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Annelida

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One way digestive tract. Both Filter Feeders and Predators. Asexual and Sexual ... The eggs fertilized in capsule, then it slips off the worm and left in soil ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Annelida


1
Annelida
  • Segmented Worms

2
N0- not that kind of worm!
3
Common Examples
  • Earthworms

4
Common Examples
  • Bristle Worms

5
Common Examples
  • Feather Duster Worms

6
Common Examples
  • Tube Worms

7
Common Examples
  • Tube Worms

8
Common Examples
  • Leeches

9
  • Rag Worm

How would you like to run into the jaws of this
guy!
10
(No Transcript)
11
Characteristics
  • Segmentation
  • Cephalization
  • Bilateral Symmetry
  • Coelomates
  • One way digestive tract
  • Both Filter Feeders and Predators
  • Asexual and Sexual Reproduction
  • Water and Land Examples

12
Segmentation
  • Each segment repeats
  • Very efficient design.
  • Some are specialized
  • Digestion, reproduction,excretion, etc.

13
Definite Head End
14
Annelida has Bilateral Symmetry
Yes, Symmetric
No, not Symmetric
No, not Symmetric
15
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Body Structure
  • The basic body plan a tube within a tube
  • internal tube suspended w/in coelom digestive
    tract.

16
Phylum Annelida
  • Hydrostatic skeleton
  • Fluid pressure in coelom provides support
    locomotion
  • Circular muscles
  • Longitudinal muscles
  • Peristaltic locomotion squeeze, relax, squeeze!

17
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Body Structure
  • SETAE tiny bristles on each segment
  • help move
  • anchors body in soil so each segment can move
    the animal along

Setae
18
Phylum Annelida
  • Setae (bristles) of chitin a carbohydrate
  • Chitin forms the exoskeleton in insects, shrimp,
    crayfish, etc.
  • anchors for earthworm
  • paddles for polychaete
  • Enlarged as jaws in leeches, some polychaetes

19
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Body Structure
  • distinguishing characteristic is that bodies are
    divided into ringed segments
  • In most species, segmentation continues
    internally as each segment is separated from the
    others by a body partition.

Segments
20
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Body Structure
  • Each segment has its own muscles, allowing
    shortening and lengthening of the body.
  • Segmentation also allows for specialization of
    body tissues.
  • Certain segments have modifications for functions
    such as sensing and reproduction.

21
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Nervous system
  • Segmented worms have simple nervous systems in
    which organs in anterior segments have become
    modified for sensing the environment
    cephalization
  • Some sensory organs are sensitive to light, and
    eyes with lenses and retinas have evolved in
    certain species.

22
Nervous system
  • In some species there is a brain located in an
    anterior segment.

Setae
  • Nerve cords connect the brain to nerve centers
    called ganglia, located in each segment.

Brain
23
Phylum Annelida
  • Closed circulatory system
  • Multiple hearts
  • Hemoglobin not in blood cells
  • reddish-pink color
  • Blood carries O2 to and CO2 from body cells
  • flow through vessels to reach all parts of the
    body
  • must live in water or in wet areas on land
    because they exchange gases directly through
    their moist skin like your lungs

24
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Digestion and Excretion
  • complete internal digestive tract
  • length of body
  • Nutrients diffuse to blood
  • Transported to all cells
  • Food gt mouth gt crop gtgizzard gt gut gtanus

25
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Digestion and Excretion
Gizzard
Crop
  • GIZZARD
  • a muscular sac
  • Contains hard particles to grind soil and food
    before they pass into intestine/gut

Mouth
Circulatory System
26
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Excretion
  • have two nephridia in almost every segment.
  • Special cells that collect waste and transport it
    through the coelom and out of the body.

Nephridia
27
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Reproduction
  • Earthworms and leeches are hermaphroditic
  • exchange sperm.
  • forms a capsule for the eggs and sperm.
  • The eggs fertilized in capsule, then it slips off
    the worm and left in soil
  • 2-3 weeks, young worms emerge from the eggs.

28
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Reproduction in Bristleworms
  • separate sexes and reproduce sexually.
  • eggs and sperm are released into seawater and
    fertilize there external fertilizaton
  • larvae hatch in sea
  • become part of the plankton important part of
    food chain
  • Eventually settles to the bottom to live

29
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
CLASSES OF ANNELIDA
  • ClassOligochaeta - earthworms
  • Class Polychaeta - bristleworms
  • Class Hirudinea - leeches

30
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Class Oligochaeta Earthworms
  • most well-known annelids
  • Easily seen by most people.
  • burrows through soil
  • Loosens and aerates soil
  • Feces castings fertilizer
  • Ecologically very important
  • Possible human food source protein

31
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Class Polychaeta Bristleworms
  • Polychaete means many bristles
  • Most body segments have many setae
  • has a head with well-developed sense organs,
    including eyes.

32
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Class Polychaeta Bristleworms
  • have parapodia, (paired feet)
  • can be used for swimming or crawling over corals
    and bottom of sea.
  • Parapodia also function in gas exchange.

33
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Class Hirudinea Leeches
  • segmented worms with flattened bodies
  • usually no setae
  • Many are parasites
  • suck blood or other body fluids from hosts
    (ducks, turtles, fish, and humans).

34
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Hirudinea Leeches
  • Front and rear suckers for attachment
  • saliva contains
  • anesthetic chemicals
  • Anticoagulants prevent clotting of blood
  • can ingest 2 to 5 times its weight in 1 meal.

35
Section 27.2 Summary pages 728-733
Origins of Segmented Worms
  • Annelids probably evolved in the sea, perhaps
    from larvae of ancestral flatworms.
  • Tubes constructed by polychaetes are the most
    common fossils of this phylum.
  • Some of these tubes appear in the fossil record
    as early as 540 million years ago.
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