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Phylum Platyhelminthes

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from aquatic plants. Important human parasite (second only to malaria) Class Cestoidea ... Leeches. Fresh water. Do not have setae. Flat and tapered body with ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Phylum Platyhelminthes


1
Phylum Platyhelminthes
(Flatworms)
20,000 species
2
Characteristics
  • Range from lt1mm to 25m
  • Flattened shape (for gas exchange) and
    unsegmented
  • Triploblastic (mesoderm called parenchyma)
  • Acoelomate
  • Bilaterally symmetrical

3
Characteristics
  • First phyla with organ system level
  • Incomplete gut
  • Somewhat cephalized (anterior ganglion and
    longitudinal nerve cords)
  • Excretory structures (protonephridia)
  • Hermaphroditic (complex structures)
  • Three muscle types (longitudinal, circular,
    oblique)

4
Class Turbellaria
3000 species
planaria
5
Turbellaria
  • Free-living (non-parasitic)
  • Predators or scavengers
  • Named for turbulence that beating cilia create in
    the water

cilia
6
Turbellaria
  • Ventral surface has gland cells that form mucus
    sheath, produce attachment chemical, and produce
    releaser chemical
  • Lay down sheet of mucus as they move

7
-Digestive cavity varies from simple to highly
branched (no circulatory system)-Pharynx tube
from mouth -Respiration through
diffusion
eyespot
pharynx
-Flame cells excrete liquid waste -Two simple
eyespots (ocelli) sense light
8
  • Reproduce asexually by transverse fission
    produce zooids (regeneration)
  • Monoecious internal fertilization (exchange
    sperm) lay eggs

fission
egg
9
Class Monogenea
  • Flukes with only one generation
  • External parasites (fish)

10
Class Trematoda
The Flukes
schistosoma
8,000 species
11
  • Wide, flat shape
  • Parasitic as adult
  • Feed on host cells or fragments (blood, body
    fluids)
  • Most have oral sucker and acetabulum to attach to
    host (two suckers)
  • Outer layer called tegument (protects from hosts
    immune system)

12
  • Some require at least two different sources
    (example, larva in snail and adult in sheep)

13
Important human parasite
(second only to malaria)
Sheep liver fluke
Schistosomes
from aquatic plants
-freshwater snail host
-enter through skin
Chinese liver fluke
from raw fish
14
Class Cestoidea
The tapeworms
3,500 species
15
Scolex
  • Most highly specialized
  • Endoparasites (digestive system intestines)
  • Lack mouth and digestive tract attach to host by
    knob shaped scolex with suckers absorbs
    nutrients directly from host

16
  • Outer layer called cuticle
  • Consists of repeating units called proglottids
  • New proglottids form at neck, old ones (mature)
    reproduce and break free to release eggs
  • Reproduction with other mature proglottids of
    same worm or another worm

17
Also important human parasites
  • Beef tapeworm pasture contaminated with feces
    cows graze and tapeworm enters bloodstream to
    muscles consumed by human attach to intestines

18
  • Pork tapeworm can release eggs were larva bore
    hole through intestine to bloodstream and encyst
    in tissue

fish tapeworm
19
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20
Phylum Gastrotricha
21
Aschelminthes Roundworms
7 phyla
22
Characteristics
  • Psuedocoelom
  • Most have complete tubular digestive tract
    alimentary canal
  • Two body openings
  • Some show eutely number of cells constant for
    animal and organs
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Triploblastic

23
Phylum Rotifera
2,000 species
24
  • Characteristic
  • ciliated organ
  • corona
  • Free-living
  • Marine and freshwater
  • Pharynx contains mastax (jaws)
  • Some reproduce through parthenogenesis

25
Phylum Kinorhyncha
Burrow into sand with snout
26
Phylum Nematomorpha
Horsehair worms
27
Phylum Acanthocephala
Thorny headed worms
28
Phylum Loricifera
most recently discovered
29
Phylum Priapulida
30
Phylum Nematoda
16,000 species
(maybe as many as 500,000)
31
  • Most parasites affect almost all species of
    plants and animals
  • Feed on plants by sucking juices (fruit and
    cotton industry affected)
  • Humans host about 50 species
  • More than 1/3 human population suffers

32
  • 1 shovel soil contains over 1 million nematodes
    (5 billion in an acre)

33
  • Covered with tough cuticle
  • and tapered at both ends
  • Absence of circular muscles characteristic
    thrashing
  • Excrete liquids through
  • excretory pore

34
  • Most dioecious females usually larger
  • Guinea worm males 1, females 2-4
  • Cloaca- common chamber for digestive and
    reproductive tract
  • Sperm stored in female body

35
Ascaris
Intestinal roundworms
36
  • Largest nematodes- can grow over 1 foot
  • Also infect pigs and horses
  • Does not cause serious health problems unless
    many block intestine

37
  • Human eats veggies grown in infested soil (eggs)
  • Eggs hatch in intestines, bore hole through wall
    and enter blood stream to lungs
  • Larvae coughed up into mouth, swallowed and
    returned to intestine
  • Develop into mature adults and reproduce
  • Fertilized eggs leave host in feces and may be
    picked up by other hosts (eggs well protected by
    tough shells- up to 5 years)

38
Hookworm
Bent anterior end
39
  • Attaches to intestine and sucks blood- can cause
    much damage as host often loses blood (anemia)
  • Serious problem in warm, moist areas where people
    walk barefoot
  • Larvae develop in soil and enter host through
    cracks in foot
  • Life cycle like Ascaris

40
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41
Trichina
42
  • Smaller (1.5-4mm)
  • Life cycle begins in pig (or other mammal)-
    reproduce sexually
  • Fertilized eggs hatch in body and larvae
    deposited in lining of intestines
  • Larvae get to blood and travel to all parts of
    body
  • Worms lodge in muscle where they develop cysts
    and cause cramps
  • Muscle tissue is eaten- 1 gram of pork can
    contain 3,000 cysts
  • Heat of cooking kills trichina
  • Trichinosis uncommon in US- farmers cook meat
    scraps fed to hogs

43
Trichinosis
undercooked pork
cyst in muscle
bear meat
44
Filarial worm
Filariasis (elephantiasis)
45
Guinea worm
46
Loa loa worm
47
River blindness
48
Phylum Annelida
"Little rings"
9,000 species
Segmented worms
49
  • Bodies divided into a series of segments- visible
    as rings on outside of body- separated by
    septa--- metameric
  • Each segment has own excretory, nervous, and
    circulatory structures
  • Flexible support and efficient locomotion

50
Characteristics
  • Most complex of all worm
  • Triploblastic
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • True coelom
  • More complex circulatory, respiratory, and
    nervous systems
  • Closed circulatory system

51
Characteristics
  • Two sets of muscles- circular and longitudinal
  • Paired epidermal setae (bristles)
  • Ventral nerve cord

52
Class Oligochaeta
Earthworms
53
Mostly live in soils
(some aquatic and marine)
Vary in size- few cm to 11 ft
Most of 100-150 segments identical
except ends and 35-37 (clitellum)
Moves by anchoring setae on
posterior segments then
contracting circular muscles
in front
54
Digestion
  • Takes in soil through pharynx
  • Soil moves down esophagus to crop (storage)
  • Moves to gizzard- crushed by grinding
  • Moves to intestine- absorbed into blood through
    folds in wall
  • Solid waste out through anus
  • Valuable to gardeners and farmers (break up soil,
    aerate, and add nutrients)

55
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56
Circulation- closed system
  • Blood circulates through series of vessels (run
    length of body)
  • Blood absorbs molecules and carries them through
    dorsal vessel to five pairs of hearts
  • Hearts pump blood into main ventral blood vessel
    and smaller vessels carry blood to body

57
Respiration and Excretion
  • Take in O2 and give off CO2 by diffusion through
    skin
  • Must remain moist (not too wet or dry)
  • Eliminate liquid wastes through ciliated tubes
    called metanephridia (2 per segment)
  • Increased by extensions of body surface called
    gills

58
Nervous Control
  • Can respond rapidly due to concentration of
    nerves called cerebral ganglion (anterior)
  • Connected to rest of body by ventral nerve cord
  • Ganglion connects each segment to cord
  • No external eyes or ears- receptors in skin
    enable reactions (light, sound, chemical)
  • Active mainly at night
  • Do not respond to red light

59
Reproduction
  • Hermaphroditic
  • Female structures anterior, male posterior
  • 2 worms exchange sperm- mucus secretion from
    clitellum holds together
  • Sperm stored in seminal receptacle until just
    before eggs laid
  • Mucus case formed to push eggs and sperm through
    body and protect until hatching

60
Class Hirudinea
Leeches
61
  • Fresh water
  • Do not have setae
  • Flat and tapered body with suckers on each end
  • Feed on blood of other animals- attach by
    anterior suckers
  • Three sharp jaws to pierce host skin
  • Secrete substance that prevents hosts blood from
    clotting

62
  • Used medically to bleed patients

63
Class Polychaeta
"many bristles"
64
  • Mostly marine
  • Largest group
  • Burrow into sea floor or live in reefs or tubes
  • Carnivores or filter feeders
  • Lateral extensions called parapodia with numerous
    setae

65
  • Remarkable regeneration
  • Some produce epitokes- reproductive individuals
    different from nonreproductive individuals
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