 ft long
- 2,950 ft (900 m) deep
- used baited fishing line
20Phylum Arthropoda
21Phylum Arthropoda
The most diverse phylum, largest geographical
distribution, most numbers Total population of
arthropods on Earth is estimated at around one
billion billion individuals (quintillion) -80
of all animal spp are arthropods Ancestry
morphology, embryology, indicate annelid
ancestry? not universally accepted Closest
Relatives morphological, embryological,
molecular studies indicate Phyla Tardigrada
Onychophora
velvet worms
waterbears
22Phylum Arthropoda
- Basic Body Plan
- Heteronomous metamerism segmentation in unequal
sections? Head, thorax, abdomen - Extensive fusion of segments w/ similar
function?tagmata - cephalothorax
- Each segment bears a pair of jointed appendages
- Wide adaptation of appendages for multiple
functions - Sensory (antennae), feeding (mandibles, maxillae,
maxillipeds) - Integument armor covering chitin protein to
form exoskeleton - Hardened via deposition of CaPO4 or CaCO3 salts
23Phylum Arthropoda
Phylum Arthropoda includes the following
divisions Subphylum Crustacea (The
crustaceans) Subphylum Hexapoda, (The
insects) Subphylum Cheliceraformes (The horseshoe
crabs arachnids) Class Trilobita (extinct)
24Phylum Arthropoda
Subphylum Crustacea
Yar, I'm running a school for lobsters, we
practice tough love, daily chores etc. No?Okay,
I understand, it can be hard to let go. Tell me
this then ... do ye have any spare change? - Sea
Captain McCallister
Consisting mainly of aquatic species Crustaceans
have 2 or 3 segments have 2 pairs of antennae,
a pair of eyestalks w/ compound eyes, a pair of
mandibles on head, as well as a pair of legs on
each body segment These legs are biramous, or two
branches, meaning that each leg has a joint in
it All crustaceans respire via gills
25Phylum Arthropoda
Subphylum Crustacea
26Phylum Arthropoda
Subphylum Hexapoda
Largest class of animals on Earth, comprising of
at least three fourths the animals on the
planet Includes insects, springtails,
etc Characterized by having uniramous, or single
branched, appendages Majority of uniramians are
terrestrial, although a few species are aquatic,
very few marine
27Phylum Arthropoda
Subphylum Hexapoda
MARINE INSECTS Very rare only 250-350 spp Why?
Include spp of open ocean (pelagic), of tide
pools (those in intertidal zone), beach marsh
dwelling (those regularly exposed to salt water
from tides)
Maybe due to major competitors/predators
(crustaceans)
- Bledius spectabilis, Rove Beetle
- Burrows in intertidal zone
- ? very narrow openings at surface (lt 2 mm)? when
covered by water, air pressure in the burrow
keeps water out
- Halobates, Sea Skaters
- Dont dive
- Feed on zooplankton, dead jellyfish, fish eggs
- Lay eggs on floating debris
- Pontomyia, Marine Midge
- Skate on 2 legs (rare)
- ? Reduced wings, skate on ocean surface
- ? larval-like
- Adults live for few hours, die
- Larvae feed on detritus algae
28Phylum Arthropoda
Subphylum Cheliceraformes
Nice doggy Milhouse Van Houten
Includes many animals that have gone extinct ever
since Paleozoic era 2nd most prominent group in
arthropoda after uniramians Classes Arachnida
(spiders, ticks, scorpions) Merostomata
(horseshoe crabs) Chelicerae preoral appendages
modified as
fangs or pincers 2 Tagmata cephalothorax
abdomen Predators, parasites, or decomposers
29I want your blood
- Horseshoe Crabs blood
contains amoebocyte ?
cells in blood that act as
an immune system - These cells bind to a
pathogen form a clot
to
physically quarantine the
pathogen - Pharmaceutical companies use an
extract of the blood (LAL) to test that
all finished products are pathogen-free
before distribution to customers - Respond to endotoxin secreted by marine
bacteria
30Phylum Arthropoda
Class Trilobita
First appeared approximately 540 million years
ago Closest living relatives are horseshoe
crabs Believed to be first animals w/ color
vision Most were detritus feeders, although some
predatory Diverse common around 500 million
years ago Extinct 245 million years ago
31Phylum Bryozoa
32Phylum Bryozoa
Aquatic organisms, living in colonies A few to
many millions form one colony Some bryozoans
encrust rocky surfaces, shells, or algae Others
form lacy or fan-like colonies Bryozoan
colonies range from millimeters to meters
individuals 1 mm
lophophore
33Phylum Echinodermata
34Phylum Echinodermata
- Largest phylum to lack any freshwater or land
representatives - Most are pentameral - have fivefold symmetry, w/
rays or arms in fives or multiples of five?
pentamerous radial symmetry - Have a system of internal water-filled canals,
which in many echinoderms form suckered "tube
feet ? move or grip objects - Include starfish, sand dollars, brittle stars,
sea cucumbers, sea urchins
35Phylum Echinodermata
36Phylum Echinodermata
- Class Echinoidea sea urchins, sand dollars
- Class Asteroidea starfish
- Class Chrinoidea sea lilies, feather stars
- Class Holothuroidea sea cucumbers
- Class Ophiuroidea brittle stars
37Class Echinoidea
Sea urchins, heart urchins, sand dollars One of
the more diverse successful echinoderm
groups Roe (egg mass) of some spp resulting in a
commercial fishery Larval development of
echinoids has also been studied extensively,
many discoveries in developmental biology have
been made using echinoids Echinoids also have a
substantial fossil record
38Sea Urchin Larvae Development
Pleutius larvae planktonic for 1-2 months
39Class Echinoidea
- Very efficient locomotory system
- hydraulic tube-feet?tubular pipes emerging from
small hole called ambulacra, w/ vaccum attachment
discs at end - skeleton is a symmetrical structure made of
close-fitting calcareous plates - which grow in a
definite pattern, constantly adding more more
plates, held together by flexible collagenous
fibers ? test - armed w/ thick spines, smaller
spines ending w/ sharp
sometimes
poisonous pincers
40Class Asteroidea
True starfish have no sharp
demarcation between arms
central body, they move using
tube feet Most starfish are
predators, feeding on sessile or slow-moving prey
such as mollusks barnacles Many, but not all,
starfish are able to turn a portion of their
stomachs out through the mouth, thus digest
food outside of the body.
41Phylum Echinodermata
Class Asteroidea
- Crown-of-Thorns (Acanthaster planci)
- Frequent at scuba depths feeding upon corals
(usually Pocillopora meandrina) - Appears fluorescent green at depth
- Spines are tipped w/ venom
- Natural predator Tritons Trumpet less
frequently Harlequin shrimp - Has not yet caused significant damage in HI
42Class Chrinoidea
Stalked crinoids, or "sea lilies", lived attached
to the bottom, filtered food particles from
currents flowing past them Only attached
suspension-feeding echinoderms Important group
for studying the numerous extinct attached
suspension-feeding echinoderms Mostly inhabit
deep water not abundant Unstalked crinoid, or
"feather star" superficially resembles a
starfish, but the mouth faces up crawls by
"walking" on specialized cirri
43Class ChrinoideaFeather Star
44Class Holothuroidea
- Sea Cucumbers
- retain pentameral (five-rayed) symmetry, w/ five
rows of tube feet running from the mouth along
the body - Surrounding mouth are 8 - 30 tentacles (modified
tube feet) - Think of a holothurian is as a sea urchin that is
lying on its side, stretched out, missing much
of its skeleton - Has skeletal components? in most spp the skeletal
plates are reduced to microscopic spicules - Common in the oceans shallow-water habitats
such (tidepools) - Cuvierian tubules
45Class Holothuroidea
Sea Cucumber Anus
Cuvierian Tubules
46Class Ophiuroidea
Over 1600 spp - brittle stars basket stars
Brittle stars have long, flexible arms move
fairly rapidly by wriggling their arms Basket
stars larger arms are very highly forked,
branched, more flexible Most ophiuroids are
scavengers detritus feeders, although they also
prey on small live animals such as small
crustaceans worms
47Species of the Day
Post-larval
Juvenile
Kona White Color Morph
Kona Black Color Morph
- Common Name Yellow Tang
- Scientific Name Zebrasoma flavescens
- Hawaiian Name Lau'ipala