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How does Cnidaria fit in?

How does Cnidaria fit in?. Cnidaria. 3 classes:Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa, Anthozoa . Porifera. 2 body types: polyp, medusa. diploblastic. 3 body types . tissue level of organization. choanocytes. cellular level of organization. Blastula stage. heterotrophic. multicellular. unknown

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How does Cnidaria fit in?

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  1. How does Cnidaria fit in? Cnidaria 3 classes:Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa, Anthozoa Porifera 2 body types: polyp, medusa diploblastic 3 body types tissue level of organization choanocytes cellular level of organization Blastula stage heterotrophic multicellular unknown common ancestor eukaryote

  2. How do the Acoelomates fit in? the acoelomates Platyhelminthes Nemertea Cnidaria Porifera unknown common ancestor

  3. The Acoelomates

  4. Acoelomate Characteristics Organ level of organization Tissues are organized to for organs which are used to accomplish physiological functions

  5. Acoelomate Characteristics Triploblastic 3 Tissue Layers gastrodermis mesoderm epidermis 3 Embryonic Germ Layers endoderm mesoderm ectoderm

  6. Acoelomate Characteristics No body cavity ectoderm ectoderm mesoderm mesoderm Gut endoderm endoderm

  7. Acoelomate Characteristics Triploblastic Mesoderm (mesenchyme, parenchyma) Gut Ectoderm Endoderm

  8. Acoelomate Characteristics Bilateral Symmetry Anterior: toward the front of the body Posterior: toward the rear of the body

  9. Acoelomate Characteristics Cephalization the concentration of sensory organs in the head of the animal Eye spots Auricles

  10. Phylum Platyhelminthes the flatworms

  11. Physiology Feeding • Free-living, carnivorous • parasitic Digestion • intestine is simple or branched • incomplete system (no anus) • digestive system reduced or absent in parasitic species

  12. Physiology Osmoregulation and excretion • Protonephridia and flame cells • much excretion is via diffusion protonephridia flame cell

  13. Physiology Cerebral ganglia Nervous system -ladder-like -cephalization -nervous system is reduced in parasitic species Lateral nerve cords Skeletal and circulatory systems • absent

  14. Physiology Reproduction Asexual Sexual • usually monoecious, but most must cross fertilize • Internal fertilization (usually reciprocal)

  15. Phylum Platyhelminthes Class Turbellaria Class Trematoda Class Cestoda

  16. Class Turbellaria • Free-living flatworms • move on slime trails using cilia

  17. Class Turbellaria • predatory • use a pharynx to capture prey pharynx

  18. Class Turbellaria • have a branched (or lobed) gut

  19. ClassTurbellaria Reproduction Asexual • Fission

  20. ClassTurbellaria Reproduction Sexual • internal fertilization • simple life cycle

  21. Adaptations for Parasitism • increased reproductive potential • monoecious • presence of adhesion organs (suckers, hooks) • poorly developed sensory systems • reduced, or absent, digestive system • resistant cuticle • complex life cycles with more than 1 host

  22. Class Trematoda • Parasitic Flukes • endoparasitic

  23. Trematoda Life Cycle • have at least two hosts in their life cycle • final host = vertebrate Vertebrate host #1 infective stage in host muscle Vertebrate host #2 adult fluke (in host liver) Invertebrate host eats eggs

  24. Class Cestoda Parasitic tapeworms

  25. Class Cestoda 2 body regions: scolex and proglottids scolex proglottids

  26. Class Cestoda Scolex suckers rostellum

  27. Class Cestoda • Proglottids • repeating segments containing reproductive organs • may be immature, mature, or gravid

  28. Class Cestoda Immature proglottids • found at the anterior end of the tapeworm • contain no noticeable sex organs

  29. Class Cestoda Mature proglottids • found in the middle of the tapeworm • contain noticeable sex organs • sperm must come from either a different proglottid or a different individual

  30. Class Cestoda genital pore Mature proglottids sperm duct vagina uterus ovary testes

  31. Class Cestoda Gravid proglottids • found at the posterior end of the tapeworm • contain fertilized eggs • entire proglottid is shed in the host’s feces uterus eggs

  32. Cestoda Life Cycle Adult tapeworm (in host intestine) Gravid proglottids Vertebrate host #2 Infective stage in host muscle eggs Vertebrate host #1

  33. Ecology • Parasitic flatworms infect many people in some parts of the world (for example, the Chinese liver fluke infects approx. 30 million people in Asia) • Some Trematodes have display polyembyony: a single larvae can have up to 4 younger larvae developing within it • Trematodes are a model system for studying host parasite coevolution

  34. Phylum Nemertea the ribbonworms

  35. Physiology Feeding • Free-living, carnivorous • have an eversible proboscis that is not connected to the digestive system • Proboscis is used to stab prey and may have a poisonous tip (or stylet)

  36. Physiology rhynchocoel proboscis mouth rhynchocoel

  37. Physiology Digestion • intestine is unbranched • complete system (mouth and anus) This is the first animal to have an anus!!!

  38. Physiology Reproduction Asexual • Some species are capable of reproducing asexually through fragmentation and regeneration • Sexual • usually dioecious • internal fertilization

  39. Physiology Osmoregulation and excretion • same as Platyhelminthes Nervous system • same as Platyhelminthes Skeletal system same as Platyhelminthes

  40. Physiology Circulation • closed circulatory system consisting of contractile blood vessels This is the first animal to have a closed circulatory system!!!

  41. Ecology • Nemerteans are mostly marine, although there are a few species found in freshwater (and even a few on land!) • They range in size from a few millimeters to 30 meters • Their biology is little known in part because they are extremely fragile and fragment easily

  42. How do the acoelomates fit in? Nemertea Platyhelminthes acoelomate Complete digestive system acoelomate Closed circ. system Ladder-like nervous system Cnidaria proboscis Porifera cephalization protonephridia organ level of organization triploblastic unknown common ancestor

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