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Sponges and Cnidarians

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A polyp is a cylindrical body with arm-like tentacles. In a polyp, the mouth points upward. Polyps are usually sessile (do not move) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sponges and Cnidarians


1
Sponges and Cnidarians
  • Unit VI
  • Chapter 26

2
What is an Animal?
  • Animals, members of the kingdom Animalia, are
    multicellular, eukaryotic heterotrophs whose
    cells lack cell walls
  • Invertebrates are animals that have no backbone,
    or vertebral column
  • Includes over 95 of all animal species
  • Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone
  • Includes 5 of all animal species

3
What Animals Do to Survive
  • Animals carry out the following essential
    functions
  • Feeding herbivores, carnivores, omnivores,
    detritivores
  • Respiration take in O2 and give off CO2
  • Circulation diffusion, closed/open circulatory
    system
  • Excretion ridding the body of liquid and solid
    wastes
  • Response nervous systems
  • Movement sessile or mobile
  • Reproduction asexual or sexual

4
Trends in Animal Evolution
  • Complex animals tend to have high levels of cell
    specialization and internal body organization,
    bilateral body symmetry, a front end or head with
    sense organs, and a body cavity

5
Trends in Animal Evolution
mollusks
echinoderms
roundworms
arthropods
annelids
flatworms
chordates
cnidarians
sponges
6
Early Development
  • Animals that reproduce sexually begin life as a
    zygote (fertilized egg)
  • The zygote undergoes a series of divisions to
    form a blastula (hollow ball of cells)
  • The blastopore leads to a central tube that
    becomes the digestive tract
  • A protostome is an animal whose mouth is fromed
    from a blastopore (most invertebrates)
  • A dueterostome is an animal whose anus is formed
    from the blastopore (most vertebrates)

7
Body Symmetry
  • With the exception of sponges, all animals
    exhibit some type of body symmetry
  • Radial symmetry body plan in which body parts
    repeat around the center of the body
  • Bilateral symmetry body plant in which only a
    single imaginary line can divide the body into 2
    equal parts

8
Cephalization
  • Animals with bilateral symmetry usually exhibit
    what is called cephalization
  • Cephalization is the concentration of sense
    organs and nerve cells at the anterior, or
    fromnt, end of the body

9
Sponges
  • Sponges are classified as animals because they
    are multicellular, heterotrophic, have no cell
    walls, and contain a few specialized cells

10
Body Plan of Sponges
  • Sponges are asymmetrical they have no front or
    back end
  • The movement of water through the sponge provides
    a simple mechanism for feeding, respiration,
    circulation, and excretion
  • Sponges are filter feeders that sift microscopic
    food particles from the water
  • Sponges can reproduce either sexually or
    asexually
  • In sponges, eggs are fertilized inside the
    sponges body, a process called internal
    fertilization
  • Sponges do not have nervous systems that allow
    them to respond to their environment, however,
    some produce toxins to ward off predators

11
Anatomy of a Sponge
12
Ecology of Sponges
  • Sponges play an important part in the ecology and
    survival of numerous aquatic organisms
  • They usually live attached to the sea floor
  • They form mutually beneficial relationships with
    bacteria, algae, and plantlike protists
  • They provide a habitat for snails, sea stars, sea
    cucumbers, and shrimp

13
Cnidarians
  • Cnidarians are soft-bodied, carnivorous animals
    that have stinging tentacles arranged in circles
    around their mouths
  • They are the simplest animals to have body
    symmetry and specialized tissues
  • Cnidocytes are stinging cells that are located
    along their tentacles
  • A nematocyst is a poison filled, stinging
    structure that contains a tiny coiled dart used
    to paralyze and kill prey

14
Cnidarians
15
Form and Function in Cnidarians
  • Cnidarians are radially symmetrical
  • They typically have a life cycle that includes
    two different-looking stages a polyp and a
    medusa
  • A polyp is a cylindrical body with arm-like
    tentacles
  • In a polyp, the mouth points upward
  • Polyps are usually sessile (do not move)
  • A medusa has a motile, bell-shaped body with the
    mouth on the bottom

16
Life Stages of Cnidarians
17
Cnidarian Activity
  • After paralyzing its prey, a cnidarian pulls the
    prey through its mouth into its gastrovascular
    cavity
  • Nutrients are then transported through the body
    by diffusion
  • Cnidarians gather information from their
    environment using specialized sensory cells
  • Most cnidarians reproduce both sexually and
    asexually
  • Most sexual reproduction takes place with
    external fertilization (outside the females body)

18
Groups of Cnidarians
  • Cnidarians include jellyfishes, hydras and their
    relatives, and sea anemones and corals

19
Ecology of Corals
  • The worldwide distribution of corals is
    determined by a few variables
  • Temperature
  • Water depth
  • Light intensity
  • Many coral reefs are now suffering from human
    activity
  • Recreational diving, chemical fertilizers,
    over-fishing, coral bleaching
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