Title: Invertebrates I: Jellyfish and Worms
1Invertebrates I Jellyfish and Worms
2An invertebrate is an animal without a backbone.
Still has a skeleton
3The Jellyfish A Cnidarian
Phylum that contains many animals that have
tentacles with stinging cells!
- Hydrostatic skeleton
- Support system like a balloon filled with water
- The two layers of tissue found in jellyfish are
called the ectoderm and endoderm
4Endoderm and Ectoderm
Layers are one cell thick
- Inside the endoderm is the gastrovascular cavity
which is where the jellyfish digests his food - The mouth is the only opening
- No brain
5Jellyfish Activities
- Nematocysts shoot out a tube that penetrates
skin, scales etc. and forces out poison that
paralyzes or kills small animals. Digestive
enzymes from the endoderm break down the food in
the gastrovascular cavity.
6Jellyfish Swim
- Jellyfish dont use their tentacles to swim
- A set of muscle fibers around the rim of the
mouth contract which forces water out of the
gastrovascular cavity thus propelling the
jellyfish in jerky movements
Play Video
7The Planarian A Flatworm
- Bilateral Symmetry 2 equal sides
- Free-living flatworm that lives in freshwater
streams and soil
8Nerves
- Neurons are long thin nerve cells found
throughout the body of an animal or human - A collection of neurons wrapped in protective
coverings is called a nerve
9Planarians Nervous System
Stimulus- is something an organism can
sense. Planarians sense touch and respond to
light
10Planarians Digestive System
11Roundworms
12Ascaris (common roundworm)
- Release eggs into intestines?exit through
feces?eggs eaten by grazing animal?eggs
hatch?larvae burrow through intestines to the
bloodstream and make their way to the lungs then
the throat?reswallowed?larvae grows to adulthood
13Segmented Worms
14Earthworm Body
- Earthworms have an epidermis which exchanges
gases with the environment - Must be moist
- Outer coating, called cuticle, protects the
earthworm - Must be thin
15Earthworm Movement
- Uses two sets of muscles for support and movement
- Circular
- Length
16Earthworms Nervous System
- All over the earthworm there are tiny sensory
receptors. - sense a stimulus and start an impulse that
travels the neuron - Chemicals, light, temp etc.
- There are two large ganglia in the 3rd segment
- There is one small ganglion in each segment
connected together to form the nerve cord.
17Earthworms Digestive System
Follow the soil through the worms body!!!
- Upper lip pulls in moistened food
- Passes pharynx
- Glands secrete liquids to lube
- Esophagus funnels food to the crop
- Crop is a swelling the stores food
- Food goes to the gizzard
- Gizzard is a bulge- mechanical digestion
- They eat soil which contain leaves, fungi, and
small creatures.
- Ground up food passes into the intestine
- Digestive enzymes break down the food into
soluble substances - Indigestible parts pass through the anus
Please Establish Clean Gobbling In Digestion Ahead
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19Earthworms Circulatory System
- Closed Circulatory System- the blood in a worm
never leaves the continuous network of blood
vessels.
20Earthworms Circulatory System
Follow the blood through the earthworms body!!!
- Blood is in the main dorsal blood vessel (acts as
the heart) - It is pushed forward to the five aortic arches
(control blood pressure) - Down the ventral blood vessel on the underside of
the worm - Smaller and smaller arteries to capillaries where
exchange happens - Moves through veins back to the dorsal blood
vessel (heart)
- Daily Artificial Venting After Cleaning Vigorously
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22Earthworms Respiratory System
- The earthworm breathes through its moist skin!
The oxygen seeps through the skin into the
capillaries and carbon dioxide seeps out of the
capillaries into the air.
In emergencies, earthworms can go for hours
without oxygen
23The Earthworms Excretory System
- All but the first and last segments have looped
excretory vessels that channel waste out of the
skin through small pores.