1 / 43

Chapter 33

Chapter 33. Invertebrates. Overview: Life Without a Backbone. Invertebrates are animals that lack a backbone They account for 95% of known animal species. Fig. 33-2. Calcarea and Silicea. ANCESTRAL PROTIST. Cnidaria. Lophotrochozoa. Common ancestor of all animals. Eumetazoa.

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 33

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 Invertebrates

  2. Overview: Life Without a Backbone • Invertebrates are animals that lack a backbone • They account for 95% of known animal species

  3. Fig. 33-2 Calcarea andSilicea ANCESTRAL PROTIST Cnidaria Lophotrochozoa Common ancestor of all animals Eumetazoa Ecdysozoa Bilateria Deuterostomia

  4. A sea urchin A marine flatworm A jelly A sponge A ctenophore, or comb jelly

  5. A rotifer Acoel flatworms Ectoprocts 1.5 mm A marine annelid A brachiopod An octopus

  6. A priapulan A ribbon worm A scorpion (an arachnid) A roundworm An onychophoran

  7. Phyla Calcerea and Silcea (Porifera) • Sponges are sedentary animals • They live in both fresh and marine waters • Sponges lack true tissues and organs • Most sponges are hermaphrodites: Each individual functions as both male and female

  8. Sponges are suspension feeders, capturing food particles suspended in the water that pass through their body • Choanocytes, flagellated collar cells, generate a water current through the sponge and ingest suspended food • Water is drawn through pores into a cavity called the spongocoel, and out through an opening called the osculum • Sponges consist of a noncellular mesophyl layer between two cell layers

  9. Fig. 33-4 Flagellum Choanocyte Choanocyte Osculum Spongocoel Phagocytosis of food particles Amoebocyte Pore Epidermis Water flow Amoebocytes Mesohyl

  10. Clade Eumetazoa (true tissues): Phylum Cnidarians • Wide range of both sessile and motile forms including jellies, corals, and hydras • They exhibit a relatively simple diploblastic, radial body plan • The basic body plan of a cnidarian is a sac with a central digestive compartment, the gastrovascular cavity

  11. Fig. 33-5 Mouth/anus Tentacle Polyp Medusa Gastrovascular cavity Gastrodermis Mesoglea Body stalk Epidermis Tentacle Mouth/anus •A single opening functions as mouth and anus •There are two variations on the body plan: the sessile polyp and motile medusa

  12. Cnidarians are carnivores that use tentacles to capture prey • The tentacles are armed with cnidocytes, unique cells that function in defense and capture of prey • Nematocysts are specialized organelles within cnidocytes that eject a stinging thread

  13. Fig. 33-6 Tentacle Thread Nematocyst “Trigger” Thread discharges Thread (coiled) Cnidocyte

  14. Table 33-1

  15. Fig. 33-7 (c) Sea wasp (class Cubozoa) (d) Sea anemone (class Anthozoa) (b) Jellies (class Scyphozoa) (a) Colonial polyps (class Hydrozoa)

  16. Hydrozoans: - Alternate between polyp and medusa forms Scyphozoans: - Jellies (medusae) are the prevalent form of the life cycle Classes of Phylum Cnidaria Video: Hydra Budding Video: Jellyfish Medusae separating from polyp Video: Jellyfish Medusae Cubozoans: Video: Jellyfish tentacles • Includes box jellies and sea wasps • The medusa is box-shaped and has complex eyes • - Cubozoans often have highly toxic cnidocytes Anthozoans: • Includes the corals and sea anemones • Occur only as polyps Video: Sea anemone Video: Box Jelly sting

  17. Clade Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms • Includes the flatworms, rotifers, ectoprocts, brachiopods, molluscs, and annelids

  18. Phylum Platyhelminthes • Flatworms live in marine, freshwater, and damp terrestrial habitats (mostly parasitic) • They are tribloblastic acoelomates • They are flattened dorsoventrally and have a gastrovascular cavity (one opening) • No organs for gas exchange or circulation

  19. Flatworms are divided into four classes: 1. Turbellaria (mostly free-living flatworms called planarians; hermaphrodites) 2. Monogenea (are fish parasites) 3. Trematoda (trematodes, or flukes are parasites) 4. Cestoda (tapeworms, parasites in intestine of vertebrates) Video: Tapeworm

  20. Table 33-2

  21. Phylum Rotifera • Rotifers are tiny animals that inhabit fresh water, the ocean, and damp soil • Rotifers are smaller than many protists but are truly multicellular and have specialized organ systems - Rotifers have an alimentary canal (not a gastrovascular cavity), a digestive tube with a separate mouth and anus that lies within a fluid-filled pseudocoelom - Parthogenesis: females producing more females with out the help of males Video: Rotifer

  22. Phylum Mollusca • Includes snails and slugs, oysters and clams, and octopuses and squids • Most are marine, though some inhabit fresh water and some are terrestrial • Soft-bodied animals, but most are protected by a hard shell

  23. All molluscs have a similar body plan with three main parts: • Muscular foot • Visceral mass • Mantle • Many molluscs also have a water-filled mantle cavity, and feed using a rasplike radula • Most molluscs have separate sexes with gonads located in the visceral mass • Many snails are hermaphrodites.

  24. Table 33-3

  25. Class Gastropoda • Snails and slugs • The most distinctive characteristic of gastropods is torsion, which causes the animal’s anus and mantle to end up above its head Class Polyplacophora • Chitins • Oval-shaped marine animals encased in an armor of eight dorsal plates

  26. Class Cephalopoda Class Bivalvia • Squids and octopuses • Carnivores with • beak-like jaws surrounded • by tentacles of their modified foot • Cephalopods have a closed circulatory system, well-developed sense organs, and a complex brain - Clams, oysters, mussels, and scallops - Shell is divided into two halves - The mantle cavity contains gills that are used for feeding as well as gas exchange (suspension feeders) Squid

  27. Phylum Annelida • Annelids have bodies composed of a series of fused rings • Segmented worms and are coelomates • Closed circulatory system • Sea, frseshwater habitats, and damp soil

  28. Polychaetes Oligochaetes • Paddle-like parapodia that work as gills and aid in locomotion • Sparse chaetae, bristles made of chitin • Earthworms • Earthworms are hermaphrodites but cross-fertilize • Alimentary canal Hirudinea Blood-sucking parasites, such as leeches

  29. Clade Ecdysozoans • Covered by a tough coat called a cuticle • The cuticle is shed or molted through a process called ecdysis • The two largest phyla are nematodes and arthropods

  30. PhylumNematoda • Roundworms are found in most aquatic habitats, in the soil, in moist tissues of plants, and in body fluids and tissues of animals • They have an alimentary canal, but lack a circulatory system • pseudocoelomate • Non segmented • Tough coat = cuticle

  31. Phylum Arthropoda • Coelomates • Body plan consists of a segmented body, hard exoskeleton, and jointed appendages • The body of an arthropod is completely covered by the cuticle, an exoskeleton made of layers of protein and the polysaccharide chitin • When an arthropod grows, it molts its exoskeleton • Arthropods have an open circulatory system • A variety of organs specialized for gas exchange have evolved in arthropods • Aquatic and terrestrial

  32. Table 33-5

  33. Sub Phyla Cheliceriforms - Clawlike feeding appendages called chelicerae - Include spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites - Have an abdomen and a cephalothorax, which has six pairs of appendages Sub Phyla Myriapods - Millipedes and centipedes - Are terrestrial, and have jaw-like mandibles - Millipedes (each segment has two pairs of legs) - Centipedes are carnivores (one pair of legs per segment)

  34. Sub Phyla Hexapoda • Insects • Complex organ systems • Evolution of flight • Some insects are beneficial as pollinators, while others are harmful as carriers of diseases, or pests of crops • Insects are classified into more than 30 orders

  35. In incomplete metamorphosis, the young, called nymphs, resemble adults but are smaller and go through a series of molts until they reach full size • - Insects with complete metamorphosis have larval stages known by such names as maggot, grub, or caterpillar Adult Larva (caterpillar) Pupa Later-stage pupa Emerging adult

  36. Sub Phyla Crustaceans • Marine and freshwater environments • Branched appendages that are extensively specialized for feeding and locomotion • Isopods include terrestrial, freshwater, and marine species • Pill bugs are a well known group of terrestrial isopods • Decapods are all relatively large crustaceans and include lobsters, crabs, crayfish, and shrimp Ghost crab Krill Barnacles

  37. Clade deuterostomes • Phylum Echinodermata (sea stars) and phylum Chordata (vertebrates) • Shared characteristics define deuterostomes (Chordates and Echinoderms) • Radial cleavage • Formation of the mouth at the end of the embryo opposite the blastopore

  38. Phylum Echinodermata • Slow-moving or sessile marine animals • Have a unique water vascular system, a network of hydraulic canals branching into tube feet that function in locomotion, feeding, and gas exchange • Males and females are usually separate, and sexual reproduction is external • Central disk has nerve ring and nerve cords Video: Biology of Echinoderm

  39. Table 33-6

  40. Fig. 33-40 (a) A sea star (class Asteroidea) (b) A brittle star (class Ophiuroidea) (c) A sea urchin (class Echinoidea) (d) A feather star (class Crinoidea) (f) A sea daisy (class Concentricycloidea) (e) A sea cucumber (class Holothuroidea)

  41. Class Ophiuroidea Class Asteroidea • - Brittle stars • Have a distinct central disk and long, flexible arms, which they use for movement • Tube feet lack suckers - Sea stars have multiple arms radiating from a central disk - The undersurfaces of the arms bear tube feet, each of which can act like a suction disk • Sea stars can regrow lost arms • Turn stomach inside out Class Crinoidea Class Echinoidea • - Sea lilies live attached to the substrate by a stalk • Feather stars can crawl using long, flexible arms • Mouth directed upward - Sea urchins and sand dollars have no arms but have five rows of tube feet Class Holothuroidea Class Concentricycloidea • Sea cucumbers lack spines, and do not look like other echinoderms • 5 rows of tube feet - Sea daisies; only three species are known

  42. Fig. 33-UN6

More Related