Title: Invertebrates
1Invertebrates
2Introduction I
3Introduction II
4Invertebrates- Animals Without Backbones
- Ninety five percent of all known animals species
are invertebrates. - Invertebrates have a worldwide distribution
ranging from deep sea hydrothermal vents to the
polar deserts of Antartica.
5Phylum Porifera (The Sponges)
- Major Clades of Coelimates
- Protosomes
- Lophotrochozoa
6Introduction I
- Phylum Porifera (pore bearer) sponges are sessile
with porous bodies and choanocytes. - Sessile animals
- They have no nerve or muscle tissue but
individual cells can react to environmental
changes. - There are 9000 species approximately only 100
live in freshwater, the rest are marine. - Characterized by flagellate collar
cellschaoanocytes - Sponges are suspension feeders and they evolved
from colonial choanoflagellate. - Sponges range in size from a few mm to a few
meters. - They produce a variety of antibiotics and other
defensive compounds.
7Introduction III
- Sponges are hermaphrodites and almost all exhibit
sequential hermophroditism. - Gametes develop from both choanocytes and
amoebocytes. - Eggs remain in the mesophyl while sperms are
carried out of the sponge by water current. - Cross fertilization occurs when sperm are drawn
into others sponges. - Fertilization occurs in the mesophyl forming
zygotes that develop into flagella larvae. - Once settled on a suitable substrate the larvae
develop into a sessile sponge
8Introduction II
- The sponge body is a sac with tiny openings
through which water can flow - Central cavity
- Sponogocoel
- Water enters here
- Open end
- Osculum
- Water exits here
- The cells of the sponge are loosely associated
- They do not form true tissue
9Ingestion of Materials
- Water is drawn through the pores into a central
cavity called spongocoel. - Water flows out through a larger opening called
the osculum. - Sponges collect food particles with specialized
food trapping cells called choanocytes (i.e.
collar cells) which line the interior of the
spongocoel. - Choanocytes use their flagella to create a
current and then use their collars to trap the
particles which are ingested by phagocytosis.
10Phylum Cnidaria
- Major Clades of Coelimates
- Protosomes
- Lophotrochozoa
11Introduction I
- There are four classes of this phylum
- Hydrozoa
- Cubozoa
- Scyphozoa
- Anthozoa
- Characteristics
- Radial symmetry
- Two tissue layers
- Diploblasic
- Contain cnidocytes
- Cells that contain organelles with stinging
abilities called nematocysts - Gastrovascular cavity serves as both the mouth
and anus. - The nerve cells are irregular, non-directional
(nerve nets) - Connect sensory cells with contractile and gland
cells
12Introduction II
- True tissue
- There are over 10,000 species
- Occur in two forms
- Polyps
- Sessile
- Medusa
- Floats
- Often canivorous
13Classes I
- Class Hydrozoa
- Hydras, hydroids, and Portuguese man-of-war
- Polyps
- May be solitary or colonial
14Classes II
- Class Scyphozoa
- Jelly fish Sea nettles
- Generally medusa
- Class Cubozoa
- Sea wasps box jellies
- Class Anthozoa
- Polyps
- May be solitary or colonial
- Sea anemones
- Most corals sea fans
15Classes III
16Phylum Ctenophora (The Comb Jellies)
- Major Clades of Coelimates
- Protosomes
- Lophotrochozoa
17Introduction
- Fragile
- Luminescent marine predators
- Display bi-radial symmetry
- Contain eight rows that resemble combs
- Diploblastic
- Have tentacles with adhesive glue cells.
18Protostome Coelomates
19Introduction
- Spiral cleavage
- Determinate cleavage
- Mouth develops from the blastopore
20CoelomateEvolutionary Adaptations
- Allowed the formation of
- The tube-within-a-tube body plan
- The hydrostatic skeleton
- Provides space for the organs and gonads to
develop - Helps transport materials
- Protects internal organs
21LophotrochozoaPhylum Nemertea (Ribbon Worms)
22Introduction
- Characterized by proboscis
- Muscular tube used in capturing food
- Muscular tube used in defense
- Coelom is reduced
- Consists of the rhynchocoel
- Space surrounding the proboscis
- Have a tube-within-a-tube body plan
- Have complete digestive tract with mouth and anus
- Have a circulatory system
23Phylum Platyhelminthes (The Flatworms)
24Introduction I
- Commonly referred to as the flatworms because
their bodies are thin between the dorsal and
ventral surfaces - Some are free living or parasites
- Live in marine, freshwater and/or damp
terrestrial habitats - Divided into four classes (No details this year
?) - Turbellaria
- Monogenea
- Trematoda
- Cestiodea (Tapeworms)
25Introduction II
- Acoelomate animals
- Bilateral symmetry
- Cephalization
- Connection of the head
- Concentration of nervous tissue at the front end
of the animal - Have a ladder-type nervous system
- Sense organs and a simple brain
- Consists of two nerve cords that extend the
length of the body - Many are hermaphrodites
- Animal develops both sperm and eggs
- Have protonephridia
- Organs that function in osmoregulation and
disposal of metabolic wastes
26Phylum Mollusca (The Mollusks)
27Mollusks
28Introduction I
- Soft-bodied animals usually covered by a shell
- Have a ventral foot for locomotion
- Have a mantle that covers the visceral mass
- Visceral mass
- Concentration of body organs
- Open circulatory system
- Exception Cephalopods (squids, octopods)
- Have paired excretory tubules and metanephridia
- Have rasplike radula
- Functions as a scraper in feeding
- Marine mollusks are free-swimming, ciliated
trochopore larva
29Introduction II
- Class Polyoplacophora
- Sluggish marine chitons
- Class Gastropoda
- Largest group of mollusks
- Snails slugs
- Bodies undergo torsion
- Visceral mass rotates up to 180º causing the
animals mantle and head to end up above its
head - Class Bivalvia
- Aquatic clams scallops oysters
- 2 part shell, hinged dorsally, encloses the
bodies of these suspension feeders - Class Cephalopoda
- Squids Octopods
- Active and predatory swimmers
- Tentacles surround mouth
30Major Classes of Phylum Mollusca
31Phylum Annelida (The Segmented Worms)
32Introduction I
- 15,000 species that include
- Many aquatic worms
- Others live in freshwater or terrestrial habitats
- Earthworms
- Leeches
- Conspicuous long bodies with segmentation
internally and externally - Large compartmentalized coelom serves as a
hydrostatic skeleton
33Classes Annelida
- Class Polychaeta
- Marine worms
- Have appendages called parapodia
- Used for locomotion and gas exchange
- Bear setae
- Class Oligochaeta
- Earthworms
- Named for their sparse setae which are bristles
composed of chitin - Important to farming
- Castings, aeration, soil texture and tilling
- Class Hirudinea
- Leeches
- Characterized by the absence of sate and
appendages - Parasitic leeches are equipped with suckers at
anterior and posterior ends.
34Evolutionary Connection
- Adaptations
- Development of coelom
- Provides a hydrostatic skeleton
- Body space for storage and complex organ
development - Protection
- Cushion for internal structures
- Segmentation
- Allows for a high degree of specialization of
body regions
35Phylum Nematoda (The Roundworms)
- Protosomes
- Lophotrochozoa
36Introduction I
- Non-segmented psuedocoelomates covered with a
tough cuticle that prevents desiccation - Over 90,000 species
- Bilateral symmetry
- Triploblastic
- Complete digestive system
- Zygotes are able to survive harsh conditions
- Parasitic Nematodes
- Ascaris, hookworms, trichina worms, pinworms
- Agricultural pests
- Attack plant roots.
37Phylum Arthropoda (Jointed Feet)
- Protosomes
- Lophotrochozoa
38Introduction I
- Segmented animals
- Have paired, jointed appendages
- Specialized for walking, feeding, sensory
reception, sex and defense - Exoskeleton of protein and chitin
- Thick spots are armor
- Molting is necessary for arthropods to grow
- Evolutionary Connection
- Moved out of water following plants and the fungi
39Introduction II
- Open circulatory system with a dorsal hear that
pumps hemolymph. - Evolution Connection
- System evolved convergently in the mollusks and
arthropods - Aquatic forms have gills
- Terrestrial forms have either tracheae or book
lungs
40Introduction III
- Trilobites
- Extinct maring arthropods covered by a hard
segmented shell - No connection to the theory of evolution right
nowRB
41Subphylum Myriapoda
- Have unbranced appendages
- Single pair of antennae
- Class Chilopoda
- Centipedes
- Class Diplopoda
- Millipedes
42Subphylum Chelicerata
- Body consists of a cephalothorax and abdomen
- No antennae or mandibles
- There are six pairs of jointed appendages
- Appendages are for manipulation of food,
locomotion, defense or copulation. - Four pairs serve as legs
- First pair
- Chelicerae
- 2nd Pair
- Pedipalps
43Subphylum Crustacea
- Lobsters, crabs, shrimp, pillbugs and barnacles
- Body consists of a cephalothorax and abdomen
- Typically have five pairs of walking legs
- Have two pairs of antennae
- Sense taste and touch
- Third appendages are mandibles
- Used for chewing
- Two pairs of maxillae, posterior to the mandibles
- Manipulate and hold food
44Subphylum Hexapoda
- Includes class Insecta
- Considered to be an articulated, tracheated
hexapod - Body consist of head, thoarax and abdomen
- Have tracheae for gas exchange
- Have Malpighian tubules for excretion
- Have unbranched appendages
- Single pair of antennae
45Hexapods II
- Live in almost every terrestrial habitat and in
freshwater - Rarely found in a marine environment
- Success is associated with the ability to fly
- Can escape predators
- Find food and mates
- Disperse to new habitats faster
- May also help, from an evolutionary
perspective, explain the diversity of insects and
angiosperms
46Hexapods III
- Body is divided into three parts
- Head
- Thorax
- Abdomen
- Antennae are present
- Mouth parts are modified for chewing, sucking and
lapping - Have three pairs of legs
- Internal anatomy has complex organ systems.
- Waste removed from hemolymph via malphigian
tubules - Tracheal system lined with chitin carries O2
- Nervous system consists of ventral nerve cords
with several segmental ganglia - Metamorphosis is central to insect development
- Most insects only mate once
- Females lay eggs on a food source for next
generation
47Insect Diversity
48Insect Diversity II
49Evolution Connection
- Wings
- First evolved as extensions of the cuticle that
helped the insect absorb heat and were later
modified for flight - Not true appendages
- May have served as gills in aquatic insects
- Wings functioned for swimming
- Allowed animals to glide from the vegetation to
the ground
50Deuterostomia (Second Mouth)the Deuterostomes
51Introduction I
- Radial cleavage
- Indeterminate cleavage
- Anus develops from blastopore
- Two phyla
- Enchinodermata
- Chordata
52Phylum Enchindermata (Spiny Skin)
53Introduction I
- Over 6000 marine animals with spiny skin, water
vascular system (network of canals that branch
off into tube feet), tube feet and endoskeleton. - Sessile or slow moving animals
- Larvae have bilateral symmetry
- Most adults exhibit penta-radial symmetry
(secondary radial symmetry) - Body parts radiate from the center as five spokes.
54The Classes of Enchindernata
- Class Crinoidea
- Sea lilies feather stars
- Attach themselves to their substrate by a stalk
- Crawl using long flexible arms
- Class Asteroidea
- Sea stars
- Central disk with five or more arms
- Use tube feet for locomotion
- Attach themselves tightly to a substrate or creep
slowly along the sea floor - Can regenerate lost body parts
55Classes of Enchinodermata II
- Class Ophiuroidea
- Brittle stars
- Move by lashing their arms
- Some species are predators while others are
scavengers - Class Echinoidea
- Sea urchins and sand dollars
- Lack arms
- Have solid shell and are covered with spines
- 5 rows of tube feet, and muscles that pivot long
spines, used for locomotion
56Classes of Enchinodermata III
- Class Holothuroidea
- Sea cucumbers
- Animals with elongated flexible bodies
- Mouth surrounded by circle of five rows of tube
feet that serve as tentacles. - Class Concentriclyloidea
- Newly discovered
- Armless bodies are disk shaped with five-fold
symmetry - Live on waterlogged wood in deep seas.
57Phylum Chordata
- Invertebrates
- Deuterosomes
58Subphylum Urochordata
- Tunicates
- Suspension feeding, marine animals with tunics
- Larvae have typical chordate characteristics
- Free swimming
- Adults of most groups are sessile suspension
feeders
59Subphylum Cephalochordata
- Lancelets
- Small segmented, fishlike animals that exhibit
chordate characteristics
60Evolution Connection
- Tunicates were probably the first chordates to
evolve. - Subphyla Cephalochordata and Vertebrata may be
sister taxa - Groups that diverged from a recent common ancestor
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