Title: Annelids
1Annelids
2Annelids
- Phylum Annelida little ring segmented body
- Round worm-like animal that has a long, segmented
body - Sizes range from .5mm to 3m
- tube-within-a-tube digestive tract mouth to
anus - Segments separated by internal walls celled
septa. Most segments are identical, some modified
3Anatomy of an Earthworm
4Anatomy of an Earthworm
5Feeding in Annelids
- Filter feeders to predators
- Pharynx very muscular, may be armed with jaws
(predators and herbivores), may be sticky (mucus,
detritus feeders), act like a pump (deposit
feeders and parasites) - Mucus bag filter feeders
- Feather-like structures filter feeders
- Pharynx esophagus crop (storage) gizzard
(ground up) intestine
6Circulation in Annelids
- Closed circulatory system blood contained
within blood vessels - Blood moves toward the head (dorsal vessel)
- Blood moves away from the head (ventral vessel)
- Ring vessels in each segment connect dorsal to
ventral vessels - Vessels act as hearts which help pump blood
through the system
7Respiration in Annelids
- Gills aquatic
- Skin must stay moist, secrete cuticle
(earthworm)
8Excretion in Annelids
- Solid wastes pass through the anus
- Waste from cellular metabolism eliminated by
nephridia
9Response in Annelids
- Brain and several nerve cords
- Ventral nerve runs entire length of body
- Sense organs most often found in polychaetes
- True eyes that see shapes, Statocysts, chemical
receptors, sensory tentacles, vibration sensors - Defense, runaway and hide, a few fight with jaws
(sandworm) - Marine fireworms have irritating bristles
10Movement in Annelids
- Muscles
- Longitudinal lengthwise make worm longer and
shorter - Circular make worm fatter and skinnier
11Reproduction in Annelids
- Most reproduce sexually
- External (broadcast) spawners worms swarm to
surface to spawn by millions - Some hermaphrodites exchange sperm clitellum
secretes mucus ring containing eggs and sperm
which forms cocoon (earthworm)
12Groups of Annelids
- Three classes of Annelids
- Class Oligochaete
- Class Polychaete
- Class Hirudinea
13Class Oligochaetes
- Few bristles few setae
- Earthworms and tubifex worms
- Deposit feeders, eat dirt and produce castings
aerate and fertilize the soil - Tropical earthworms produce castings 18cm long
and 2cm in diameter - Soil or freshwater
14Examples of Class Oligochaetes
15Class Polychaetes
- Many bristles
- Paired, paddle-like, appendages tipped with
bristles (setae) (sea mouse) - Live in all sorts of marine habitats
- Some free-living, some tube-builders
- May be brightly colored, iridescent, or
luminescent
16Examples of Class Polychaetes
17Class Hirudinea
- Most parasitic, some carnivorous, most freshwater
- 6cm to 30cm long, two suckers, one at each end
- Penetrate skin by use of proboscis or sharp jaws
- Produce secretions that prevent clotting and
anesthetizes wound - Can swallow ten times its weight
18Examples of Class Hirudinea
19Mollusks
20Phylum Mollusca
- Phylum Mollusca
- 100,000 species
- Defined as soft-bodied animals that have an
internal or external shell
21Anatomy of a Clam
22Form and Function in Mollusks
- Body Plan four parts mantle, foot, shell,
visceral mass - Mantle thin layer of tissue that covers most of
the mollusk body contains shell glands - Foot movement, mouth, and associated feeding
structures - Shell protection
- Visceral mass contains all organs
23The Mollusk Body Plan
Squid
Snail
Shell Mantle cavity Foot Gills Digestive tract
Clam
Earlymollusk
24Feeding in Mollusks
- Herbivores, carnivores, or filter feeders
- Radula found in snails and slugs rasp-like
tongue - Herbivores scrape food
- Predators drill shells or dart food
- Cephalopods beaks
- Clams, oysters, scallops filter feeders use
gills - Octopi use siphon (tube-like structure) to trap
plankton
25Respiration in Mollusks
- Gills in mantle cavity in aquatic species
- Modified mantle in terrestrial species
26Circulation in Mollusks
- Open circulatory system blood flows through
vessels and sinuses (open spaces) (clams and
snails) - Closed circulatory system blood always flows
inside vessels (cephalopods)
27Excretion in Mollusks
- Remove ammonia with use of tube-shaped organs
called nephridia
28Response in Mollusks
- Simple to very complex nervous systems (scallops,
octopi) - Cephalopods, highly evolved eyes and brains
29Movement in Mollusks
- Mucus in snails and slugs
- Jet propulsion in octopi
30Reproduction in Mollusks
- In most mollusks, sexes are separate, broadcast
spawners - Cephalopods, internal fertilization
- Some gastropods are hermaphroditic
31Groups of Mollusks
- Three classes of mollusks
- Class Gastropoda
- Class Bivalvia
- Class Cephalopoda
32Class Gastropoda
- stomach foot
- Snails, slugs, abalones, nudibranchs
- Some snails have operculum (hard disk on foot
that forms a door when inside shell) - Nudibranchs feed on cnidarians utilize
nematocysts for their own defense - Bright colors mean bad taste or even poison
33Examples of Class Gastropoda
34Class Bivalvia
- two shell
- Clams, oysters, scallops
- Most are sessile
- Epifaunal on top of bottom (oyster, mussels)
- Infaunal in bottom (clams)
- Some are motile scallops can move by flapping
shells and have eyespots (Ocelli)
35Scallop Swimming
36Examples of Class Bivalvia
37Class Cephalopoda
- head foot
- Squid, octopus, cuttlefish, nautilus
- Predators, beak for mouth
- Seem to be intelligent
- Move quickly via jet propulsion
- Little or no shell
- Highly developed eyes and brains
38Examples of Class Cephalopoda
39Nautilus Swimming
40Ecology of Mollusks
- Fried calamari
- Shipworms
- aquaculture
41Comparing the Three Major Groups of Mollusks
MOLLUSK GROUP Gastropods Bivalves Cephalop
ods
SHELL Shell-less orsingle-shelled Two shells
held together by oneor two muscles Internal
shell orno shell
FOOT Muscular foot located on ventral side and
used for movement Burrowing species have muscular
foot. Surface-dwelling species have either no
foot or a reduced foot. Head is attached to a
single foot. The foot is divided into tentacles
or arms.
EXAMPLES Snail, slug, sea hare, nudibranch
Clam, oyster, mussel, scallop Octopus,
squid, cuttlefish, nautilus