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Chapter 29 Simple Invertebrates

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Title: Chapter 29 Simple Invertebrates


1
Chapter 29 Simple Invertebrates
  • High School Biology Class

2
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3
Invertebrates
  • Animals without backbones are known as the
    invertebrates.
  • Examples snail, crab, spider, butterfly, clam,
    scorpion, etc.

4
Phylum Porifera (Sponges)
  • Simplest of all the animal phyla.
  • Have an asymmetrical body plan.
  • Are sessile (do not move from a spot once they
    attach themselves).
  • Reproduce both asexually and sexually.
  • Sponges can range from 1cm to 2m in size.

5
Phylum Porifera (Sponges)
  • Sponges siphon food through the ostia (water and
    food enter through these tiny pores).
  • The larger openings where water leaves the
    sponge are called the oscula.

6
Phylum Porifera (Sponges)
  • First animals with multicellularity.
  • Examples
  • Calcareous sponge, Glass sponge, Demosponge

7
Phylum Cnidaria (Cnidarians)
  • Have a radial symmetrical body plan.
  • There are two body shapes as well
  • Medusa - free-floating, jelly-like, often
    umbrella-shaped.
  • Polyp - tube-like and usually attached to a rock.

8
Cniadarian Parts
Polyp
Medusa
9
Phylum Cnidaria (Cnidarians)
  • Bodies have stinging tentacles (called
    cnidocytes) that are used for defense and to
    spear their prey.
  • Reproduce both asexually and sexually.

Digestion begins extracellularly and is completed
intracellularly.
10
Cnidarian Lifecycle
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Phylum Cnidaria (Cnidarians)
  • First animals with tissues.
  • Examples
  • Hydra, Man-of-war, Jellyfish, Comb Box jellies,
    Sea anemones, Corals (Reefs)

12
Phylum Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)
  • Have a bilateral symmetrical body plan.
  • Have a mesoderm (middle layer).
  • May be free-living organisms or parasites.
  • Range in size from 1mm to several meters.

13
Phylum Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)
  • First animals with bilateral symmetry.
  • Examples
  • Turbellaria hermaphroditic marine flatworms
    that release undigested food out of their mouths
    and have two light-sensitive eyespots that give
    it a cross-eyed appearance.

14
Phylum Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)
  • Examples
  • Cestoda - parasitic tapeworms, use hook
    structures to attach to intestines of their host
    (up to 40 feet long).
  • Tapeworms live in muscle of cattle and therefore
    humans become infected when they eat undercooked
    beef.

15
Phylum Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)
  • Examples
  • Trematoda - parasitic blood flukes, use suckers
    to attach themselves to hosts.
  • Infection occurs when people swim in infected
    waters the parasites bore through the skin and
    then block blood passages.

16
Phylum Nematoda (Roundworms)
  • Have a bilateral symmetrical body plan.
  • Have a one-way digestive system.
  • Non-segmented organisms.
  • Most are parasitic.

17
Phylum Nematoda (Roundworms)
  • First animals with a pseudocoelomate
  • (body cavity, mouth, and anus).
  • Examples
  • Ascaris - eggs in the soil may become ingested
    (eaten).
  • Once eaten they grow inside the intestine. The
    larvae then bore holes to get to the blood-stream
    and make their way to the lungs causing
    respiratory illness.

18
Phylum Nematoda (Roundworms)
  • Examples
  • Trichinella - cause disease by eating
    under-cooked pork.

19
Phylum Nematoda (Roundworms)
  • Examples
  • Necator - cause disease by bare feet stepping on
    larvae.

20
Chapter 30 Mollusks and Annelids
  • High School Biology Class

21
Phylum Mollusca (Mollusks)
  • The second largest animal phlya.
  • Have a bilateral symmetrical body plan.
  • Have excretion, digestion, circulation,
    respiration, and reproduction organ systems.
  • May live in marine, freshwater, and/or
    terrestrial habitats.

22
Phylum Mollusca (Mollusks)
  • Body is divided into three parts
  • 1) Visceral mass - contains internal organs.
  • 2) Mantle - heavy covering of tissue that forms
    on the outside of the body.
  • 3) Foot - muscular region or locomotion.

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Phylum Mollusca (Mollusks)
  • Radula - rasping tongue-like organ located in the
    mouth.
  • Have one or two shells (made of calcium
    carbonate) to protect their soft bodies.
  • Trochophore larva, develop from the fertilized
    egg and are free-swimming, moves with cilia.

26
Phylum Mollusca (Mollusks)
  • First animals with a true coelom.
  • Examples
  • Gastropoda - snails and slugs
  • Bivalvia - clams, oysters, and scallops
  • Cephalopoda - octopi and squids

27
Phylum Annelida (Segmented Worms)
  • Have a bilateral symmetrical body plan.
  • Have a coelom (body cavity).
  • Have many organ systems including a closed
    circulatory system and modified gut.
  • Have a cerebral ganglion (primitive brain).
  • Setae - bristles for movement (traction).

28
Phylum Annelida (Segmented Worms)
  • First animals with segmentation.
  • Examples
  • Polychaeta - marine worms with many setae.
  • Oligochaeta - earthworms (scavengers).
  • Hirundinea - leeches (parasites).

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Any Questions?
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