1 / 45

Chapter 33 Notes

Chapter 33 Notes. Invertebrates. Concept 33.1. Phylum porifera : - asymmetric - ex. sponges - sessile adults, larva may swim - have no nerves or muscles; individual cells can sense and react to environmental changes. Concept 33.1.

shani
Download Presentation

Chapter 33 Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 33 Notes Invertebrates

  2. Concept 33.1 Phylum porifera: - asymmetric - ex. sponges - sessile adults, larva may swim - have no nerves or muscles; individual cells can sense and react to environmental changes

  3. Concept 33.1 - filter-feeders; choanocytes, or collar cells, ingest food filtered through the sponge - most are hermaphrodites

  4. Concept 33.1

  5. Concept 33.1

  6. Concept 33.2 Phylum Cnidaria: - radial symmetry - ex. jellyfish, hydra, sea anemones, coral - have stinging cells called nematocysts or cnidocysts; eject a barbed thread - contain a gastrovascular cavity; single opening

  7. Concept 33.2

  8. Concept 33.2 - sessile forms are called polyp; free-floating are called medusa - diploblastic (epidermis and gastrodermis); between layers is the mesogloea

  9. Concept 33.2

  10. Concept 33.2

  11. Concept 33.2

  12. Concept 33.2 There are 3 classes of Cnidarians: Hydrozoa: - ex. hydra, Portuguese man-of-war - most marine - both polyp and medusa stages; polyp is often colonial

  13. Concept 33.2 Scyphozoa: - ex. jellies - all marine - polyp stage is reduced - free-swimming

  14. Concept 33.2

  15. Concept 33.2 Anthozoa: - ex. sea anemones, coral - all marine - medusa stage absent - sessile

  16. Concept 33.2

  17. Concept 33.2 Phylum Ctenophora: - means “comb-bearer” for the eight rows of fused cilia - ex. comb jellies - tentacles contain colloblasts to capture prey

  18. Concept 33.3 Phylum Platyhelminthes: - ex. Flatworms, flukes, tapeworms - bilateral symmetry - unsegmented - triploblastic; acoelomates (no body cavity)

  19. Concept 33.3 Class Turbellaria: - flatworms - free-living - rely on diffusion for movement of food, oxygen, and waste - asexual and sexual reproduction; can regenerate lost parts

  20. Concept 33.3

  21. Concept 33.3

  22. Concept 33.3 Class Trematoda: - ex. blood flukes, liver flukes - all parasitic: feed on veins/organs of host - hermaphroditic

  23. Concept 33.3 Class Cestoidea: - ex. tapeworms - all are parasites - attach to intestinal wall with scolex and absorb food from host

  24. Concept 33.3

  25. Concept 33.3 Phylum Rotifera: - psuedocoelomates - freshwater - complete digestive tract - fluid in psuedocoelom acts as a hydrostatic skeleton

  26. Concept 33.3

  27. Concept 33.3 Phylum Nematoda: - ex. roundworms - complete digestive system and closed circulatory system: blood is contained in vessels - decomposers and parasites

  28. Concept 33.4 Phylum Mollusca: - ex. snails, slugs, clams, squids, octopuses - body consists of three parts: foot, visceral mass, mantle - open circulatory system - gas exchange is via gills, lungs, or the body surface (diffusion)

  29. Concept 33.4

  30. Concept 33.4 Class Polyplacophora: - ex. chitons - use foot to cling to rocks - simple nervous system and sense organs

  31. Concept 33.4

  32. Concept 33.4 Class Gastropoda: - “stomach-foot” - ex. snails and slugs - torsion: uneven growth in the visceral mass; rotates 180 degrees - exchange gases via gills; use mantle cavity

  33. Concept 33.4

  34. Concept 33.4 Class Bivalvia: - “hatchet-foot” - ex. clams, oysters, mussels - foot used for motility or anchorage - suspension feeders - no distinct head

  35. Concept 33.4

  36. Concept 33.4 Class Cephalopoda: - “head-foot” - ex. squid and octopus - carnivores; beak-like jaw to crush prey - have chromatophores to allow them to change colors - shell is reduced or absent

  37. Concept 33.4

  38. Concept 33.5 Phylum Annelida: - ex. earthworms, leeches - all are segmented - setae project from cuticle - closed circulatory system; aortic arches

  39. Concept 33.5 - developed nervous system with two ventral, solid nerve cords and cerebral ganglia - complete digestive system: mouth-crop-gizzard-intestine-anus - sexual and asexual reproduction - tactile organs, chemoreceptors, balance receptors, and photoreceptors

  40. Concept 33.5

  41. Concept 33.5

  42. Concept 33.5 Class Oligochaeta: - ex. earthworm - all have setae - help aerate soil and cycle nutrients

  43. Concept 33.5 Class Hirudinea: - ex. leeches - mostly freshwater - either carnivorous or parasitic

  44. Protosomia Class Polychaeta: - primarily marine - parapodia with bristles; can be used for locomotion and gas exchange - largest class

  45. Protosomia

More Related