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The Pseudocoelomate Body Plan: Aschelminthes

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Title: The Pseudocoelomate Body Plan: Aschelminthes


1
The Pseudocoelomate Body PlanAschelminthes
  • Chapter 11

2
Aschelminthes
  • Seven different Phyla grouped into either the
    Lophotrochozoan (those that do NOT molt)
  • or
  • Ecdysozoan (those that DO molt)

3
Aschelminthes
  • Characteristics
  • First animal to posses a body cavity
  • Pseudocoelom
  • Distinct body cavity with no peritoneal lining
    and mesenteries.
  • Visceral (internal) organs lie free in the cavity

4
  • A pseudocoelom
  • Is a body cavity derived from the blastocoel,
    rather than from mesoderm

Pseudocoelomates such as nematodes have a body
cavity only partially lined by tissue derived
from mesoderm.
5
Characteristics
  • Pseudocoelom acts as an internal hydrostatic
    skeleton
  • that functions
  • in
  • locomotion

6
Characteristics
  • Most have a complete tubular digestive tract
    (mouth-anus)
  • First time mechanical breakdown of food,
    digestion, absorption, and feces formation

7
Characteristics
  • Show eutely same number of cells for each
    animal and for each given organ in all the
    animals of the species
  • Ex. Caenorhabditis elegans (a type of nematode)
    has 959 cells
  • Every worm in the species has 80 cells in their
    pharnyx

8
  • C. elegans
  • Nobel Prize (2002)Brenner, Sulston and Horvitz
  • Genetic regulation of organ development and
    programmed cell death

http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/2002/press.
html
9
Characteristics
  • Microscopic to meters in length
  • Bilaterally symmetrical
  • Unsegmented and cylindrical in cross section
  • Most are freshwater
  • Osmoregulation through protonephridia (mainly in
    freshwater)

10
Characteristics
  • Triploblastic
  • Most are dioecious
  • No separate gas exchanges
  • Some cephalization is present
  • Cuticle present may bear spines or scales and
    is useful for protection and taxonomic
    identification

11
Lophotrochozoan
  • Phylum Rotifera
  • (rota, wheel fera, to bear)
  • Small animals 0.1-3 mm
  • Most abundant in freshwater
  • About 1,000 cells (3 classes) and organs are
    eutelic

12
Phylum Rotifera
  • All have a Corona (crown)- ciliated organ for
    locomotion and food gathering

13
Phylum Rotifera
  • Posterior toes and adhesive glands called
  • Pedal gland- secretions aid in temporary
    attachment of foot to a substratum.

14
Feeding and Digestion
  • Feed on small microorganisms and organic material
  • Coronal cilia brings food to mouth
  • Food enters the Pharynx that contains a muscular
    organ that grinds food called Mastax

15
Feeding and Digestion
  • Then food passes through a ciliated Esophagus to
    the ciliated Stomach-complete extracellular
    digestion and absorption of food occurs.

16
Feeding and Digestion
  • Some species have ciliated Intestine that becomes
  • Cloacal bladder- receives water from the
    protonephridia, eggs from ovaries, and digestive
    waste.
  • Cloacal bladder opens to the outside via an Anus

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Other Organ Systems
  • Protonephridia that empty into the cloacal
    bladder function in osmoregulation
  • Nervous System- 2 lateral nerves and bilobed brain

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Reproduction and Development
  • Some reproduce sexually
  • Many reproduce by parthenogenesis- a type of
    reproduction in which females produce offspring
    from unfertilized eggs

21
Reproduction and Development
  • Females
  • Germovitellarium- ovary and vitellarium fuse
  • Males
  • Single testis
  • Eversible penis-injects sperm into the
    pseudocoelom of female (hypodermic impregnation)

22
Reproduction and Development
  • Divided into 3 classes

class
order
23
Class Seisonidea
  • Females produce haploid eggs that must be
    fertilized and develop into either males or
    females.
  • ? ? similar in size and form
  • Sexually reproduction only

24
Class Bdelloidea
  • Females are parthenogenetic (asexual)- produce
    diploid eggs that hatch into diploid females.

25
Class Bdelloidea
  • "The study of rotifers is a study of ladies,
    sometimes beautiful, often capricious, always
    fascinating. (Meglitsch)

26
Class Monogononta
  • Females produce two kinds of eggs
  • Amictic eggs- diploid eggs that have not
    undergone reduction division, cannot be
    fertilized develop only into females.

27
Class Monogononta
  • Mictic eggs- undergone meiosis and are haploid-
    if
  • Unfertilized- develop quickly into males
  • Fertilized- they secrete a thick shell and become
    dormant for several months before developing into
    amictic females.

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32
Phylum Nematoda
Ecdysozoan
  • The roundworms

33
5 billion per acre
34
Phylum Nematoda
  • Parasites and free-living
  • Lack cilia except in their sensory structures
  • Marine, freshwater, and soil habitats
  • Triploblastic, bilaterally symmetrical
  • Unsegmented vermiform (wormlike organism)

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Phylum Nematoda
  • External features
  • Noncellular, collagenous cuticle
  • Can molt 4 times during maturation
  • Maintains internal hydrostatic pressure
  • Mechanical protection
  • Resists digestion by the host

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Phylum Nematoda
  • Longitudinal muscles are used for locomotion
  • Thrashing movements (cant crawl like worms)

39
Phylum Nematoda
  • Sensory organs
  • Amphids chemoreceptors along the cuticle
  • Phasmids - chemoreceptors near the anus
  • Ocelli eyespots found in aquatic nematodes

40
Feeding and Digestive System
  • Carnivores, herbivores, omnivores,
    saprobes(decomposers), or parasitic
  • Complete digestive system
  • mouth-gtbuccal cavity-gtpharynx
  • -gttubular intestine-gtrectum-gtanus
  • Hydrostatic pressure pushes food thru

41
Other Organ Systems
  • Glandular system
  • Aquatic nematodes
  • Renettes absorb nitrogenous waste
  • Tubular system
  • Parasitic nematodes
  • Renettes form a canal

42
Other Organ Systems
  • Nervous system
  • Nerve ring from anterior to posterior
  • Also have neuroendocrine secretions involved in
    growth, molting, cuticle formation, and
    metamorphisis

43
Reproduction
  • Sexual
  • Dioecious-having separate sexes
  • Dimorphic-males are smaller than females
  • internal fertilization

44
Reproduction
  • Males
  • One testis
  • Bursa- used to insert their sperm into the female
  • males have ameboid sperm

45
Reproduction
  • Females
  • Pair of convoluted ovaries
  • Oviducts become uterus
  • Several hundred to several hundred- thousand eggs
    per day
  • Ovovivparity giving birth to larvae that
    hatched from an egg

46
Some Important Nematode Parasites of Humans
  • Ascaris lumbricoides
  • Enterobius vermicularis
  • Necator americanus
  • Trichinella spiralis
  • Wuchereria bancrofti

47
Ascaris lumbricoides
  • The Giant Intestinal Roundworm- The adult female
    worm can be over 30 cm long and 2-6 mm wide
  • 800 million infected- most common parasitic worm
    disease in the world

48
Ascaris lumbricoides
  • Adults live in small intestines of humans
  • Eggs exit with through feces
  • Once the eggs are ingested, they hatch in
    intestine and travel to the lungs
  • Larvae molt twice, they travel to the trachea
    where they are swallowed

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Ascaris lumbricoides
  • Warning those with weak stomachs need not
    continue viewing. Only for the HBO audiences!

When Ascaris becomes a big problem. . .
52
Enterobius vermicularis
  • Pinworm
  • Most common parasite in US
  • Adults live in large intestine
  • At night females migrate out of the anus and lay
    eggs on skin

53
Enterobius vermicularis
  • Human ingest eggs, hatch and molt 4 times in
    small intestine migrate to large

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55
Necator americanus
  • Found in Southern US
  • Adults live in small intestine with teeth and
    feed on blood tissue fluid
  • Females 10,000 eggs daily pass out of body in
    feces

56
Necator americanus
  • Eggs hatch in warm moist soil and releases a
    small larva, the larva molts and becomes the
    infective filariform larva.

hookworms living in soil
57
Necator americanus
  • Humans become infected when filariform penetrates
    the skin (usually b/w toes) to reach our
    circulatory system

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59
Trichinella spiralis
  • The Porkworm
  • Adults live in mucus of small intestine of humans
    and other mammals

Adult female
Adult male
60
Trichinella spiralis
  • Females birth young, larvae enter circulatory
    system and are carried to Skeletal (striated)
    Muscles

Larvae entering into Skeletal Muscle cells
61
Trichinella spiralis
  • Larvae encyst in muscles remains infective for
    many years

62
Another host must ingest infective meat to
continue the life cycle
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Trichinella spiralis
  • Humans become infected by eating improperly
    cooked pork products
  • Larvae encyst in stomach move to small intestine
    molt 4 times, turn into Adults

65
Wuchereria bancrofti
  • The Filarial worms
  • In tropical countries over 250 million human
    infected

66
Wuchereria bancrofti
  • Thread-like worms that live in the Lymphatic
    System, block the vessels
  • This causes enlargement of various appendages
    Elephantiasis

An Adult female Wuchereria bancrofti is about
80-100 mm long and 0.24-0.30 mm in diameter,
whereas a male is about 40 mm long and 0.1 mm in
diameter.
67
Elephantiasis
  • Warning Pictures not for everyone!

68
Wuchereria bancrofti
  • Adults copulate produce microfilariae.
  • The microfilariae released into the blood stream

A microfilaria is about 240-300 µm (micrometers)
long and 7.5-10 µm thick
69
Wuchereria bancrofti
  • Mosquito (intermediate host) feeds on human
    (definitive host) ingest microfilariae and larvae
    molts 2 times
  • Mosquito bites another human it injects 3rd stage
    larvae into human blood, molts, enters lymphatic
    system

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Other Filarial Worms
  • Dirofilaria immitis in US parasite of dogs
  • Adult worms live in heart, large arteries, and
    lungs
  • Heartworm disease- fatal to dogs, unless give
    preventative medicine

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Phylum Nematomorpha
  • Phylum Nematomorpha
  • Characteristics
  • 250 species
  • Horsehair worms
  • Adults are free-living
  • Juveniles are parasitic in arthropods
  • No distinct head
  • Dioecious

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