Title: Advanced Biology
1Advanced Biology
- Chapter 35 Sponges, Cnidarian, and Ctenophores
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3Chapter 35 Sponges, Cnidarian, and Ctenophores
- 35-1 Sponges (Porifera)
- 35-2 Cnidarians and Ctenophores
435-1 Sponges
- Classification
- Body Plan
- Feeding and Digestion
- Reproduction
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6Classification
- Sponges simple aquatic animals that make up the
phylum Porifera - Clearly represent the transition from unicellular
to multicellular life - No gastrula stage
- Exhibit less cell specialization than most other
animals - No true tissues or organs
7Classification
- About 10,000 species
- Early biologists thought sponges were plants.
Sessile
8Body Plan
- Body wall 2 layers of cells separated by a
jellylike substance and surrounds a hollow
cylinder that is closed at the bottom and open at
the top. - Collar cells
- Line the interior of the body cylinder
- Beating flagella draw water into the sponge
through pores in the body wall. - Osculum the opening at the top of a sponge
through which water leaves the body cylinder
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11Body Plan
Spongin
- Simple skeleton
- Spongin protein fibers that support the body
- Spicules tiny, hard particles of calcium
carbonate or silicon dioxide. Often shaped like
spikes - Some sponges have a combination of spongin and
spicules. - Sponges are divided into three classes based on
differences in composition of the skeleton
Spicules
12Feeding and Digestion
- Filter Feeding feed by screening food out of the
water that the collar cells pump through their
body. - Food bacteria, protozoans, unicellular algae,
bits of organic matter
13Feeding and Digestion
- Food that is collected is engulfed and digested
by collar cells. - Nutrients pass from collar cells to amebocytes,
cells that crawl about within the body wall to
deliver food to the rest of the body - CO2 and other wastes diffuse into water passing
through the sponge and flows out through the
osculum.
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15Asexual Reproduction
- Form small buds that break off and live
separately - Gemmules internal buds produced by some
freshwater sponges during droughts or cold
weather. Food-filled ball of amebocytes
surrounded by a protective coat made of organic
material and spicules - Regeneration re-grow missing parts. A small
piece can regenerate a complete new sponge.
16Gemmule
17Sexual Reproduction
- Sperm released into the water by one sponge
enters the pores of another sponge. - Collar cells engulf the sperm and transfer them
to amebocytes which carry the sperm to an egg. - The fertilized egg develops into a larva
18- Flagella on larvas surface enable it to leave
parent sponge, swim, and be carried by currents,
settle and attach to an object. - Cells reorganize to form an adult sponge.
- Some species have separate sexes but most species
are hermaphrodites. Increases chances of
successful fertilization if all individuals can
produce eggs... Self-fertilization is rare.
19Smoking sponge Some colonies are known to
simultaneously mass produce gametes within a
limited time period.
2035-2 Cnidaria and Ctenophora
- General Characteristics
- Structure and Function of Cnidarians
- Class Hydrazoa
- Class Scyphozoa
- Class Anthozoa
- Phylum Ctenophora
Frilled Anemone
21General Characteristics
- Radially symmetrical invertebrates
- Somewhat more complex then sponges (Porifera).
Have tissues and a few simple organs - Aquatic, live in the ocean
Lined Anemone
22Structure of Cnidarians
- Body shape
- Polyp vase-shaped. Specialized for a sessile
existence - Medusa bell-shaped. Specialized for swimming
Burrowing Anemone
Polyp
Medusa
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24- Two cell layers
- Epidermis outer layer
- Gastrodermis inner layer
- Mesoglea jellylike material between layers
- Gastrovascular cavity hollow center of the body.
Single opening for mouth - Tentacles numerous flexible extensions
surrounding the mouth
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26Feeding and Defense
- Cnidocytes specialized cells used for defense
and capturing prey. Usually concentrated in the
dermis especially the tentacles. - Nematocyst organelle in cnidocyte that has a
long filament coiled up inside it.
27- When object brushes against trigger on
cnidocyte the nematocyst inside it pushes out of
the cell with great force. - Some have sharp tips and spines that inject
poison. - Some have filaments that adhere by wrapping
around objects.
28Tentacles
- Capture small animals with nematocysts and
paralyze them with poison injection - Tentacles push the prey into the gastrovascular
cavity through the mouth.
Hydra
Lionsmane jellyfish eating another jellyfish
Fish caught in tentacles
29Tentacles
- Enzymes in the gastrovascular cavity break up the
prey. Cells lining cavity absorb nutrients. - Undigested food and waste expelled through the
mouth.
30- Nerve net diffuse web of interconnected nerve
cells - In many cnidarians the nerve net is distributed
uniformly throughout (no brain or control center) - In some medusa forms nerve cells are clustered
in rings around the edge of the bell-shaped body
31- Nerve net enables response to specific stimuli in
environment, But stimuli anywhere on the body
causes signal to be sent through nerve net in all
directions and contract entire body - Nerve net also coordinates the complex activities
of the body that are necessary for feeding and
traveling through the environment. (movement of
tentacles, rhythmic contractions of body for
propulsion of medusae)
32Classification
- Hydrozoa (hydrozoans)some species live as
polyps, some as medusae, some alternate between
forms. - Scyphozoa (scyphozoans) most of lives as medusae
- Anthozoa (anthozoans) live only as polyps.
33Class Hydrozoa
- 3,700 species. Most live as colonial organisms in
oceans - Examples
- Obelia
- Portuguese Man-of-War
- Hydra
34Obelia
- Many polyps attached to branched stalks. Some
function in food gathering, others specialize in
reproduction.
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36Portuguese Man-of-War (Physalia)
- Exists as a colony of medusae and polyps.
- Gas-filled float keeps colony at surface
- Polyps specialized for feeding, digestion, or
sexual reproduction. - Tentacles 20m long dangle from the feeding polyps
and carry large number of cnidocytes. - Preys mostly on small fish but cnidocytes
poisonous/fatal to humans
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38Magnified view of tentacle
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41Hydra
- Not typical hydrozoans. Exist only as polyps, not
colonial, and live in fresh water. - Range in size from 1-4cm in length
- Most white or brown, some appear green because of
symbiotic relationship with algae living in their
gastrodermis
42Two cell layers
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44- Found in quiet ponds, lakes, streams. Attach to
rocks or water plants by means of sticky
secretion by cells at base. - Can leave one location and move to another by
secreting bubbles at base causing it to float to
surface or can move by somersaulting motion - Reproduce asexually during warm weather by
budding on side of body.
45Hydra budding
46- Sexual reproduction in the fall.
- Sperm and egg produced by meiosis along the body
wall in swellings called ovaries and testes. - Some species are hermaphroditic
- Sperm released into water, those that reach
ovaries can fertilize egg cells. - A hard covering protects the embryo through the
winter. Embryos hatch in spring and develop into
a new hydra.
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49Class Scyphozoa
- Cup animals. Medusa is the dominant form of the
life cycle. - 200 species. Commonly known as jellyfish
- Cup sizes range from 2cm to 4m. Some have
tentacles several meters long
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51- Pulsating motions of the cup propel it through
water. - Some have poisonous nematocysts that can cause
pain/death in humans. - Aurelia life cycle Figure 35-9 p700
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54Class Anthozoa
- Flower animals
- 6,100 marine species.
- Examples
- Sea Anemones
- Corals
Anthozoa Colony
Capnella Soft Coral
55Sea Anemones
- Polyps commonly found along coastal areas.
- Feed on fishes and other animals.
- Some have symbiotic relationship with Clownfish.
- Share food and protect each other from predators.
- Movements of clownfish prevents sediment from
burying the anemone. Anemone does not fire its
nematocysts when clownfish touches its tentacles.
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57Jewel Anemone
Striped Sea Anemone
58Corals
- Small polyps usually live in colonies.
- Cements its calcium carbonate skeleton to the
skeletons of adjoining polyps in the colony. - When they die, hardened skeletons remain and
serve as foundation for new polyps. Build up to
form coral reefs. Only the top layer is living.
59Coral Reefs
- Provide food and shelter for an enormous and
colorful variety of fishes and invertebrates. - Coral reefs are restricted to ocean with in 30 N
or S of equator. Only warm, shallow, clear water.
Coral skeleton
60Coral Reefs
- Photosynthetic algae live symbiotically inside
coral cells. - Corals depend on algae to provide oxygen and to
speed up accumulation of calcium from the sea
water. - Algae depend on corals to supply vital nutrients.
61Northern Star Coral
Polyps withdrawn
62- (The Phylum Cnidaria was once called
Coelenterata, which also included the Ctenophora,
or "comb jellies" or "sea gooseberries". Animals
in the new Phylum Ctenophora do not have stinging
cells. )
63Phylum Ctenophora
- 100 species. Resemble jellyfish. Often called
comb jellies - Ctenophoa means comb holder and refers to the 8
comblike rows of cilia that run along the outside
of the animal.
64Bloodybelly
Lobed Comb Jelly
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66- Differ from jellyfish and other cnidarians
- Move through water by beating cilia rather than
pulsating - Most do not have cnidocytes. Have cells called
colloblasts which secrete a sticky substance that
binds to their prey. - Apical organs sensory structures at one end of
their body enables it to sense its orientation in
the water. Nerves running from the apical organ
coordinate the beating of the cilia.
67- Most are hermaphroditic
- Bioluminescence production of light. Often
observed in large swarms near surface at night.
68Ctenophora (comb jellies) superficially resemble
cnidaria but lack nematocysts and have a complete
gut. The name derives from the cilia-bearing
ctenes, which the animals use for locomotion.