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Annelids. Phylum Annelida. Class Aelosomata. Class Polychaeta. Class Clitellata. Aelosomata. Marine worms. Subclass Errantia. Subclass Sedentaria. Subclass Oligochaeta. Subclass Hirudinae. earthworms. Leeches. Annelids. Class Polychaeta marine worms segmented
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Phylum Annelida Class Aelosomata Class Polychaeta Class Clitellata Aelosomata Marine worms Subclass Errantia Subclass Sedentaria Subclass Oligochaeta Subclass Hirudinae earthworms Leeches
Annelids • Class Polychaeta • marine worms • segmented • Class Clitellata • Subclass Oligochaeta • earthworms • segmented • Subclass Hirudinea • Leeches • segmented
Characteristics • Segmentation (metameric body plan) • Eucoelomate • 15,000 species • Closed circulatory system, but no heart • Hydrostatic skeleton • Excretion- protonephridia, metanephridia, diffusion or gills • Simple gut • Respiration- diffusion or gills • Central nervous system- brain and nerve cord • Reproduction- asexual or sexual (many gonochoric) • Sensory system of tactile organs, taste buds, statocysts,photoreceptor cells, and eyes with lenses.
Subclass Oligochaeta • Lack parapodia and have few setae • Lack the distinctive head region of polychaetes and have no eyes. • Scavengers that consume soil that contains organic matter • The ingested soil moves into a storage chamber called the crop, then to an area called the gizzard, where grinding action breaks down the soil particles. Undigested material passes out the anus in a form called castings, which are prized as soil fertilizer.
Metamerism (segmentation) • Each segment is also known as a metamere • Each metamere has a parapodia with numerous setae parapod chaetae
gut Body Cavities Mesoderm coelom Eucoelomate- body cavity completely lined with mesoderm Ectoderm Endoderm
Hydrostatic Skeleton EarthwormPhylum Annelida
Nervous System and Behavior • A mass of ganglia (neural masses) forms an anterior brain that is usually dorsal to thepharynx. • They have either a pair of ventral nerve cords(primitive) or a single ventral nerve cord that runsthe length of the body. • Each segment has a swelling of the nerve cord called a segmental ganglion. • Sensory receptors include: chemoreceptors, touchreceptors, photoreceptors, statocysts and vibration receptors. • Behaviors vary depending on class/life style.
Digestive System Esophagus Gizzard Pharynx Crop Buccal cavity Intestine Mouth
Reproductive System Seminal vesicle Ovary Testes Egg funnel and oviduct Sperm duct Seminal receptacle
Subclass Hirudinea • Leeches • Most live in fresh bodies of water, but some live among moist vegetation. • Suckers found on both ends • Unlike other annelids, its segments are not separated internally • Leeches lack both setae and parapodia • Most are predators or scavengers. Very few are parasites. • They secrete anticoagulants, hirudin, to keep blood from clotting and anesthetic that prevents the host from feeling their presence.
Class Polychaeta • Largest group of annelids • Primarily marine • Most segments include a pair of paddle–like parapodia • Well-developed head with eyes and other sensory structures
Class Polychaeta Subclass Sedentaria • Fan worms, • Christmas-tree worms • Spaghetti worms • Chaetopterus • lugworms • Subclass Errantia • Sand worms, • Scale worms • Fire worms • palolo worms
featherduster worms Subclass Sedentaria
Lugworm Subclass Sedentaria
Chaeopteris Subclass Sedentaria
Spaghetti worm Lanice conchilega • Hawaii has 11 species • 5 are endemic Subclass Sedentaria
Christmas tree worms Spirobranchus giganteus Subclass Sedentaria
Scale worm Subclass Errantia
Fire worm Eurythoe complanata Subclass Errantia