Ch. 10,11- Phylums Platyhelminthes and Nematoda - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Ch. 10,11- Phylums Platyhelminthes and Nematoda

Description:

Ch. 10,11- Phylums Platyhelminthes and Nematoda Flatworms and Roundworms Phylum Platyhelminthes Largest group of acoelomate (no body cavity) worms Flatworms with ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:465
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: PhenixCit
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Ch. 10,11- Phylums Platyhelminthes and Nematoda


1
Ch. 10,11- Phylums Platyhelminthes and Nematoda
  • Flatworms and Roundworms

2
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Largest group of acoelomate (no body cavity)
    worms
  • Flatworms with middle tissue layer- mesoderm
  • Tissues organized into organs
  • Bilaterally symmetrical and flat
  • Cells lie close to exterior enabling efficient
    diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide
  • Highly branched gastrovascular cavity runs close
    to all tissues giving cells ready access to food
  • No respiratory or circulatory systems

3
Phylum Platyhelmithes
  • Flatworms
  • Liver Flukes, Planaria and tapeworms
  • Marine flatworms
  • Characteristics
  • Ribbon-like bodies
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Branched digestive system
  • No skeleton
  • Asexual (fission) Hermaphrodites (sexual)
  • Free movement
  • Skin breathing

4
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Class Turbellaria
  • Most free-living marine
  • Dugesia- Freshwater planarians
  • Digestion- Nutrients absorbed by intestinal wall
    and waste goes out through mouth
  • Muscular pharynx comes out of central mouth to
    feed
  • -- Reproduction- Mostly asexual by attaching
    posterior end to stationary object and pulling
    into two
  • Hermaphrodites can reproduce sexually
  • Nervous system Brain, two nerve cords, and
    light-sensitive eye spots
  • Water balance- Water continually enters by
    osmosis
  • Flame cells with cilia draw water to the outside

5
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Marine flatworm

6
Planarian
7
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Most occur in vertebrates
  • Dozen types in humans
  • Taenia saginata- Beef tapeworm
  • Live in cow muscles in cysts
  • High temp. kills larvae
  • Subclass Cestodaria
  • Body not subdidvided into proglottids
  • Larvae in crustaceans adults in fish
  • Many parasitic
  • Endoparasite- internal
  • Ectoparasite- external
  • Class Cestoidea
  • Subclass Eucestoda- Parasitic flatworms
    (tapeworms)
  • Suckers and hooks attach to walls of intestines
    and food absorbed from hosts intestines directly
    through the tapeworms skin
  • String of rectangular body sections (proglottids)
  • Each proglottid is a reproductive unit
  • Added continually through life
  • May grow up to 12 m (40 ft.) long

8
Phylum Platyhelmithes
9
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Complex life cycles involve more than one host
  • Ex Schistosoma- Responsible for schistosomiasis
  • From contaminated water
  • Larvae bore into host skin into blood vessels of
    intestines
  • Block vessels causing bleeding and damage to
    liver
  • Snail is intermediate host
  • Class Monogenea- Monogenetic flukes
  • One life cycle in one host
  • Mostly ectoparasites on vertebrates
  • Largest flatworm class, Trematoda
  • Parasitic worms called flukes
  • Endoparasites or ectoparasites
  • Subclass Aspidogastrea (Aspidobothrea)-
    Endoparasite of mollusks
  • Subclass Digenea- Endoparasites of vertebrates
  • Tegument- thick protective covering prevents them
    from being digested
  • Take nourishment directly from hosts
  • Use suckers to attach and the muscular pharynx to
    suck nourishment from hosts body fluids

10
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Liver fluke

11
Phylum Nematoda
  • Roundworms- have a pseudocoelem (body cavity
    between endoderm mesoderm)
  • Fluid movement serves as circulatory and gas
    exchange system
  • Fluid also distributes nutrients to cells from
    digestive system
  • Long, cylindrical bodies
  • Majority microscopic and free-living
  • One-way digestive system
  • Thick, flexible epidermis protects and gives
    shape
  • Layer of muscle underneath pulls at epidermis and
    pseudocoelem for whip-like movement

12
Phylum Nematoda
  • Roundworms
  • Ascaris, Trichinella and hookworms
  • Characteristics
  • Flattened bodies
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Many are parasites
  • Fluid-filled body cavity called a pseudocoelem
  • Digestive tube
  • No skeleton
  • Sexual reproduction (Internal fertilization)
  • Sperm is amoeboid
  • Free movement
  • Skin breathing

13
Phylum Nematoda
  • Class Secernentea (Phasmidea)- Phasmids (sensory
    structures) in tail
  • Ascaris, Enterobius, Rhabditis, Turbutrix,
    Necator, and Wuchereria
  • Class Adenophorea (Aphasmidia)- No phasmids
  • Dioctophyme, Trichinella, Trichuris
  • 50 species are parasitic
  • Plant parasites feed on living plant cells in all
    parts of plant, causing wilting and withering
  • 14 species affect humans
  • Ex Enterobius (pinworms), Ascaris lumbricoides,
    Trichinella spiralis, Necator (hookworms)

14
Phylum Nematoda
  • Trichinella infects pigs and causes trichinosis
    (serious disease caused by eating undercooked
    pork)
  • Necator live in warm, moist soils of the tropics
  • Hookworm larvae enter bloodstream through soles
    of feet

15
Phylum Nematoda
  • Ascaris
  • Carried in human waste
  • After ingestion, eggs hatch into larvae in
    intestines
  • Larvae bore through blood vessels, enter blood
    stream and then lungs (causes respiratory
    distress)
  • Larvae may enter gallbladder or pancreas causing
    blockages
  • Return to intestines to mature and mate
  • May grow up to 1 ft. in length

16
Phylum Nematoda
  • Ascaris
  • Trichinella

17
Trichinosis
  • Trichinella spiralis is found in pork
  • Trichinosis is a disease caused by the
    Trichinella worm.
  • Eggs hatch in the hosts gut
  • Symptoms
  • Diarrhea
  • Fever
  • Muscle pain
  • Death

18
Common Parasitic Roundworms
  • Hookworms attach to the inside of the digestive
    tract
  • Often found in pets
  • Pinworms- most common
  • Heartworms- transmitted to dogs by mosquitos
  • Filarial worms- live in blood where they block
    blood vessels or lymph vessels causing severe
    swelling (Elephantitis)
  • Guinea worm- Ingested with contaminated water
  • Cause dracunculiasis
  • Only found when exiting skin
  • Found in Africa, India and Pakistan
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com