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Noncoelomate Invertebrates

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Title: Noncoelomate Invertebrates


1
Noncoelomate Invertebrates
  • Chapter 33

2
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
  • Scientists generally agree about the taxonomic
    classification of 36 animal phyla
  • -They do disagree, however, about how these are
    interrelated
  • Traditional reconstructions lump together phyla
    that share major features of body plan
  • New reconstructions employ molecular comparisons
    of rRNA and other genes

3
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
  • Both old and new phylogenies agree that
  • -Porifera first separated from Eumetazoa
  • -Among the eumetazoans, Cnidaria and Ctenophora
    branch out before Bilateria
  • -Bilateria are divided into two groups
    protostomes and deuterostomes
  • Modern phylogeny differs radically from
    traditional phylogeny in construction of the
    protostome lineage

4
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
  • Traditionally, the branches of animals are based
    on the nature of the body cavity
  • -Acoelomates Have no body cavity
  • -Pseudocoelomates Have pseudocoel
  • -Coelomates Have coelom
  • Acoelomates and pseudocoelomates are always
    protostomes
  • Coelomates are either protostomes or deuterostomes

5
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
6
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
  • Modern protostome phylogeny distinguishes between
    two major clades that have evolved independently
  • -Spiralians
  • -Ecdysozoans

7
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
  • Spiralians
  • -Grow by adding mass to an existing body
  • -Two main groups
  • -Lophotrochozoa mostly coelomates
  • -Include the phyla Brachiopoda, Mollusca
    and Annelida
  • -Platyzoa mostly acoelomates
  • -Include the phyla Platyhelminthes, and
    Micrognathozoa

8
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
  • Ecdysozoans
  • -Increase in size by molting their external
    skeletons
  • -Two phyla have been particularly successful
  • -Nematoda pseudocoelomates
  • -Roundworms
  • -Arthropoda coelomates
  • -Insects, crustaceans, and others

9
Invertebrate Phylogeny Revolution
10
Parazoa
  • Parazoans lack tissues, organs and a definite
    symmetry
  • -However, they have complex multicellularity
  • Sponges, phylum Porifera, are parazoans
  • -Include marine and freshwater species
  • -Larval sponges are free-swimming, but adults
    are anchored onto submerged objects

11
Parazoa
  • Adult sponges are shaped like a vase

Walls of the vase have three functional layers
12
Parazoa
  • 1. Inner layer Specialized flagellate cells
    called choanocytes, or collar cells
  • 2. Central layer Gelatinous, protein-rich
    matrix called the mesohyl
  • 3. Outer layer Protective epithelium
  • Mesohyl may contain spicules and/or fibers of a
    tough protein called spongin
  • -These strengthen the body of the sponge

13
Parazoa
14
Parazoa
  • Sponges are filter-feeders
  • -Beating of the choanocyte flagella draws water
    through numerous small pores
  • -Brings in food and oxygen and expels wastes
  • -Small organisms are filtered from the water,
    which flows through passageways
  • -Eventually exits from the osculum

15
Parazoa
  • Sponge reproduction
  • -Asexual Fragmentation
  • -Sexual Egg and sperm
  • -Larval sponges use cilia for swimming
  • -Settle down on a substrate
  • -Transform into adults

16
Eumetazoa
  • Eumetazoans are animals with distinct tissues
  • Embryos have distinct layers
  • -Inner endoderm Forms the gastrodermis
  • -Outer ectoderm Forms the epidermis and
    nervous system
  • -Middle mesoderm (Only in bilateral animals)
  • -Forms the muscles

17
Eumetazoa
  • Eumetazoans also evolved true body symmetry
  • -Radiata Exhibit radial symmetry
  • -Phylum Cnidaria
  • -Phylum Ctenophora
  • -Bilateria Exhibit radial symmetry
  • -All other animals

18
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Cnidarians are nearly all marine
  • -Bodies have distinct tissues but no organs
  • Cnidarians are diploblastic
  • -Ectoderm (epidermis) and endoderm
    (gastrodermis)
  • -In between, a layer of gelatinous material
    (mesoglea)

19
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Cnidarians are carnivores
  • They have two basic body forms
  • -Polyps Cylindrical and sessile
  • -Medusae Umbrella-shaped and free-living

20
Phylum Cnidaria
21
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Some cnidarians exist as either medusae or
    polyps, while others alternate between the two
    phases
  • Polyps may reproduce sexually or asexually
  • -Asexual reproduction occurs by budding and may
    produce a new polyp or medusae
  • Medusae reproduce sexually
  • -Form free-swimming larvae called planulae

22
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23
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Cnidarians have internal extracellular digestion
  • -Digestion begins with extracellular
    fragmentation in the gastrovascular cavity
  • -This is followed by phagocytosis and
    intracellular digestion
  • Cnidarians have no circulatory, respiratory or
    excretory systems

24
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Cnidarians have unique specialized cells on their
    epidermis called cnidocytes
  • The nematocyst is a special type of cnidocyte
  • -Contains a small but powerful harpoon
  • -Used for food acquisition and defense

25
Phylum Cnidaria
26
Four Classes of Cnidarians
  • Hydrozoa (hydroids)

Scyphozoa (jellyfish)
Cubozoa (box jellyfish)
Anthozoa (corals and sea anemones)
27
Phylum Ctenophora
  • A small phylum whose members are known as comb
    jellies, sea walnuts or sea gooseberries

Structurally more complex than cnidarians
Capture prey with a colloblast -Contains strong
adhesive material
28
Phylum Ctenophora
  • Ctenophores propel themselves through water with
    eight rows of fused cilia
  • They are triploblastic
  • -Have true muscles cells derived from the
    mesoderm
  • Their mode of symmetry is not strictly radial as
    in cnidarians

29
The Bilaterian Acoelomates
  • The Bilateria are characterized by bilateral
    symmetry
  • -Allowed for high levels of specialization
  • Bilaterians are traditionally classified by the
    condition of their coelom
  • -Acoelomates
  • -Pseudoceolomates
  • -Coelomates

30
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • The flatworms are soft-bodied animals
  • -Many species are parasitic
  • -Others are free-living

Move by ciliated epithelial cells Have developed
musculature
31
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Flatworms have an incomplete digestive cavity
    with only one opening
  • -Therefore, they cannot feed continuously
  • Muscular contractions in the pharynx allows food
    to be ingested and torn into small bits
  • Tapeworms (parasitic flatworms) lack digestive
    systems
  • -Absorb food directly through body walls

32
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Flatworms have an excretory and osmoregulatory
    system
  • -Network of fine tubules runs through body
  • -Flame cells located on the side branches
  • -Primary function water balance
  • -Secondary function excretion
  • Metabolic wastes are excreted into the gut and
    eliminated through the mouth

33
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Flatworms lack a circulatory system
  • -Flattened body shape and highly-branched gut
    utilize diffusion
  • They have a simple nervous system
  • -Eyespot can distinguish light from dark
  • Most are hermaphroditic
  • -Undergo sexual reproduction
  • -Also have capacity for asexual regeneration

34
Phylum Platyhelminthes
35
Phylum Platyhelminthes
36
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Flatworms have been traditionally grouped into
    four major classes
  • -Turbellaria
  • -Monogenea
  • -Trematoda
  • -Cestoda

Free-living
New studies group all three parasitic classes
into a single group, Neodermata
37
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Class Turbellaria
  • -Free-living flatworms
  • -Recently shown to be polyphyletic
  • -Found in freshwater, marine and even
    terrestrial environments

38
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Classes Monogenea and Trematoda
  • -Flukes
  • -Live as ectoparasites or endo-parasites in the
    bodies of other animals
  • -Attach by suckers, anchors or hooks
  • -Most have a life cycle that involves two or
    more hosts

39
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Clonorchis sinensis Oriental liver fluke
  • -Complex life cycle
  • -Miracidium Ciliated stage in egg
  • -Rediae Nonciliated larvae produced within
    sporocyst
  • -Cercaria Tadpole-like larval stage
  • -Metacercaria Adult stage produced within
    cysts

40
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41
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Other important flukes are the blood flukes of
    the genus Schistosoma
  • -Three species cause the disease
    schistosomiasis, or bilharzia
  • -Worms coat themselves with hosts own antigens
  • -Thus, are immunologically invisible

42
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Class Cestoda
  • -Tapeworms
  • -Live as parasites within the bodies of other
    animals

-Most species occur in the intestines of
vertebrates
43
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Class Cestoda
  • -Long flat bodies divided into three zones
  • -Scolex Attachment organ
  • -Neck Unsegmented portion
  • -Proglottids Repetitive sections
  • -Each a complex hermaphroditic unit
  • -Taenia saginata is the beef tapeworm

44
Phylum Platyhelminthes
45
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Acoel flatworms were once considered basal
    members of the phylum Platyhelminthes
  • -Have a primitive nervous system and lack a
    digestive cavity

Are now classified in their own phyla, Acoela
46
Phylum Nemertea
  • Nemerteans are often called ribbon worms or
    proboscis worms

Are long animals that can stretch to several
meters
47
Phylum Nemertea
  • Nemerteans possess a fluid-filled sac, the
    rhynchocoel a true coelomic cavity
  • Are the simplest animals with a complete
    digestive system (mouth and anus)
  • Have a closed circulatory system
  • They are not related to flatworms
  • -Are now classified with other coelomate
    protostomes in the Lophotrochozoa

48
Phylum Cycliophora
  • Discovered in 1995
  • Acoelomates that live on the mouthparts of claw
    lobsters
  • Have unique anatomy and form of sexual
    reproduction

49
The Pseudocoelomates
  • Possess a pseudocoel, which is a cavity between
    the mesoderm and endoderm
  • -Serves as a hydrostatic skeleton, against which
    the animals muscles can work
  • Pseudocoelomates lack a defined circulatory
    system
  • -Role is performed by fluids that move within
    the pseudocoel

50
Phylum Nematoda
  • Nematodes are roundworms comprising many species
  • -Found in marine, freshwater and soil habitats
  • Are bilaterally symmetrical and unsegmented

51
Phylum Nematoda
  • Nematodes are covered with a flexible, thick
    cuticle
  • Are ecdysozoans
  • -Molt cuticle four times
  • Lack specialized respiratory organs and exchange
    oxygen through their cuticles

52
Phylum Nematoda
  • Mouth is equipped with piercing organs called
    stylets
  • Food passes through the mouth by the sucking
    action of the pharynx
  • Undigested material is eliminated through the anus

53
Phylum Nematoda
54
Phylum Nematoda
  • Nematodes usually reproduce sexually
  • -Sexes are separate
  • Adults of some species exhibit eutely
  • -Have a fixed number of cells
  • -Caenorhabditis elegans has only 959 cells

55
Phylum Nematoda
  • Many nematodes are active hunters, preying on
    protists and other small animals
  • Others are parasites of plants
  • Still others live within the bodies of larger
    animals

56
Phylum Nematoda
  • Nematodes can cause diseases in humans

-Trichinella causes trichinosis -Forms cysts
in muscles
-Ascaris lumbricoides Intestinal roundworm
57
Phylum Rotifera
  • Rotifers are bilaterally symmetrical unsegmented
    pseudocoelomates
  • -They have complex internal organs
  • They propel themselves through water by rapidly
    beating thick cilia at their heads
  • -Wheel animals
  • They gather food via a conspicuous organ called
    the corona

58
Phylum Rotifera
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