Phylum Porifera- Sponges - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Phylum Porifera- Sponges

Description:

Phylum Porifera- Sponges Porifera means pore-bearer Sponges are Asymmetrical Sessile Contain cells only; no tissues Choanocytes ( collar cells ) are ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:962
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: jchshubCo
Category:
Tags: cycle | life | of | phylum | porifera | sponges | stars

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Phylum Porifera- Sponges


1
Phylum Porifera- Sponges
  • Porifera means pore-bearer
  • Sponges are
  • Asymmetrical
  • Sessile
  • Contain cells only no tissues
  • Choanocytes (collar cells) are flagellated
    cells that line the internal cavity of a sponge
    and aide in filtering food from the water

2
Porifera continued
  • As water leaves the sponge, waste products are
    washed away
  • Some sponges have skeletons made of spicules
  • Asexual (budding or fragmentation) and sexual
    reproduction (hermaphrodites)

3
Phylum Cnidaria- Cnidarians
  • No brain or central nervous system have a nerve
    net instead that aid in muscle contraction
  • Radial symmetry
  • Two tissue layers
  • Endoderm (inner)
  • Ectoderm (outer)
  • Sexual (external fertilization) or asexual
    reproduction (budding)

4
  • Two basic body forms
  • Medusa (free floating umbrella shape)
  • Polyp (tube-like, usually attached to a
    substrate)
  • Tentacles surround the opening of the
    gastrovascular cavity
  • Each tentacle contain stinging cells called
    cnidocytes
  • Within each cnidocyte is a small, barbed harpoon
    called a nematocyst
  • Used for defense and to spear prey
  • Some contain toxins that kill or merely stun
  • The tentacles bring the prey into the
    gastrovascular cavity

5
3 Types of Cnidarians
  • Hydrozoaex. Hydra
  • Include polyp and medusa stages
  • Attached to substrates by an area on their body
    called a basal disk
  • Scyphozoatrue jellyfish
  • Active predators
  • Mostly medusa stage but also have a polyp stage
  • Anthozoaexist only as polyps
  • Sea anemones and corals
  • Most have a symbiotic relationship with protists

6
Phylum Platyhelminthes Flat Worms
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • 3 tissue layers
  • Mesoderm is middle tissue layer that helps form
    true organs
  • Gastrovascular cavity
  • Defined head and tail region
  • Centralized nervous system containing a brain and
    nerve cords
  • Eyespots for light detection

7
More on Flatworms
  • Flatworms are hermaphroditic and capable of
    sexual and asexual reproduction
  • Passive diffusion through the skin supplies
    oxygen to their body parts
  • Most species of flatworms are parasitic

Planaria
8
Tapeworms and You!
  • Generally infect vertebrates or humans
  • Suckers and hook-like structures allow the
    tapeworm to permanently attach themselves to the
    inner wall of their hosts intestines
  • Food is directly absorbed from the hosts
    intestines to the tapeworms skin
  • Grow by producing a string of rectangular body
    sections called proglottids behind their head
  • May grow up to 40 ft long!

9
  • Largest flatworm class consisting of parasitic
    worms called flukes
  • Most have complex life cycles
  • Some live inside their hosts making them
    endoparasites or outside their host making them
    ectoparasites
  • Flukes do not have a well-developed digestive
    system because of its dependence on a host

10
Phylum Nematoda Round worms
  • 3 tissue layers
  • Gases are exchanged through the fluid by
    diffusion
  • Simplest animals to have a one-way digestive
    system
  • Have long muscles that extend the length of the
    worm
  • Allows the nematode to move whip-like
  • Many cause human and plant diseases

11
Roundworms and your pet!
12
Roundworms Guinea Worms A Worldwide Problem
  • What is dracunculiasis?
  • Dracunculiasis, more commonly known as Guinea
    worm disease (GWD), is a preventable infection
    caused by the parasite Dracunculus medinensis.
    Infection affects poor communities in remote
    parts of Africa that do not have safe water to
    drink.
  • How does Guinea worm disease spread?
  • Adult female Dracunculus worms emerge from the
    skin of Infected persons annually. Persons with
    worms protruding through the skin may enter
    sources of drinking water and allow the worm to
    release larvae into the water. These larvae are
    eaten by fresh water water fleas where these
    develop into the infective stage in 10-14 days.
    Persons become infected by drinking water
    containing the water fleas that have the
    infective stage larvae of Dracunculus medinensis.

13
Roundworms Pinworms and You!
  • What are the symptoms of a pinworm infection?
  • Itching around the anus, disturbed sleep, and
    irritability are common symptoms. If the
    infection is heavy, symptoms may also include
    loss of appetite, restlessness, and difficulty
    sleeping. Symptoms are caused by the female
    pinworm laying her eggs. Most symptoms of pinworm
    infection are mild many infected people have no
    symptoms.
  • Who is at risk for pinworm infection?
  • Pinworm is the most common worm infection in the
    United States. School-age children, followed by
    preschoolers, have the highest rates of
    infection. In some groups nearly 50 of children
    are infected. Infection often occurs in more than
    one family member. Adults are less likely to have
    pinworm infection, except mothers of infected
    children. Child care centers, and other
    institutional settings often have cases of
    pinworm infection.
  • Danger of Sandboxes!

14
Roundworms Elephantiasis
  • What is lymphatic filariasis?
  • Lymphatic filariasis is a parasitic disease
    caused by microscopic, thread-like worms. The
    adult worms only live in the human lymph system.
    The lymph system maintains the body's fluid
    balance and fights infections.
  • How is lymphatic filariasis spread?
  • The disease spreads from person to person by
    mosquito bites. When a mosquito bites a person
    who has lymphatic filariasis, microscopic worms
    circulating in the person's blood enter and
    infect the mosquito. People get lymphatic
    filariasis from the bite of an infected mosquito.

15
Phylum Annelida Segmented worms
  • Easily recognized by their segments which are in
    ring-like structures
  • Each segment contains digestive, excretory,
    circulatory, and locomotor organs
  • Simple brain located in head region
  • Digestive tract

16
  • Have circular and longitudinal muscles which
    allow the worm to crawl
  • Circular muscles contract to elongate the segment
  • Longitudinal muscles contract to bunch up the
    segments
  • Respiration occurs through the worms skin
  • The digestive tract is divided into different
    regions for different functions of digestion
  • Have external bristles called setae
  • Located on each segment to increase traction
  • Earthworms are hermaphrodites

17
  • Examples include polycheates, leeches and
    earthworms
  • Earthworms eat detritus using this pathway
  • Muscular pharynx, esophagus, crop, gizzard,
    intestine, anus
  • Leeches have suckers at both ends of their body

18
Phylum Mollusca Soft-bodied
  • FYI Second largest animal phyla
  • Examples snails, slugs, oysters, clams,
    scallops, octopuses, and squid
  • Aquatic mollusks have gills for respiration,
    terrestrial mollusks have thin membranes that act
    as a primitive lung or do respiration through
    their skin
  • Sexual reproduction

19
Key characteristics shared by all mollusks
  • All have
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Digestive Tract
  • Three-part body plan
  • Visceral massa central section that contains the
    mollusks organs
  • Mantlea heavy fold of tissue that wraps the
    visceral mass like a cape
  • Secretes a shell in some mollusks
  • Footmuscular region which is used primarily for
    movement or grasping
  • Many have a radulaa rasping tongue-like organ
    located in their mouth

20
  • Gastropods Ex. Snails, slugs, nudibranchs
  • Foot is adapted for locomotion
  • Have various feeding habits mainly using their
    radulas
  • Bivalves Ex. Clams, oysters, mussels
  • Most are sessile but some like scallops will flap
    its valves to move
  • Most bivalves are filter feeders

21
Cephalopods (squids, nautiluses, octopuses)
  • Large head attached to tentacles (foot divided
    into parts)
  • Squid (10 tentacles), octopus (8 tentacles),
    nautilus (80-90 tentacles)
  • Nautilus only living cephalopod with a shell
  • Most intelligent of all invertebrates
  • Have eyes similar to vertebrates eyes
  • Have the largest eyes known in any animal
  • Move by closing their mantle cavity to shoot
    water out forcefully
  • All cephalopods are active marine predators
    feeding on fish, mollusks, crustaceans, and worms

22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
FYIPearls
  • Many species of bivalves produce pearls
  • When a grain of sand becomes stuck between a
    mollusks mantle and shell, the mollusk coats the
    sand with nacre
  • Nacre is also mother-of-pearl that is also used
    on the inside of the bivalves shell
  • The sand is continually covered in nacre to form
    a pearl
  • Only pearls that contain overlapping mineral
    crystals within the nacre are considered
    gem-quality pearls

25
Phylum Arthropoda
  • FYI Means jointed foot
  • FYI Over 1 million species
  • Most diverse group of animals
  • Most have
  • Segmented bodies
  • Usually in three distinct regions head, thorax
    (mid-body region) and abdomen
  • The head may fuse with the thorax to form a
    cephalothorax
  • Exoskeleton made of protein, chitin
  • Prevents water loss, protects internal
    structures, and attachment for muscles
  • Does not grow with organism, so they must shed
    their exoskeletonmolting

26
More common characteristics
  • Appendages legs, antennae, mouthparts etc that
    grow out from the body and are jointed/bendable
  • Open circulatory system
  • Air enters spiracles through a network of fine
    tubes called tracheae
  • Distinct head often with compound eyes
  • Eye made of thousands of individual units each
    with its own lens and retina
  • Image is not as clear but motion is detected more
    quickly

27
Chelicerata
  • Spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites, marine
    horseshoe crabs, sea spiders, and harvestman
    (daddy long legs)?

28
Chelicerata
  • Chelicerae are mouthparts modified into fangs
  • Arachnid body
  • Cephalothorax
  • Abdomen
  • No antennae
  • Chelicerae, first pair of appendages
  • Second appendage, pedipalps modified to catch and
    handle prey
  • Four functioning legs
  • All arachnids are carnivorous except mites
  • Spiderproduce silk through spinnerets
  • Scorpionsstinger-tipped abdomen
  • Mitessingle, unsegmented body

29
Crustaceans
  • Crabs, lobsters, crayfish, shrimps, barnacles,
    water fleas, Daphnia, pill bugs, etc

30
Crustaceans
  • Gills
  • Cephalothorax with protective shieldcarapace
  • In crayfish and lobsters, anterior pair of legs
    is modified into large pinchers called chelipeds
  • Barnacles are sessile crustaceans with a
    free-swimming larval stage
  • Reproduction mainly sexual with internal
    fertilization
  • Sperm is deposited where eggs are released, no
    water required

31
Uniramia (Insecta, Diplopoda, Chilopoda)?
  • Butterflies, beetles, fleas, lice, grasshoppers,
    ants, mosquitoes, etc

32
Insecta
  • Chewing mouthpartsmandibles
  • Most have
  • Head-mandibles, one pair of antennae, compound
    eyes
  • Thorax-composed of three fused segments, two or
    three pairs of jointed legs attached
  • Abdomen-composed of 9-11 segments
  • First animals to evolve wings
  • Insect life cycle
  • Complete metamorphosis
  • Egg, larva, protective capsule stage chrysalis,
    pupa, adult
  • Incomplete metamorphosis
  • Egg, nymph, after several molts becomes adult

33
Developmental Patterns
  • Protostomesdevelop a mouth first and anus second
    from the opening of the digestive cavity
  • Nematodes, Annelids, Mollusks, Arthropods
  • Deuterostomesdevelop an anus first and a mouth
    second
  • Echinoderms

34
Phylum Echinodermata- Sea stars, sand dollars,
sea cucumbers, sea urchins
  • Spiny skin
  • All marine
  • Bilateral larvae then 5-part radial symmetry as
    adults
  • Number of arms can vary

35
  • Calcium-rich endoskeleton composed of individual
    plates called ossicles
  • Even though the ossicles of adult echinoderms
    appear to be external, they are covered by a thin
    layer of skin
  • No head or brain
  • Nervous system consists of a central ring of
    nerves with branches extending into each of the
    arms
  • Regeneration of arms
  • Water vascular systemwater-filled system of
    interconnected canals and thousands of tiny
    hollow tube feet
  • Tube feet extend outward through openings in the
    ossicles
  • Used for locomotion, feeding and gas exchange

36
  • Sea stars
  • Most are carnivores
  • Responsible for the mass destruction of coral
    polyp colonies
  • Brittle stars
  • Name given for the delicacy of their brittle arms
  • Most are filter feeders
  • Sea lilies and feather stars
  • Most ancient and primitive echinoderms
  • Sessile

37
  • Sea urchin and sand dollars
  • Lack arms but still have the 5-part body plan
  • Some sea urchins contain venom
  • Sea cucumbers
  • Soft-bodied, slug-like animals without arms
  • Ossicles are small and not fused
  • Sea daisies
  • Only two known species of newly discovered group
  • No arms but still have 5-part radial symmetry
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com