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Pseudocoelomate Animals

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Title: Pseudocoelomate Animals


1
Chapter 15
Pseudocoelomate Animals
2
Outline
  • Intro to pseudocoelomates
  • Ecdysozoans
  • P. Nematoda (roundworms)
  • P. Nematomorpha (horsehair worms)
  • P. Loricifera
  • P. Kinorhyncha
  • P. Priapulida
  • Lophotrochozoans
  • P. Rotifera (rotifers)
  • P. Acanthocephala (rotifers)
  • P. Entoprocta (rotifers)

3
Intro
  • Molecular evidence suggests after deuterostomes
    diverged, protostomes split into Ecdysozoa and
    Lophotrochozoa
  • Characteristics of pseudocoelomates
  • either ecdysozoan or lophotrochozoan
  • bilateral, unsegmented, triploblastic
  • 2 cavities
  • gut cavity pseudocoel formed from blastocoel
  • lack true coelom (peritoneal cavity), not lined
    w/ peritoneum
  • body wall (epidermis)/dermis/muscles surrounding
    pseudocoel

4
Intro
  • complete digestive tract (tube w/i tube)
  • lack circulatory/respiratory systems
  • reproductive system
  • gonads, dioecious, chitinous eggs
  • excretory system
  • canals/protonephridia
  • nervous system
  • cerebral ganglia or nerve ring
  • ciliated pits/ papillae/bristles/eyespots
  • vermiform
  • some have cuticle
  • secreted by epidermis
  • some exhibit eutely

5
Intro
  • Advantages of pseudocoelom
  • ? freedom of mvmt
  • space for development/differentiation of
    digestive/reproductive/excretory systems
  • simple means of circulatory system
  • storage area for wastes
  • hydrostatic skeleton

6
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7
Ecdysozoa Phyla
8
P. Nematoda (Nemata)
  • Roundworms
  • 25,000 sp. (500,000 sp.?)
  • Microscopic ? 1 m
  • Live everywhere
  • aquatic/terrestrial/marine/freshwater/polar/tropic
    s
  • Free-living/not

9
P. Nematoda (Nemata) Form/Function
  • Characteristics
  • cylindrical
  • nonliving cuticle
  • flexible, noncellular
  • secreted by hypodermis
  • shed btwn juvenile growth stages
  • func. hydrostatic skeleton/protection
  • crisscrossing collagen
  • elastic but constrains expansion
  • eutely
  • hydrostatic skeleton
  • pseudocoel fluid-filled
  • dorsal/ventral hypodermal cords w/ nerves/lateral
    cords
  • lack cilia/flagella/protonephridia

10
P. Nematoda (Nemata) Form/Function
  • Muscles
  • longitudinal (no circular), beneath hypodermis
  • run in 4 bands, marked by 4 hypodermal cords
  • dorsal/ventral hypodermal cords have nerves
  • lateral hypodermal cords have excretory canals
  • each muscle cells has contractile fibrillar
    portion (spindle) noncontractile sarcoplasmic
    portion (cell body)
  • sarcoplasmic extends into pseudocoel, stores
    glycogen
  • fibrillar is striated w/ actin/myosin
  • muscle arm extends to ventral or dorsal nerve
  • Excretory system
  • lack protonephridia
  • have canal system or
    1 gland
    cell w/ excretory pore

11
P. Nematoda (Nemata) Form/Function
  • Feeding/digestion
  • parasitic/predatory/herbivorous/saprozoic/coprozoi
    c
  • mouth ? pharynx ? non-muscular intestine ? rectum
    ? anus
  • food sucked into pharynx
  • muscles contract, lumen expands
  • intestine is 1 cell thick
  • food moves posteriorly as new food enters and
    body moves
  • defecation occurs via opening anus allowing
    pseudocoelomic pressure to expel poop

12
P. Nematoda (Nemata) Form/Function
  • Respiration
  • aerobic/anaerobic
  • Nervous/sensory system
  • ring of nerve tissue and ganglia around pharynx
    lead to dorsal and ventral nerve cords
  • sensory papillae at head/tail
  • amphids pair of sensory
    organs on
    head
  • lead into a deep cuticular

    pit w/ modified cilia
  • phasmids pair of glands/sensory
    structures near
    posterior

13
P. Nematoda (Nemata) Form/Function
  • Reproduction
  • most dioecious w/ ? smaller than ?
  • ? has copulatory spicules to hold ? vulva open
    against hydrostatic pressure
  • internal fertilization
  • eggs stored in uterus until deposited
  • cuticular molts btwn juvenile stages

14
P. Nematoda Ascaris
  • Large roundworm of humans (Ascaris lumbricoides)
  • up to 64 of people in some areas of SE US
  • 1.2 B affected worldwide
  • infection rates highest in children
  • ? more heavily infected than ?
  • ? lays 200,000 eggs/day
  • eggs pass via hosts feces
  • embryos develop into infective
    juveniles in 2 wks
  • killed by direct sunlight/? temp.
  • resistant to dessication/? O2
  • eggs remain viable long after fecal
    matter disappears

15
P. Nematoda Ascaris
  • infection via ingestion of eggs (finger/uncooked
    veggies)
  • juveniles hatch, burrow through intestinal wall
    to veins/lymph
  • carried through ? to lungs
  • break into alveoli and carried up trachea/pharynx
  • coughed up/swallowed
  • pass to stomach
  • mature in intestine after 2 months
  • feed on intestinal contents
  • may block/perforate intestines
  • emerge from anus/throat
  • enter eustachian tubes/middle ear

16
P. Nematoda Ascaris
  • Roundworm in dogs/cats
  • Toxocara
  • similar life cycle as human roundworm
  • juveniles migrate to uterus of pregnant dogs
  • puppies infected

17
P. Nematoda Necator
  • Hookworms (Necator americanus)
  • 911 mm
  • hook-like curve on anterior end
  • dioecious
  • large plates in mouth cuts into intestinal mucosa
  • then suck hosts blood
  • suck more than they digest (anemia)
  • eggs pass in feces
  • juveniles hatch in soil where they live on
    bacteria
  • infective juveniles burrow through skin to blood
  • travel in blood to lungs
  • coughed up and swallowed
  • mature in the intestine
  • symptoms
  • retarded growth, ? S

18
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19
P. Nematoda Trichina
  • Trichina worm (Trichinella spiralis)
  • tiny
  • 2.4 of US
  • trichinosis (potentially lethal)
  • adults burrow into intestinal mucosa
  • ? directly produce juvenile worms
  • juveniles penetrate blood vessels/circulate
    throughout body to all
    tissues (live 10-20 yrs)
  • penetrate skeletal muscle
  • redirecting gene expression of the musculature so
    it loses its striations
  • becomes a nurse cell to the parasite
  • encyst in muscle
  • excyst when poorly cooked meat containing
    encysted juveniles is eaten
  • infect humans/hogs/rats/cats/dogs

20
P. Nematoda Enterobius
  • Pinworms (Enterobius vermicularis)
  • most common nematode parasite in the US
  • 30 all children, 16 all adults
  • causes little disease
  • 12 mm
  • adults live in large intestine/cecum
  • ? migrate to anal region at night/lay eggs
    (Scotch Tape Method)
  • itching
  • scratching contaminates hands and bedclothes
  • eggs develop/become infective w/i 6 hrs at body
    temp.
  • ingested, hatch in duodenum, mature in large
    intestine
  • haploid ? from unfertilized eggs
  • diploid ? come from fertilized eggs
    (haplodiploidy)
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