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Syncytial hypothesis: came from multinucleate ciliated cells

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9,000 species- mostly marine (150 fresh water) ... skeletal elements, transporting and storing food, forming contractile rings ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Syncytial hypothesis: came from multinucleate ciliated cells


1
Origin of multicellular animals
  • Syncytial hypothesis came from multinucleate
    ciliated cells
  • Colonial hypothesis came from colonial
    flagellated cells (some rRNA
  • evidence)
  • Polyphyletic no single
  • scheme (monophyletic would indicate single
    ancestor for all animals)

2
Phylum Porifera The Sponges
"pore bearer"
3
Phylum Porifera The Sponges
  • 9,000 species- mostly marine (150 fresh water)
  • First appear in Paleozoic Era (600 mya)- first
    thought plants (animal kingdom- 1857)
  • Simplest of all animals
  • Possibility arose from protozoan similar to
    present day choanoflagellates (have choanocytes)
  • Most sessile (permanently attached)

4
Characteristics
  • Range from mm to 2m- many shapes (ball, vase,
    disc, shrub, tree)
  • Asymmetrical or radially symmetrical
  • No tissues or organs (cell aggregate with
    specialized cells)
  • Diploblastic
  • Central cavity (spongocoel) or branching chambers
    through which filter feeds exits out large
    opening in top (osculum)

5
Body plan
  • Pinacocytes thin, flat cells that line outer
    surface
  • Some porocytes (ostia or pore cells) openings
    for water movement

6
Body plan
  • Mesohyl jellylike middle layer
  • Mesenchyme cells (amoebocytes) specialized for
    reproduction, secreting skeletal elements,
    transporting and storing food, forming
    contractile rings

amoebocyte
7
Body plan
  • Choanocytes (collar cells) flagellated cells
    that beat and create current

8
Body plan
  • Spicules skeleton of needlelike spikes- CaCO3
    (can get from boring holes into shells) or
    silica- used for defense (some produce poisons)
  • Spongin spongy protein of collagen (do not cause
    allergic reaction like latex)

spongin
spicule
9
Three forms
figure 18.7
  • Ascon- vase like
  • Sycon- folded wall
  • Leucon- extensively branched canal system (can
    provide protection for invertebrates)

ascon
sycon
leucon
10
Nutrition
  • Filter feeders bacteria, algae, microorganisms
    (up to 1500L per day)
  • A few carnivorous
  • Important source of nutrition for some snails,
    sea stars and fish
  • Respiration and excretion by diffusion

11
Reproduction
  • Most hermaphroditic but do not self fertilize
    (produce eggs and sperm at different times) form
    from choanocytes or amoebocytes
  • Eggs retained in mesohyl, sperm exit osculum and
    travel to other sponges

12
Reproduction
  • Larva develop within wall
  • Larva breaks free and swims for no more than two
    days

13
Reproduction
  • Asexual by budding, fragmentation (one cell can
    regenerate in some species), and creating
    gemmules (weather resistant capsules of
    ameobocytes surrounded by spicules)- released in
    winter

14
Ecological
brittle stars
home to many other species
15
Natural sponges
non allergenic
spongin spicules (collagen)
16
Antibiotic possibilities
AR5
17
Interesting fact
  • Some genetically engineered bacteria produce a
    gluelike chemical similar to that produced by
    sponges (used in medicine and industry)
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