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Phylum chordata and protochordates

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Title: Phylum chordata and protochordates


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PRESENTED AND PREPARED BY
  • SADIA KHURSHID
  • LECTURER ZOOLOGY DEPARTMENT
  • DA COLLEGE FOR WOMEN,PHASE VIII

3
PHYLUM CHORDATA (Protochordates)
  • INTRODUCTION, CLASSIFICATION AND GENERAL
    CHARACTERS OF CHORDATES AND PROTOCHORDATES

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OUTLINE
  • Definition
  • Fundamental characters
  • General characters
  • Classification of chordata
  • Group Acraniata
  • UROCHORDATA
  • More details
  • Systems
  • CEPHALOCHORDATA
  • SYSTEM

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DEFINATION
  • The name of this phylum is derived from two
    Greek words, the chorde meaning a string or cord,
    and ata meaning bearing, group or forms.
  • Thus chordates are animals having a
    cord , i.e., notochord.

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CHORDATES
  • They include about 45000species including many
    animals of major economic importance.
  • Phylum Chordata includes the most highly evolved
    animals, the vertebrates, as well as the marine
    invertebrate cephalochordate, amphioxus and
    tunicates.

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FUNDAMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHORDATES
  • All chordates shows all or at least any one of
    the following three fundamental characteristics
  • Notochord
  • Nerve cord
  • Pharyngeal gill slits

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1-NOTOCHORD(chorda dorsalis)
  • DEFINATION
  • The notochord is an elongated, flexible
    cartilaginous rod-like, skeletal structure lies
    dorsal to the gut tube and ventral to the nerve
    cord.

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DIAGRAM OF NOTOCHORD
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Fates of notochord
  • In most adult chordates the notochord disappears
    or becomes highly modified, or it is surrounded
    and replaced by a vertebral column.
  • In some non-vertebrate chordates and fishes the
    notochord persists as a laterally flexible but
    incompressible skeletal rod.

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FIGURE 1 A generalized chordate showing
fundamental chordate characters
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2-NERVE CORD
  • DEFINATION
  • The nerve cord of chordates develops dorsally
    in the body as longitudinal, a fluid filled
    hollow tube, lying just above the notochord and
    extending lengthwise in the body.

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Fates of nerve cord
  • In most species it differentiates in
    embryogeny into the brain anteriorly and spinal
    cord that runs through the trunk and tail.
    Together the brain and spinal cord are the
    central nervous system to which peripheral
    sensory and motor nerves connect.

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3-PHARYNGEAL GILL SLITS
  • DEFINATION
  • In all chordates, at some stages of their life
    history, a series of paired lateral gill cleft or
    gill slits perforate through the pharyngeal wall
    of the gut behind the mouth. These are variously
    termed as branchial, visceral or pharyngeal cleft
    or pouches.
  • The soft and skeletal tissues between
    adjacent clefts are the visceral arches. (FIGURE.
    1)

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Function of gill cleft
  • Gill cleft serve primarily for the passage of
    water from the pharynx to outside , thus bathing
    the gills for respiration.
  • The water current secondarily aid in filter
    feeding by retaining food particles in the
    pharynx.

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Embryonic fate of the clefts
  • Non-vertebrate chordates The clefts and
    arches are elaborated as straining devices
    concerned with capture of small food particles
    from water and are function throughout life.
  • Fish-like vertebrates and juvenile amphibians
    The walls of the pharyngeal clefts develop
    into gills that are organs of gas exchange
    between the water and blood.
  • Adult amphibians and the amniotes tetrapods
    The anterior most cleft transforms into the
    auditory tube and middle ear chamber, whereas the
    other clefts disappear after making some
    important contributions to glands lymphatic
    tissue in the throat region.

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GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHORDATES
  • Chordates in general have following
    characteristics
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Triploblastic
  • Deuterostome
  • Complete digestive tract
  • Well developed coelom
  • Internal organs are suspended in the coelomic
    cavity by a thin membranous tissue called
    mesentery
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Post anal tail

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CLASSIFICATION OF CHORDATES
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1-Group ACRANIATA (Protochordata)
  • They are the simple or first chordates in which
    brain box (cranium) is absent and hence brain is
    not prominent.
  • Notochord does not transform into vertebral
    column.
  • Group acraniata is divided into two sub
    phylum
  • Urochordata (notochord in the tail)
  • Sub-phylum cepalochordata (notochord from head to
    tail)

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1-SUB-PHYLUM UROCHORDATA (Tunicata)
  • Urochordates have a notochord that extends from
    just behind the head to the tail (rather than
    from head to tail Urochordata means
    "tail-cord").
  • Urochordates are also called tunicate because
    their body is enclosed in a sac called tunic or
    test composed largely of tunicine, similar to
    cellulose. (FIGURE-2) Tunicate includes about
    2,000 fixed and nearly 100 pelagic species.

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FIGURE 2 Tunicates sea squirts
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More about Urochordates
  • DIGESTIVE SYSTEMThey are all marine and sessile.
    Most tunicates feed by filtering sea water
    through pharyngeal slits.Tunicates are suspension
    feeders. They have two openings in their body
    cavity, an in-current and an ex-current siphon.
    The in-current siphon is used to intake food and
    water, and the ex-current siphon expels waste and
    water.
  • The tunicate's primary food source is plankton.
    Plankton gets entangled in the mucus secreted
    from the endostyle.The tunicate's pharynx is
    covered by miniature hairs called ciliate cells
    which allow the consumed plankton to pass down
    through to the esophagus. Their gut is U-shaped,
    and their anuses empty directly to the outside
    environment. They have complete digestive
    tract.(FIGURE-3)

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Figure 3 Internal organs of adult ascidians
(sea squirt). Large arrows show water flow
through the animal small arrows, the path food
trapped by the pharyngeal gill slits takes
through the animal.
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RESPIRATION, EXCRETION AND COELOM
  • RESPIRATION They have two to seven pairs of gill
    slits. Respiration through test and gill slits.
  • EXCRETION Tunicates lack the kidney-like
    metanephridial organs. They have neural gland,
    pyloric gland and nephrocytes.
  • COELOM The original coelom body-cavity develops
    into a pericardial cavity and gonads.

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What the Urohordates have?
  • Like other chordates, tunicates have a
    notochord during their early development, but
    lack myomeric segmentation throughout the body
    and tail as adults.
  • Blood vascular systemBlood vascular system is
    of open type. Heart is simple, ventral and
    tubular. Tunicate blood contains high
    concentrations of the metal vanadium
    ,vanadium-associated proteins as well as lithium.

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REPRODUCTION
  • Most tunicates are hermaphrodites. Tunicates
    begin life in a mobile larval stage that
    resembles a tadpole, and exhibit chordates
    characters. It contains a nerve cord and a short
    notochord in its tail only .
  • As the larva reaches maturity it attaches to the
    sea bottom and undergoes retrogressive
    metamorphosis by losing its tail and most of the
    chordate characters.only gill slits persist.
    Later, it develops into a barrel-like and usually
    sedentary adult form. (FIGURE-4)
  • IN PAKISTAN
  • Many species of Herdmania are fond in our
    seas.

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FIGURE 4 LARVAL AND ADULT ASCIDIAN
Ascidian Larvae
Older Ascidian Larvae
Young Ascidian Larvae
Adult Ascidian
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2-SUB-PHYLUM CEPHALOCHORDATA
  • DEFINATION
  • Cephalochordates are small, eel-like animals
    that spend much of their time buried in sand.
    They have notochord and nerve cord extends from
    head up to the tail, and persists throughout life.

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Chordates features
  • Cephalochordates have all the typical chordate
    features.
  • dorsal nerve cord
  • notochord.
  • pharyngeal slits (100 )which are used to strain
    food particles out of the water.
  • The musculature of the body is divided up into
    V-shaped blocks, or myomeres.
  • post-anal tail.
  • On the other hand, cephalochordates lack features
    found in most or all true vertebrates, small
    brain and poorly developed sense organs and no
    true vertebrae.
  • (FIGURE-5)

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FIGURE 5 AMPHIOXOUS
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DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Digestive tract is complete. Pharynx is large
    perforated by numerous gill slits. They are
    filter feeder.
  • A pouch or hepatic caecum secretes digestive
    enzymes, and actual digestion takes place in a
    specialized part of the intestine known as the
    iliocolonic ring. (FIGURE -6)

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FIGURE 6 AMPHIOXOUS INTERNAL STRUCTURE
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More about cephalochordates
  • RESPIRATION Respiration through the general body
    surface. No special organ for respiration.
  • CIRCULATORY SYSTEM Cephalochordates also have a
    well-developed circulatory system.
  • EXCRETORY SYSTEM Simple excretory system
    composed of paired nephridia.

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REPRDUCTION
  • Reproduction is sexual. The sexes are
    separate, and both males and females have
    multiple paired gonads. Eggs are fertilized
    externally, and develop into free-swimming,
    fishlike larvae. No asexual reproduction.
    Development is indirect.

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SPECIES NUMBERS
  • Cephalochordates comprises about 30 species.
  • IN PAKISTAN
  • Out of only two genera found around the world,
    Branchiostoma is found on our coast.

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REFERENCES
  • WEBSITE USED
  • www.wikipedia.com
  • www.youtube.com
  • www.google.com
  • www.glossary.com
  • www.answer.com
  • BOOKS
  • Elements of Chordate Anatomy by Charles K.
    Weichert
  • Modern Text Book of Zoology, Vertebrates. R.L.
    Kotpal

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  • Thank you
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