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Animals Chapter 2

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Animals Chapter 2 Sponges, Cnidarians, and Worms Sections 1 and 2 Definitions Nerves carry signals throughout the body Ganglia groups of nerves bundled together. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animals Chapter 2


1
Animals Chapter 2
  • Sponges, Cnidarians, and Worms
  • Sections 1 and 2

2
Definitions
  • Nerves carry signals throughout the body
  • Ganglia groups of nerves bundled together.
    Animals can have a brain and ganglia or just have
    ganglia depending on how advanced the animal is
  • Gut pouch lined with digestive enzymes
  • Coelom cavity that allows organs such as the
    gut, heart etc to work without interference from
    body movement

3
Coelom
4
Ganglion
5
Symmetry
6
Sponges
  • Phylum Porifera
  • 1st animals on earth

7
Phylum Porifera
  • Simplest of all animals
  • Asymmetrical
  • No head, nervous system, gut or coelom
  • Spicules are needle-like splinters that make up
    the skeleton
  • If cells are separated, they can come back
    together
  • Both asexual and sexual reproduction

8
Sponge Anatomy
  • Pores - used to pump water into sponge
  • Collar Cells filters particles of food from
    water and digests them
  • Osculum hole at the top of the sponge

9
Anatomy of a Sponge
10
Cnidarians
  • Jellyfish
  • Hydra
  • Sea anenome
  • corals

11
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Radial symmetry
  • Complex tissues
  • Gut
  • Nerve net and nerve ring in medusa form
  • If cells get separated, they come back together
  • Tentacles covered with nematocysts
  • Nematocysts stinging cells
  • Sexual and asexual reproduction

12
Body Forms
  • Medusa free swimming, mushroom shaped
  • Polyp vase shaped, attached to a surface
  • Most spend life as polyps but some are born
    polyps and turn into medusas

13
Flatworms - Platyhelmenthes
  • Planaria
  • Flukes
  • Tapeworms

14
Characteristics
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Nervous system
  • Ganglia acts as a brain
  • Sensory lobes to detect light and food
  • Planaria have a gut
  • Fluke and tapeworms are parasites and have no gut

15
Reproduction of Fluke
16
Reproduction of Tapeworms
  • Sexual
  • Can go from uncooked meat to human

17
Roundworms - Nematoda
18
Roundworm
  • Pseudocoelom tube within a tube
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Can pick up through the soles of feet, through
    dirty hands, through some foods

19
Segmented Worms - Annelida
  • Includes earthworms, bristle worms and leeches
  • Can live in water or on land

20
Earthworms, Bristle Worms, Leeches
  • Earthworms aerate soil (makes tunnels) to allow
    water and air in, break down organic matter into
    elements that can be used
  • Bristle Worms all live in water
  • Leeches can be scavengers, predators or
    parasites, and can be used in medicine

21
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22
Next
  • Earthworm dissection
  • Earthworm questions powerpoint

23
Mollusks
  • Phylum Mollusca
  • Soft bodied usually with a shell or shells
  • Three classes
  • Gastropods snails and slugs
  • Bivalves 2 shells- clams, mussels, etc.
  • Cephalopods squid and octopus

24
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25
Similarities Between Mollusks
26
Feeding
  • Different depending on species
  • Gastropods have a radula which is like a really
    rough tongue and scraps algae, leaves etc.
  • Bivalves filter feed
  • Cephalopods use tentacles to grab prey

27
Circulatory System
  • Most mollusks have an open system
  • Open system - A simple heart pumps blood into
    sinuses
  • Cephalopods have a closed system
  • Closed system blood is circulated through a
    closed loop

28
Brains
  • Most mollusks have ganglia spread throughout
    their body
  • Cephalopods have a brain where all of the ganglia
    are connected

29
Next
  • Squid Dissection
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