1 / 23

Annelida Polychaeta Larva = Trochophore Band of cilia around body; tuft on apex

Arenicola. Annelida Polychaeta Larva = Trochophore Band of cilia around body; tuft on apex Same larval stage in Mollusca Diverse lifestyles Errant vs. Sedentary Errant: Free-living predators Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws Deposit feeders Nonselective Selective

laurencej
Télécharger la présentation

Annelida Polychaeta Larva = Trochophore Band of cilia around body; tuft on apex

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. Arenicola • Annelida • Polychaeta • Larva = Trochophore • Band of cilia around body; tuft on apex • Same larval stage in Mollusca • Diverse lifestyles • Errant vs. Sedentary • Errant: Free-living predators • Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws • Deposit feeders • Nonselective • Selective • Suspension feeders • Active • Passive • Solitary • Colonial • Reproduction Fig. 9-25 Fig. 9-25 Amphitrite

  2. Arenicola marina Fig. 13-23

  3. Annelida • Polychaeta • Larva = Trochophore • Band of cilia around body; tuft on apex • Same larval stage in Mollusca • Diverse lifestyles • Errant vs. Sedentary • Errant: Free-living predators • Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws • Deposit feeders • Nonselective • Selective • Suspension feeders • Active • Passive • Solitary • Colonial • Reproduction Chaetopterus Phragmatopoma californica

  4. Annelida • Polychaeta • Larva = Trochophore • Band of cilia around body; tuft on apex • Same larval stage in Mollusca • Diverse lifestyles • Errant vs. Sedentary • Errant: Free-living predators • Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws • Deposit feeders • Nonselective • Selective • Suspension feeders • Active • Passive • Solitary • Colonial • Reproduction Nereis succinea Wikipedia

  5. Epitoky Fig. 9-27

  6. Annelida • Sipuncula (class) • Peanut worms • Exclusively marine (250+ species) • Most common in shallow water • Unsegmented bodies up to 35 cm long • Studded introvert used for locomotion • Cryptic • Burrow in sediments or hide in shelters • Deposit or suspension feeders • Consume detritus and microbes • Dioecious • External fertilization Sipunculus nudus glaucus.org.uk

  7. Annelida • Echiura (class) • Exclusively marine (~150 species) • Deposit feeders • Non-retractable proboscis • Live in U-shaped or L-shaped burrows • Typically small; may get large in deep sea • Dioecious broadcast spawners

  8. Annelida • Pogonophora (class) • Beard worms • Long, thin worms (~135 species) • Most common in deep sea • No mouth or gut • Not parasitic • Anterior tuft of up to several thousand tentacles • Tentacles absorb dissolved nutrients • Symbiotic bacteria in trophosome utilize nutrients to manufacture food • Vestimentifera • Large deep-sea animals • Found at many hydrothermal vents

  9. tolweb.org • Nematoda • Free living and parasitic forms • Cosmopolitan/Ubiquitous • Mostly in sediments (free living) or hosts (parasitic) • Common in fine muds • Organic rich areas • Described species: 28,000+ (>55% parasitic) • May be up to 500,000 species total! • Extremely abundant!! • Up to hundreds of individuals per ml of sediment • 90,000 in one rotting apple (not marine) • Hydrostatic skeleton • Longitudinal muscles only • Move by whipping back and forth

  10. Benthos – Soft Bottom • Species Composition • Animals often categorized by size and location • Location: epifauna vs. infauna • Megafauna • No standard definition • Some infaunal macrofauna would be considered megafauna if exposed • Nearly absent from sandy beaches • High energy environment • Pressure from terrestrial predators • Conspicuous but less important ecologically than smaller, more abundant organisms • More important in low energy environments

  11. Benthos – Soft Bottom • Species Composition • Macrofauna • Large enough to be retained on 0.5 mm sieve • Low diversity on beaches compared to less dynamic areas • In terms of biomass, most important taxa are • Burrowing bivalves • Polychaetes • Crustaceans • All these taxa are: • Mechanically resistant to sediment movement (bivalves) • Highly mobile (polychaetes) • Both (crustaceans) • Typically display zonation on shorelines

  12. Fig. 14-10

  13. Fig. 13-31

  14. Benthos – Soft Bottom • Species Composition • Meiofauna • Pass through 0.5 mm sieve but large enough to be retained on 62 μm sieve • Sometimes termed interstitial fauna: live in spaces between sand grains • Very diverse group vs. others inhabiting sand beaches • Many individuals move among sediment grains but may or may not displace them in bulk like burrowing macrofauna • Endobenthic: larger than interstitial spaces, displace particles while moving • Mesobenthic: move within interstitial spaces, do not displace particles while moving • Most meiofauna mesobenthic in medium to coarse sediments, endobenthic in very fine sediments

  15. Fig. 13-29

  16. Loricifera • Benthos – Soft Bottom • Species Composition • Meiofauna • Many taxa represented: Mollusks, crustaceans, worms from several phyla, etc. • Some groups entirely or almost entirely meiofaunal (Ex: kinorhynchs, gastrotrichs, loriciferans) Kinorhyncha Nematoda Gastrotricha

  17. Benthos – Soft Bottom • Species Composition • Meiofauna • Body trends in meiofauna include • Reduced body size • Especially striking in groups whose members typically are large (e.g. Mollusca, Echinodermata) • Vermiform or flattened shape • Flexibility and maneuverability • Flattened shape  Increased surface area for DOM uptake • Strengthened body design • Protects against abrasion and crushing • Adaptations may include protective spines or scales (gastrotrichs), well-developed cuticle or exoskeleton (nematodes, crustaceans), internal skeleton of calcareous spicules (ciliates, sea slugs) • Many soft-bodied animals can contract strongly to protect against mechanical damage • Adhesive and gripping structures • Adhesive glands, hooks, suckers, claws • Statocysts • Sensory organs that detect gravity and help animals to orient correctly within sediments

  18. Benthos – Soft Bottom • Species Composition • Meiofauna • Most are: • Deposit feeders (gastrotrichs, nematodes) • Predators (hydroids, flatworms) • Microherbivores (scraping diatoms or algae off sand grains; ostracods, harpacticoid copepods) • Some suspension feeding species, primarily sedentary animals like bryozoans and tunicates • Reproduction • Most have low fecundities, due primarily to small body size • Many species produce only 1-10 eggs at a time • 98% of meiofaunal species lack pelagic larvae • Young are brooded or eggs may be attached to sand grains; young hatch as benthic juveniles • No pelagic dispersal phase; dispersal through entrainment in water currents, attachment to feet of mobile organisms (e.g. seabirds)

More Related