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SPONGES

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Water flowing through sponges provides food and oxygen, as ... 1. Hydrozoans-- (Hydra, Portuguese man-of-war, Obelia) Polyp form. Mostly asexual reproduction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SPONGES


1
SPONGES
  • PHYLUM PORIFERA

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  • Major Characteristics of
  • the Phylum Porifera
  • Sponges are
  • asymmetrical
  • multicellular
  • sessile
  • Heterotrophic
  • eukaryotic
  • No body cavity
  • evolved from Kingdom Protista
  • No systems (digestive, excretory, circulatory,
    or respiratory)

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Water flowing through sponges provides food and
oxygen, as well as a means for waste removal.
Green dye was placed next to a sponge-- note the
flow from the osculum! Small incurrent pores
allow water in.
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Sponges
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Cell types (3 types) 1. Choanocyte cells
(a.k.a. collar cells) have nets and
flagella. They surround pores, bring water in,
and filter food particles.
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Cell types (2nd type)
2. Epithelial cellsoften brightly colored.
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Cell types (3rd type)
  • Amoebocyte cells have many jobs
  • transport food
  • replace damaged parts
  • produce spongin spicules
  • form gametes

amoebocyte
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BARREL SPONGES
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  • Reproduction
  • Most are hermaphrodites-- produce both male and
    female gametes.
  • Sexual Reproduction
  • Amoebocytes become
  • Eggs--retained and fertilized internally
  • Sperm-- released through osculum
  • sperm ? osculum? other sponges choanocytes?
  • amoebocyte carries sperm to egg)? fertilization
    forms larva (plankton)? released from
    mesenchyme, then floats/swims to new spot ?
    develops to adult
  • Asexual reproduction is also possible
  • gemmules (freshwater sponges only)
  • fragmentation (following damage)

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OLD PICTURE FROM FLORIDA OF SPONGE COLLECTORS
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STINGING CELLED
  • PHYLUM CNIDARIAN

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  • Characteristics of Cnidarians
  • Evolved by gaining body symmetry and tissues
  • Radially-symmetrical
  • no body cavity
  • Digestive cavity and mouth for digestion,
    excretion, circulation, and respiration

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  • Cnidarian Characteristics
  • Cnidocytes -- stinging cells-- barbed /or sticky
    /or poisonous-- used for feeding / protection

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  • Gastrovascular cavity-- food and oxygen in /
    waste and CO2 out
  • Tissues-- muscular, nervous (sensory and
    nerve-net cells), mesoglea (from ectoderm and
    endoderm)
  • Hollow body form(s)-- sessile, vase-shaped polyp
    /or free-swimming, bowl-shaped medusa
  • Planula-- free-swimming larval form resulting
    from sexual reproduction (sexual and asexual
    reproduction)

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  • Three Classes of Cnidarians
  • 1. Hydrozoans-- (Hydra, Portuguese man-of-war,
    Obelia)
  • Polyp form
  • Mostly asexual reproduction
  • Freshwater and marine types

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  • 2. Scyphozoans-- jellyfish (stinging nettle, blue
    wasps...)
  • Medusa form dominant
  • 1/2 inch to 7 feet diameter
  • Nerve cells in margin of bell (coordinate
    swimming)
  • Sense organs-- statocysts (gravity) and ocelli
    (light)
  • Some are edible (juicy mesoglea!)

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Video
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  • 3. Anthozoans-- anemones and corals (red coral,
    sea fans)
  • Polyp form only (thus sessile except for planula
    and those living on backs of snails)
  • Anemones lack skeleton corals secrete CaCO3
    (limestone)
  • Many have symbiotic dinoflagellates /or green
    algae
  • Sexual and asexual reproduction
  • Divided, sophisticated gastrovascular cavity
  • Form coral reefs of limestone skeletons-- most
    diverse marine communities-- provide food and
    shelter for fish, shellfish, etc.
  • Red coral used for money/jewelry

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