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Phylum Echinodermata

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Title: Phylum Echinodermata


1
Phylum Echinodermata
  • The echinoderms (hedgehog skin) are a very
    unusual group that includes about 7000 living
    species.
  • Members include starfish, brittle stars, sea
    urchins, sea cucumbers, and sea lilies or feather
    stars.
  • They are deuterostomes (as are chordates), but
    have secondarily evolved radial symmetry from
    bilateral symmetry (they still have bilaterally
    symmetrical larvae).

2
Characteristics of the Echinodermata
  • Exclusively a marine group. They cannot
    osmoregulate so rarely occur even in brackish
    water.
  • The body is not segmented, but shows pentaradial
    symmetry.
  • There is no head or brain and the nervous system
    is relatively simple.

3
Characteristics of the Echinodermata
  • They possess an endoskeleton of dermal calcareous
    ossicles, which are connected together by
    connective tissue.
  • Possess a unique water vascular system that
    consists of a series of canals that extend from
    the body surface as tube feet.
  • These tube feet are tentacle-like and enable the
    animal to move. In some species movement of the
    arms or spines contributes to locomotion too.

4
Classes of Echinoderms
  • There are a total of five classes of echinoderms
    and about 7300 species.
  • Class Asteroidea sea stars or starfishes
  • Class Ophiuroidea Brittle stars
  • Class Echinoidea Sea Urchins, Sand dollars
  • Class Holothuroidea Sea cucumbers
  • Class Crinoidea Sea Lilies and Feather stars.

5
Class Asteroidea
  • Star fish are the most familiar of the
    echinoderms and demonstrate the characteristics
    of the group well.
  • Typically, they have 5 tapering arms, which merge
    gradually with the central disc.
  • The mouth is found on the oral surface, the
    opposite side of the animal being referred to as
    the aboral surface.

6
Cushion seastar (Asteroidea)
7
Class Asteroidea
  • The aboral surface of starfish is usually rough
    to the touch and has spines (although these may
    be flattened so the animal appears smooth.).
  • Around the base of the spines are small
    pincerlike structures called pedicellariae, which
    are under muscular control and help to remove
    debris and protect the animals papulae (skin
    gills) projections of the coelomic cavity that
    increase the surface area for gas exchange.

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Pedicellariae
10
Water vascular system
  • Grooves called ambulacral grooves radiate out
    from the mouth on the oral surface. Tube feet
    project from the grooves.
  • These tube feet are connected to the water
    vascular system, which is a unique invention of
    the echinoderms.

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Water vascular system
  • The water vascular system is a compartment of the
    coelom and is a system of canals and tube feet.
  • The water vascular system uses hydraulic pressure
    to extend, move and contract the tube feet
    enabling the starfish to move and feed.

13
Water vascular system
  • The water vascular system opens to the outside
    via small pores in a structure called the
    madreporite on the aboral surface.
  • The madreporite connects to a ring canal and from
    this ring canal, radial canals extend down the
    abulacral groove of each arm.

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Water vascular system
  • From each of the radial canals smaller lateral
    canals branch off, which connect to the tube
    feet.
  • Each tube foot is a hollow, muscle-lined tube,
    which has a bulb at one end (on the inside of the
    arm) and a sucker at the other end which
    protrudes from the animal.

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Water vascular system
  • The tube feet use hydraulics to work.
  • Each tube foot contains a lot of connective
    tissue in its wall that maintains the tube at a
    fairly constant diameter.
  • Contraction of muscles in the ampulla forces
    fluid into the tube foot which extends (a valve
    prevents fluid flowing back into the lateral
    canal).

19
Water vascular system
  • To withdraw the foot, muscles in the tube foot
    contract which pushes fluid back into the
    ampulla.
  • The tube foot can bend to one side as a result of
    the contraction of muscles on one or other side
    of the tube foot.
  • In addition, small muscles at the end of the tube
    foot can contract to raise the center of the tube
    foot and create a suction cup.

20
Water vascular system
  • As a result of the combination of hydraulics and
    muscular control the tube feet can be moved with
    a high degree of control and can also exert a
    strong pull.
  • This enables the starfish to move up hard
    vertical surfaces and open up prey such as
    bivalves.
  • On sediments suction doesnt work well and under
    these conditions the tube feet are used more like
    legs.

21
Feeding and digestion
  • The mouth of a sea star opens into a two-part
    stomach in the central disk of the animal.
  • The lower cardiac stomach can be everted and this
    ability is important in sea stars ability to
    consume certain prey.

22
Feeding and digestion
  • The cardiac stomach is connected to a pyloric
    stomach above it which in turn connects to
    digestive cecae in the arms where most
    extracellular digestion takes place.
  • A short intestine leads from the pyloric stomach
    to the anus on the aboral side.

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Feeding and digestion
  • Most sea stars are quite unselective carnivores
    and feed on molluscs, crustaceans, annelids,
    other invertebrates and other echinoderms.
  • Some sea stars are major predators of
    economically important species of bivalve such as
    mussels and oysters.

25
Feeding and digestion
  • When a sea star attacks a bivalve it wraps itself
    around it and uses its tube feet to try to pull
    the two shells apart.
  • The adductor muscles of the bivalve keep them
    closed, but the sea star can maintain its pull
    for long periods and eventually (after about half
    an hour) the adductor muscles of the bivalve
    become fatigued and the shells separate a little.

26
Feeding and digestion
  • Once a gap opens the sea star everts its soft
    flexible stomach into the gap and begins to
    secrete digestive enzymes that slowly break down
    the soft tissues of the bivalve

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Reproduction and development
  • Most sea stars have separate sexes and
    fertilization is external.
  • Eggs are brooded by some species, but in most
    cases the eggs are released to develop into
    larvae.
  • Early development is typical of deuterostomes and
    the free swimming bipinnaria larva is bilaterally
    symetrical.

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Reproduction and development
  • Late in development, however, the larva follows a
    path quite different from other deuterostomes.
  • The bipinnaria larva transforms into a
    brachiolaria by growing three adhesive arms and a
    sucker at its anterior end.
  • It then attaches to a substrate and undergoes
    metamorphosis.

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Reproduction and development
  • During metamorphosis the larva is radically
    altered.
  • The anterioposterior axis is lost and what was
    the left side becomes the oral surface and what
    was the right side becomes the aboral surface.

33
Reproduction and development
  • The existing mouth and anus disappear and new
    ones are produced in the appropriate locations.
  • Finally short arms and podia develop and the
    animal detaches from its stalk to become a young
    starfish.

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Regeneration
  • Echinoderms have the capacity to regenerate lost
    parts. For example, a sea star can regenerate a
    leg (or even all of its legs) if it is lost).
  • If an arm that is removed contains at least one
    fifth of the central disk a new individual will
    develop from it.

36
Class Ophiuroidea
  • The Ophiuroidea includes the brittle stars and
    basket stars.
  • This is the largest class of echinoderms with
    more than 2000 living species and it probably is
    also the most abundant group.
  • They are very common in all kinds of benthic
    marine environments and abound on the abyssal sea
    floor in many places.

37
Class Ophiuroidea
  • Although similar to sea stars in having five
    arms, the brittle stars can be readily
    distinguished by their proportionally much longer
    and thinner arms and by the clear separation
    between the arms and the central disk.

38
Brittle star (Ophiuroidea)
39
Class Ophiuroidea
  • Brittle stars move in a different manner to
    starfish. Their ambulacral grooves are covered
    over with interlocking ossicles.
  • They possess tube feet which play a role in
    feeding, but dont contribute to movement.
  • Movement instead occurs by movement of the
    jointed arms.

40
Class Ophiuroidea
  • The mouth is surrounded by five moveable plates
    that act as jaws.
  • Brittle stars lack intestines and an anus and
    waste exits via the mouth.
  • Brittle stars feed on small particles that they
    glean from the sea bottom or particles they sieve
    out of the water with mucus strands attached to
    spines on their arms

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Class Echinoidea
  • The Echinoidea include the familiar sea urchins,
    sand dollars, and heart urchins.
  • They have a compact body that is enclosed in a
    calcareous shell (or test), which is formed from
    dermal ossicles that have become a series of 10
    double rows of close-fitting plates.
  • These plates also bear moveable, stiff, often
    long spines.

43
Sea urchins
44
Sand dollar
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Class Echinoidea
  • The sea urchins are considered to be regular
    echinoids because they are hemispherical and
    radially symmetrical.
  • However, the sand dollars and heart urchins are
    considered irregular because they have become
    secondarily bilaterally symmetrical.

47
Class Echinoidea
  • In sand dollars the anus and mouth are located on
    the oral side with the mouth near the middle, but
    the anus shifted near the margin, so that an
    anterioposterior axis is recognizable.
  • This is even more apparent in the heart urchins
    where the mouth is moved towards the anterior end
    and the anus (periproct) near the posterior end.

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Class Echinoidea
  • Echinoids are widely distributed in all seas.
    Sea urchins are most typically found on rocky
    substrates, but sand dollars and heart urchins
    prefer sandy substrates.
  • Sea urchins feed by grazing on algae growing on
    rocks and they do so using a complex structure
    called an Aristotles lantern.

50
Aristotles Lantern
  • The Aristotles lantern is a chewing mechanism
    that can be raised and lowered by muscles inside
    the urchin.
  • The lantern consists of five plates connected to
    each other with connective tissue in a vase-like
    arrangement and each plate has a tooth on the
    end.

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Aristotles Lantern
  • The lantern can be lowered to scrape off algae
    and then retracted inside using paired muscles.
  • The Aristotles lantern connects directly to the
    esophagus, which connects in turn to the rest of
    the gut.

53
Class Holothuroidea
  • The Holothuroidea or sea cucumbers are a quite
    odd group whose members at first glance dont
    seem that similar to the other echinoderms.
  • Sea cucumbers are very elongated along the
    oral-aboral axis and have an array of oral
    tentacles (which are modified tube feet) around
    the mouth.

54
Sea cucumber
55
Class Holothuroidea
  • Holothuroideans have a leathery body as the
    ossicles are small.
  • Because they lie on one side, sea cucumbers
    typically have well developed tube feet on only
    the three ambulacra in contact with the
    substrate.
  • The other two ambulacra have less well developed
    tube feet, which are not used for movement, but
    may play a sensory role.

56
Class Holothuroidea
  • Sea cucumbers are sluggish and dont move
    quickly.
  • They feed either on deposits, which they collect
    as they crawl along the sediment or are filter
    feeders that filter small particles from the
    water.
  • Deposit feeding sea cucumbers are a successful
    group and make up as much as 90 of the biomass
    on the surface of the deep-sea.

57
Class Holothuroidea
  • An unusual feature of sea cucumbers is their
    respiratory tree, which is a many branched
    internal respiratory structure that connects to
    the cloaca.
  • Water is pumped in and out of the tree by the
    muscular cloaca and the tree itself and gas
    exchange takes place.

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Class Holothuroidea
  • Attached to the respiratory tree are structures
    called Cuverian tubules. These are used in
    defense and are discharged out of the animal if
    it is disturbed.
  • The tubules are long, sticky and sometimes toxic
    and can entangle an attacker. Some species also
    may discharge their digestive tract, respiratory
    tree or gonads. These structures can be
    regenerated.

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Class Crinoidea
  • Includes the sea lilies and feather stars, which
    have an extensive fossil record and once were
    much more abundant in the seas.
  • The crinoids have a very feathery appearance that
    results from the branching of their five arms to
    produce many more arms each of which has many
    lateral pinnules.

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Class Crinoidea
  • Crionoids occur most commonly in deep water, but
    there are shallow water species too.
  • Not surprisingly with their appearance they
    filter feed and the food is carried down the
    ambulacral grooves to the mouth by cilia and tube
    feet.

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Class Crinoidea
  • Crinoids have a similar water vascular system to
    other echinoderms and have only simple sense
    organs. They lack spines, a madreporite and
    pedicellariae.
  • Most living species are not more than 12 inches
    long, but some fossil species had stalks over 75
    feet long.

66
Phylum Hemichordata
  • The hemichordates are deuterostome marine animals
    that were previously classified as a subphylum of
    the chordates because they possess a dorsal nerve
    cord, gills slits and a rudimentary notochord.
  • However, there is now consensus that the
    hemichordate notochord is not homologous with
    that of the chordates. Thus, they have been
    classified in their own phylum.

67
Phylum Hemichordata
  • The hemichordates are wormlike organisms that
    live on the bottom and are usually found in
    shallow waters.
  • There are two classes the Enteropneusta (the
    acorn worms) and the Pterobranchia.

68
Acorn worms
  • The acorn worms are deposit or suspension feeders
    that use their large proboscis to trap food in
    mucus that is then transported by cilia to the
    mouth.

69
Saccoglossus an acorn worm (Hemichordata class
Enteropneusta)
70
Acorn worms
  • The larva of acorn worms is called a tornaria
    and closely resembles the bipinnaria larva of
    echinoderms, which supports their classification
    as close relatives of the echinoderms.

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(Hemichordate)
(Echinoderm)
72
Pterobranchia
  • The pterobranchs are small colonial animals
    (1-7mm in length).
  • They live in tubes which they produce and can
    freely move about in filter feeding using their
    arms, which are covered in tentacles.
  • They lack a dorsal nerve cord, but one genus has
    a pair of gill slits.

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Cephalodiscus a pterobranch hemichordate
74
Taxonomy of hemichordates
  • Hemichordates were once classified among the
    chordates on the basis of their gill slits and
    dorsal nerve cord.
  • More recently molecular sequence work that has
    examined Hox genes and rRNA places the
    henichordates in a clade with the echinoderms.
    This is supported by the similarities in larvae.

75
Taxonomy of hemichordates
  • In addition, research on an extinct goup called
    the carpoids has found gill slits which suggests
    that gill slits are ancestral for all
    deuterostomes.

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