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Class Anthozoa characteristics

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Order: Actiniaria (true anemones) Never colonial. No calcareous ... Order: Cerianthara (Tube Anemone) Order: Zoanthidea (stalked anemones) Class: Anthozoa ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class Anthozoa characteristics


1
Class Anthozoa - characteristics
  • 6000 species
  • Medusa stage is absent
  • Polyp is responsible for both sexual and asexual
    reproduction
  • Size range from 0.5cm to 1m.
  • Only cnidarian class that has all three types of
    cnidae (nematocysts, spirocysts and ptychocysts).

2
Anthozoa General Anatomy
  • 1. Tentacles
  • 2. Pharynx
  • 3. Siphonoglyph
  • 4. Gastrovascular cavity

5.-7. Septae 8. Gonads 9. Pedal disk
3
Anthozoa Retractor muscles
4
Anthozoa nervous system
  • Nerve net for epidermis (tentacles)
  • Nerve net for gastrodermis (body)

5
Anthozoa Feeding and Digestion
6
Anthozoa Gas Exchange and Excretion
  • Diffusion from tentacles and body cells
  • Siphonoglyph directs currents to remove waste.

7
Anthozoa - Reproduction
  • Asexual
  • Fission
  • Fragmentation
  • Budding
  • Some asexual larval formation (Planula larvae) in
    corals

8
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Hexacorallia
  • Order Actiniaria (true anemones)
  • Never colonial
  • No calcareous skeleton
  • Some with zoozanthellae

9
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Hexacorallia
  • Order Scleractinia (stony corals)
  • Mostly colonial
  • Calcareous skeleton
  • No siphonoglyphs
  • Half with zoozanthellae

10
Corals
  • Corals flourish in nutrient-poor, clear, tropical
    waters.
  • Symbiotic photosynthetic dinoflagellates
    (zoozanthellae) help corals obtain enough
    nutrients to grow rapidly.
  • The corals provide protection and nutrients for
    the dinoflagellates, which in turn provide the
    products of photosynthesis to the corals.

11
Corals
  • Corals flourish in nutrient-poor, clear, tropical
    waters.
  • Symbiotic photosynthetic dinoflagellates help
    corals obtain enough nutrients to grow rapidly.
  • The corals provide protection and nutrients for
    the dinoflagellates, which in turn provide the
    products of photosynthesis to the corals.

12
  • The Great Barrier Reef along the northeastern
    coast of Australia is 2,000 km long and 150 km
    wide.

13
Coral reef distribution
  • Global warming and nutrient runoff are
    threatening coral reefs throughout the world.

www.geology.iupui.edu/academics/CLASSES/g130/reefs
/images/f1519th.gif
14
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Hexacorallia

15
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Octocorallia (octocorals)
  • 8 hollow pinnate tentacles
  • Single siphonoglyph
  • Scleroblasts secrete sclerites

16
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Octocorallia

17
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Ceriantipatharia

18
Class Anthozoa
  • Subclass Ceriantipatharia
  • Order Ceriantheria (tube anemones)
  • Large solitary polyp
  • Lives in tube
  • Long thin tentacles

19
Class Scyphozoa - characteristics
  • 200 species
  • Medusa stage is present and is the dominant stage
  • Polyp is a scyphistomae
  • Size range from 2 cm to 2 m.

20
Scyphozoa Polyp Anatomy
  • Tentacles
  • Periderm (tube)
  • Septal funnels instead of septae (not shown)

21
Scyphozoa Medusa Anatomy
22
Scyphozoa nervous system
  • Nerve ring for bell
  • Nerve net for manubrium, oral arms, and tentacles.

23
Syphozoa Feeding, Digestion, Gas Exchange and
Excretion
  • Similar to Anthozoa

24
Scyphozoa - Reproduction
  • Asexual
  • Budding

25
Class Scyphozoa
26
Class Cubozoa
  • Box jellies
  • Each polyp produce a single medusa
  • Medusa nearly square in X-section
  • has velarium like hydrozoan medusae
  • extremely toxic
  • 4 sets of eyes
  • Light sensor
  • Image forming eyes
  • bottom with pupil

27
Class Hydrozoa - characteristics
  • 3000 species
  • Mostly colonial medusozoans
  • Life cycle may include polyps, medusae or both
  • Unlike other Cnidarians, nematocysts are found
    only on the epidermis not in the gastrovascular
    cavity.
  • Some nematocysts funtional equivalent to
    Anthozoan spirocysts.
  • Polyps usually tiny

28
Hydrozoa Polyp Anatomy
29
Hydrozoa Medusa Anatomy
  • Statocysts and ocelli may be present along edge
    of bell

30
Hydrozoa Colony Anatomy
Thecate colony
Athecate colony
31
Hydrozoa nervous system
  • Nerve ring for bell on medusae
  • Nerve net for manubrium, body, and tentacles.

32
Hydrozoa Feeding, Digestion, Gas Exchange and
Excretion
  • Similar to Anthozoa

33
Hydrozoa - Reproduction
  • Asexual
  • Budding

34
Class Hydrozoa
  • Order Hydroida
  • Suborder Anthomedusae (Athecate)
  • Polyps solitary or colonial
  • Gonozooids lack exoskeleton (athecate)
  • Free meduse tall and bell shaped
  • Gametes form on subumbrella

35
Class Hydrozoa
  • Order Hydroida
  • Suborder Leptomedusae (Thecate)
  • Polyps always colonial
  • Feeding zooids encased in exoskeleton
  • Free medusae not usually present
  • Gamete for on radial canals in subumbrella

36
Class Hydrozoa
  • Order Trachylina
  • Polyp generally absent
  • Tentacles arise above edge of bell

37
Class Hydrozoa
  • Order Trachylina

38
Class Hydrozoa
  • Order Siphonophora
  • Floating or swimming colonies
  • Attached modified medusae
  • In all but one group, the end of the axial polyp
    forms a pneumatophore for flotation.

39
Class Hydrozoa - Athecate orders
  • Order Siphonophora
  • Nectophores (attached medusae-like zooids)
    provide propulsion

40
Class Hydrozoa Athecate orders
  • Order Siphonophora
  • Below the nectophores are three types of zooids
  • Dactylzooid grasping and prey-capture
  • Gonozooid - reproduction
  • Gastrozooid digestion

41
Class Hydrozoa
  • Order Chondrophora
  • Colonies with gastroozoids, dactylzooids and
    gonozooids or super organism?
  • Zooids attached to sail-like float
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