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Biology - Chapter 29

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Title: Biology - Chapter 29


1
Biology - Chapter 29Echinoderms and
Invertebrate Chordates
  • Charles Page High School
  • Stephen L. Cotton

2
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Relate the structure of echinoderms to essential
    life functions.

3
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Describe the characteristics of the classes of
    echinoderms.

4
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Phylum Echinodermata- starfish, sea urchins, sand
    dollars, etc.
  • echino- means spiny dermis means skin
  • these are spiny-skinned animals
  • Cambrian period 580 million yr.

5
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • In addition to having spiny skin, they are
    characterized by
  • 5 part radial symmetry
  • internal skeleton
  • water vascular system
  • suction-cuplike structures called tube feet

6
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • The internal skeleton (or endoskeleton) is made
    up of hardened plates of calcium carbonate often
    bumpy or spiny
  • water vascular system consists of an internal
    network of fluid-filled canals connected to the
    external appendages called tube feet

7
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • The water vascular system is essential for
  • feeding respiration internal transport
    elimination of wastes and movement
  • Echinoderms have an internal skeleton like
    Chordates, and some similar development

8
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Thus, some biologists feel that among
    invertebrates, echinoderms are most closely
    related to humans!
  • Echinoderms are somewhat ugly- however, they
    are very well adapted to life in the sea have
    changed very little

9
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Adult echinoderms have a body plan with five
    parts organized symmetrically around a center
  • neither anterior nor posterior end no brain
  • but, they are two-sided
  • mouth side is the oral surface

10
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Side opposite the mouth is the aboral surface
  • they have a unique system of internal tubes
    called a water vascular system
  • opens to the outside through a sieve-like
    structure called the madreporite

11
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • In starfish, the madreporite connects to a tube
    called the ring canal that forms a circle around
    the animals digestive system
  • Figure 29-3, page 639
  • from the ring canal, five radial canals extend
    into each body segment

12
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Attached to each radial canal are hundreds of
    movable tube feet
  • this entire system acts like a series of living
    hydraulic pumps that can propel water in or out
    of the tube feet
  • can create a partial vacuum to hold on to what it
    is touching

13
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Feeding-
  • carnivores, such as starfish, use their tube feet
    to pry open the shells of bivalve mollusks
  • then flips the stomach out of its mouth, pours
    out enzymes, and digests its prey in its own
    shell then pulls the stomach back, leaving an
    empty shell

14
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Herbivores, such as sea urchins, scrape algae
    from rocks by using their 5-part jaw
  • Filter feeders, such as sea lilies, basket stars,
    and some brittle stars, use tube feet on flexible
    arms to capture plankton that float by on ocean
    currents

15
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Detritus feeders, such as sea cucumbers, move
    much like a bulldozer- taking in a mixture of
    sand and detritus
  • much like an earthworm, they digest the organic
    material and pass the sand grains out in their
    feces

16
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Respiration- in most species, the thin-walled
    tissue of the tube feet forms the main
    respiratory surface
  • in some species, small outgrowths called skin
    gills also function in gas exchange

17
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Internal transport- the functions of transporting
    oxygen, food, and wastes- which is normally done
    by a circulatory system, are shared by different
    systems in echinoderms
  • dont really need a system for gases, because of
    gills and skin

18
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • The distribution of nutrients is performed
    primarily by the digestive glands and the fluid
    within the body cavity
  • Excretion- in almost all echinoderms, solid
    wastes are released through the anus (on the
    aboral surface) as feces

19
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • The nitrogen-containing cellular wastes are
    excreted primarily as ammonia
  • wastes seem to be excreted in many of the same
    places around the body in which gas exchange
    takes place- the tube feet and the skin gills

20
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Response- since they have no head, they have
    primitive nervous systems
  • they do have scattered sensory cells to detect
    food
  • starfish also have up to 200 light-sensitive
    cells clustered in eyespots at the tip of each arm

21
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • However, they can do little more than tell
    whether it is light or dark
  • also may have statocysts for balance, telling
    them whether it is right side up
  • the spiny surface is not very good protection
    good in some such as the crown-of-thorns starfish

22
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Many predators have learned that if they turn
    these animals over, they can attack them through
    their unprotected underside
  • thus, many echinoderms hide during the day
    active at night when most predators sleep

23
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Movement- use tube feet and thin layers of muscle
    fibers attached to the plates of the endoskeleton
    to move
  • in sand dollars and sea urchins, the plates are
    fused together to form a rigid box that encloses
    the animals internal organs

24
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • In sea cucumbers, the plates are reduced to tiny
    vestiges inside a soft, muscular body wall. The
    loss of the plates makes the body of sea
    cucumbers very flexible

25
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Reproduction- most echinoderms are either male or
    female, some are hermaphrodites
  • place the eggs and sperms in the water where
    fertilization takes place
  • the larvae have bilateral symmetry- very advanced

26
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • When the larvae mature and metamorphose into
    adults, they have radial symmetry
  • many starfish have incredible powers of
    regeneration
  • each piece can grow into a new animal as long as
    it contains a portion of the central part

27
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Echinoderm Classes- 5 classes, although exact
    names not given
  • almost 6,000 species found in almost every ocean
    (salt water) in the world
  • no echinoderms have ever entered fresh water, and
    they cannot survive for long on land

28
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • 1. Starfish- this class contains the common
    starfish, which are also known as sea stars
  • some have more than 5 arms
  • Figure 29-7, page 642
  • carnivorous, preying upon the bivalves they
    encounter

29
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • 2. Brittle Stars- live in tropical seas,
    especially on coral reefs
  • look like common starfish, but longer more
    flexible arms- thus able to move much more rapid
  • protection by shedding one or more arms when
    attacked are filter and detritus feeders

30
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • 3. Sea Urchins and Sand Dollars- includes
    disk-shaped sand dollars, oval heart urchins, and
    round sea urchins Fig. 29-8, p. 643
  • are grazers that eat large quantities of algae
    may burrow into the sand or mud may protect by
    long sharp spines

31
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • 4. Sea Cucumbers- look like warty moving pickles,
    with a mouth at one end and an anus at the other
  • Figure 29-9, page 644 top
  • most are detritus feeders
  • some produce a sticky material to glue a
    predator helpless

32
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • 5. Sea Lilies and Feather Stars- filter feeders,
    have 50 or more long feathery arms
  • the most ancient class of echinoderms not common
    today, but once were widely distributed
  • sea lilies sessile animals-p.644

33
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • How Do Echinoderms Fit Into the World?
  • Starfish are important carnivores, controlling
    other animal populations a rise or fall in
    numbers affects other populations

34
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • For example, several years ago the coral-eating
    crown-of-thorns starfish suddenly appeared in
    great numbers in the Pacific Ocean
  • within a short period of time, they caused
    extensive damage to many coral reefs

35
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • In many coastal areas, sea urchins are important
    because they control distribution of algae
  • in various parts of the world, sea urchin eggs
    and sea cucumbers are considered delicacies by
    some people

36
Section 29-1Echinoderms
  • Several chemicals from starfish and sea cucumbers
    are currently being studied as potential
    anti-cancer and anti-viral drugs
  • sea urchins have been helpful in embryolgy study,
    since they produce large eggs fertilize
    externally develop in sea water

37
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Name and discuss the three distinguishing
    characteristics of chordates.

38
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Describe the two subphyla of invertebrate
    chordates.

39
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • The phylum Chordata, to which fishes, frogs,
    birds, snakes, dogs, cows, and humans belong,
    will be in future chapters
  • most chordates are vertebrates, which means they
    have backbones, and are placed in the subphylum
    Vertebrata

40
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • But, there are also invertebrate chordates- these
    are divided into two subphyla
  • 1. the tunicates
  • 2. the lancelets
  • due to similar structures, the chordate
    vertebrates and invertebrates may have evolved
    from a common ancestor

41
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Chordates are animals that are characterized by a
    notochord, a hollow dorsal nerve cord, and
    pharyngeal (throat) slits
  • some chordates posses these characteristics as
    adults others as only embryos but all have them
    at some stage of life

42
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • 1. Notochord- a long, flexible supporting rod
    that runs through at least part of the body,
    usually along the dorsal surface just beneath the
    nerve cord
  • most chordates only have this during the early
    part of embryonic life

43
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Vertebrates will replace the notochord quickly
    with the backbone
  • 2. The second chordate characteristic- the hollow
    dorsal nerve cord- runs along the dorsal surface
    just above the notochord

44
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • In most chordates, the front end of this nerve
    cord develops into a large brain
  • nerves leave this cord at regular intervals along
    the length of the animal, and connect its
    internal organs, muscles, and sense organs

45
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • 3. The third chordate characteristic- the
    pharyngeal slits- are paired structures in the
    pharyngeal (or throat) region of the body
  • in aquatic chordates such as lancelets and
    fishes, the pharyngeal slits are gill slits that
    connect with the outside

46
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • In terrestrial chordates that use lungs for
    respiration, pharyngeal slits are present for
    only a brief time during the development of the
    embryo
  • they soon close up as the embryo develops- page
    283

47
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • In humans, pouches form in the pharyngeal region,
    but never open up to form slits
  • thus, some scientists consider the pharyngeal
    pouches, not slits, as the true chordate
    characteristic

48
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Tunicates- small marine chordates that eat
    plankton they filter from the water
  • name from a special body covering called the
    tunic
  • only the tadpole-shaped larvae have the notochord
    and dorsal nerve cord

49
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Examples of tunicates are the sea squirts
    Figure 29-11, page 646
  • adults are sessile, living as colonies attached
    to a solid surface larvae are free swimming

50
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Lancelets- small fishlike creatures live in
    sandy bottoms of shallow tropical oceans
  • unlike tunicates, the adult lancelets have a
    definite head a mouth that opens into a long
    pharyngeal region with up to 100 pairs of gills

51
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Figure 29-12, page 646
  • feed by passing water through their pharynx,
    where food particles are caught in a sticky
    mucus lack any jaws
  • have a primitive heart pumping blood through
    closed circulation

52
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • Lancelets muscles are organized into V-shaped
    units on either side of the body
  • each muscle unit receives a branch from the main
    nerve cord lack any appendages
  • similar system found in all living vertebrates

53
Section 29-2Invertebrate Chordates
  • How Do Invertebrate Chordates Fit Into the World?
  • By studying the invertebrate chordates, it is
    like using a time machine to study the ancestors
    of our own subphylum
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