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Introduction to the Animal Kingdom

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Title: Introduction to the Animal Kingdom


1
Introduction to the Animal Kingdom Sponges
  • Chapter 26

2
Animal Kingdom Characteristics
  • Basic functions feeding, respiring, circulating,
    excreting, responding, moving, and reproducing
  • Heterotrophic cells
  • No cell walls
  • Multicellular
  • Eukaryotic
  • Asymmetry or symmetry
  • Invertebrate or vertebrate

3
Animal development
  • Zygote fertilized egg (2n)
  • Blastula hollow ball of cells that folds on
    itself at the blastopore opening
  • Tube from blastopore is the digestive tract that
    can form the mouth (protostome) or the anus
    (deuterostome) from the opening.

4
Embryonic tissues
  • Endoderm inner layer ? digestive tract and
    respiratory system
  • Mesoderm middle layer ? muscles, circulatory,
    reproductive and excretory organs
  • Ectoderm outermost layer ? sense organs, nerves,
    and epidermis

5
Body cavity
  • Space where internal organs are housed
  • coelomates, pseudocoelomates or acoelomates,
    depends how cavity is made

6
Body symmetry
                                     
                                     
  • Asymmetrical no plane dividing body into equal
    halves
  • Radial symmetry multiple planes dividing body
    into equal halves
  • Bilateral symmetry one plane dividing body into
    equal halves

7
Body Symmetry
Section 26-1
Bilateral Symmetry
Radial Symmetry
Posterior end
Dorsal side
Anterior end
Ventral side
Plane ofsymmetry
Planes ofsymmetry
Figure 265 
8
Cephalization
head
  • Concentration of sense organs and nerves
  • Usually associated with head region
  • Defines the difference between head and tail
    regions

tail
9
Introduction to Invertebrates
Click on image to play video.
10
Invertebrates video 2
Click on image to play video.
11
Sponges the simplest animals
12
Sponge characteristics
  • Invertebrate
  • Multicellular
  • Heterotrophic
  • No cell walls
  • Asymmetrical
  • Few specialized cells

13
The Anatomy of a Sponge
Section 26-2
Water flow
Osculum
Choanocyte
Central cavity
Pores
Spicule
Pore cell
Pore
Epidermal cell
Archaeocyte
Figure 268 
14
Choanocyte
  • Collar cells that line cavity
  • Obtains nutrients and oxygen from flowing water
    when flagella beat

15
Spicule
  • Spicule spike-shaped structure made by
    archaeocytes that move around in the sponge walls

16
Archaeocytes
  • processes food
  • distributes nutrition to other cells

17
Porocyte
  • porous cells where water can flow into sponge
    cavity

18
Boat that is harvesting sponges
  • Spongin flexible protein found in soft sponges

19
Feeding
  • Filter feeders sift food from water current
  • Intracellular digestion
  • Choanocytes trap food that are then passed onto
    the archaeocytes.
  • Waste flows out of the large opening.

20
Respiration, Circulation, Excretion
  • Rely on water movement through the body for gas
    exchange, nutrient and waste transport/elimination

21
Response
  • No nervous systems to respond to environmental
    changes
  • Produce toxins that make them unpalatable or
    poisonous

To treat irritations from this sponge, apply a
vinegar-soaked cloth for 15 minutes. Use a piece
of adhesive tape on the wound to remove any
spicules.
22
Reproduction
  • Sexual
  • Internal fertilization
  • Sperm released, egg maintained
  • Asexual
  • Budding
  • Gemmules groups of archaeocytes surrounded by
    spicules (much like spores)

23
Sponge habitat photo by Justin Gilligan
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