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Sponges and Cnidarians. Biology 112. Sponges. Phylum Porifera Multicellular and heterotrophic No cell wall and few specialized cells Live their entire life attached to a surface They eat by sifting microscopic food in water
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Sponges and Cnidarians Biology 112
Sponges • Phylum Porifera • Multicellular and heterotrophic • No cell wall and few specialized cells • Live their entire life attached to a surface • They eat by sifting microscopic food in water • Choanocytes are specialized structures that help move water through their body cavity • Water enters through pores and leaves through the osculum (a large hole at the top of the cavity)
Getting Everything it Needs • Digestion is intracellular • Takes place inside the cells • Not only is food provided using this sifting action but also everything for respiration, circulation and excretion
Sponges and Reproduction • Reproduce sexually and asexually • Sexually • Eggs are fertilized internally • Zygote develops into a larva • Larva is the immature stage of the organism that looks different from the adult • They are motile • Carried by the ocean to the floor and grow into an adult sponge • Asexually • By budding
cnidarians • Phylum Cnidaria • Soft-bodied carnivores that have stinging tentacles arranged in circles around their mouth • Simplest animals that have body symmetry and specialized tissues • Exhibit radial symmetry • Central mouth with several tentacles
Two Distinct life stages • Polyp • Cylindrical body with arm-like tentacles and usually do not move • Lives attached to the surface with its mouth pointing upward • Medusa • Bell-shaped body with a mouth at the bottom • Free swimming
Cnidarians and digestion • Possess a gastrovascular cavity • Digestive chamber with one opening • Foods and wastes enter and leave this opening • Nutrients are transported throughout body by diffusion • Oxygen and wastes are diffused through the body walls
Cnidarians and response to stimuli • Gather information from their environment using specialized sensory cells • nerve nets • a network of nerve cells that together let cnidarians detect stimuli
Cnidarians and body structure • Possess a hydrostaticskeleton • Consists of layers of circular muscles as well as longitudinal muscles that, with the digestive cavity, allow it to move
Cnidarians and reproduction • Asexual – by budding • Sexual – external fertilization in water
Classification of cnidarians • Jellyfish • Live mostly as medusas • Hydras • Grow in branching colonies • Ex. Portuguese man-of-war • Sea Anemones and Corals • Only have a polyp stage • Colonial • Polyps grow together in large numbers • Secrete an underlying skeleton of calcium carbonate • Form coral reefs