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Multicellular and Tissue Level Organization

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Title: Multicellular and Tissue Level Organization


1
Multicellular and Tissue Level Organization
  • Chapter 9

2
Multicellularity
  • Multicellularity
  • Multicellular organisms have existed for 550
    million years
  • 10 of geological time
  • Allowed for a huge population explosion

3
Multicellularity
  • Hypotheses
  • Colonial
  • Multicellularity arose as a result of dividing
    cells remaining together, just as colonial
    protists would do.
  • Syncytial
  • A synctium is a large, multinucleated cell.
  • Formation of plasma membranes in the cytoplasm of
    syncytial protist could have produced small,
    multicellular organisms.

4
Animal Origins
  • The animal kingdom is said to be monophyletic.
  • The common ancestor was most likely an ancient
    protist called choanoflagellates
  • There is also evidence from molecular studies
    that supports this hypothesis.

5
Phylum Porifera
  • Phylum Porifera
  • Sponges
  • Characteristics
  • 9000 Species
  • Consist of loosely organized cells.
  • Range in size from less than a centimeter to more
    than an armful.
  • Mostly marine

6
Phylum Porifera
  • Asymmetrical or superficially radially
    symmetrical
  • Three cell types
  • Pinacocytes
  • Mesenchyme cells
  • choanocytes
  • Central cavity or branched chambers for filter
    feeding
  • No tissues or organs
  • Specialized cells
  • Spicules
  • Skeleton that is made of needle-like spikes
  • Skeleton may also be made of calcium carbonate or
    spongin

7
Phylum Porifera
  • Three cell types
  • Pinacocytes
  • Thin, flat cells
  • Line the outer surface of the sponge
  • Mesenchyme cells
  • Amoeboid cells that move through mesohyl
  • Specialized cells
  • Choanocytes or Collar cells
  • Flagellated cells
  • Line the inner surface of the sponge

8
Phylum Porifera
  • Water currents
  • Ascon or vaselike sponges the simplest and
    least common of the body types.
  • Ostia
  • Pores that draw water into the sponge
  • Spongocoel
  • Chamber or tube in the center of the sponge
  • Osculum
  • Water outlet usually at the top of the sponge

9
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10
Phylum Porifera
11
Phylum Porifera
  • Sycon or folded body sponges
  • Dermal pores
  • Water enters these pores and leads to a series
    of canals
  • Incurrent canal
  • Outside of the fold where water enters the
    sponge
  • Radial canals
  • Choanocytes line these canals

12
Phylum Porifera
13
Phylum Porifera
  • Leucon or sponges extensively branched canal
  • Water enters through incurrent canals
  • Canals lead to choanocyte lined chambers
  • Water leaves the chamber through excurrent canals

14
Phylum Porifera
15
Phylum Porifera
  • Maintenance functions
  • Nutrition
  • Filter feeder
  • 0.1 to 50 µm
  • A single leucon sponge 1 cm by 10 cm filters 20
    liters a day

16
Phylum Porifera
  • Reproduction
  • Monoecious
  • Both sexes occur in one individual
  • Fertilization
  • Occurs in the ocean water
  • Gemmules
  • Asexual reproductive resistant capsules
  • Regeneration
  • The ability to grow a new individual from a
    piece of the original

17
Phylum Porifera
  • Class Calcerea
  • Characteristics
  • Spicules of CaCO3
  • Needle shaped with 3 or 4 rays
  • Ascon, Leucon or sycon body forms
  • All marine
  • Calcareous sponges

18
Phylum Porifera
  • Class Hexactinellida
  • Characteristics
  • Spicules of silica
  • Intricate lattice, 6 rayed
  • Leucon or sycon body forms
  • 450 to 900 m deep in Pacific ocean
  • Glass sponges

19
Phylum Porifera
  • Class Demospongiae
  • Characteristics
  • Brilliant colored
  • Needle-shaped or four-rayed siliceous spicules
    or Spongin
  • Leucon body form
  • 1 meter in height
  • Freshwater sponges and bath sponges

20
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Phylum Cnidarian
  • Characteristics
  • Mostly marine
  • Radial or biradial symmetry
  • Diploblastic, tissue-level organization
  • Gelatinous mesoglea between the epidermal and
    gastrodermal layers
  • Gastrovascular cavity
  • Nervous system in the form of a nerve net
  • Specialized cells, called cnidocytes used in
    defense, feeding, and attachment.

21
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Body wall and nematocysts
  • Diplobalstic
  • Epidermis
  • Outside layer
  • Came from ectoderm
  • Gastrodermis
  • Inside layer
  • Came from endoderm
  • Mesoglea
  • Jellylike layer between the two cell layers

22
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Gastrovascular cavity
  • Nerve net nervous system
  • Cnidocytes
  • Stinging tentacle used for defense, feeding, or
    attachment

23
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Cnidocytes
  • Epidermal or gastrodermal cells that produce
    cnidae
  • Cnida
  • A fluid filled intracellular capsule
  • 30 different kinds
  • Nematocysts
  • Type of cnida with a long tube with spines or
    sticky ends

24
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Alternation of generations
  • Polyp
  • Asexual
  • Sessile
  • Oral end faces up and the aboral end attaches to
    a substrate.
  • Anemone
  • Medusa
  • Dioecious
  • Free swimming
  • Oral end faces down
  • Jelly

25
Phylum Cnidaria
26
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Maintenance functions
  • Gastrovascular cavity
  • Blind ending
  • Functions
  • Reproduction
  • Food digestion
  • Food waste

27
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Hydrostatic skeleton
  • Water or body fluids confined in a body cavity
    where contractile elements of the body wall act

28
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Movement
  • Polyp
  • End over end
  • Inching along the substrate
  • Medusa
  • Swimming
  • Floating

29
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Reproduction
  • Dioecious
  • Polyp
  • Planula
  • Embryo ciliated, free-swimming larva
  • Budding
  • Medusa
  • Budding

30
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Class Hydrozoa
  • Small
  • Mostly marine
  • This is the only class in the phylum with
    freshwater species
  • Most species display alternation of generations

31
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Features that distinguish Hydozoans from other
    Cnidarians
  • Nematocysts are only found in the epidermis
  • Gametes are epidermal and released outside of the
    body
  • Mesoglea is largely acellular

32
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Polyp Hydrozoa
  • Mostly colonial polyps
  • Obelia common marine cnidarian
  • Planula develops a feeding polyp called a
    gastrozooid
  • Another reproductive polyp that produces medusa
    is called a gonozooid
  • Polyps reproduce asexually
  • Medusa reproduce sexually

33
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Gonionemus
  • Medusa stage is dominant
  • Velum or shelf-like lip around the edge of the
    medusa
  • The velum is only found in Hydrozoa
  • Creates a small outlet of water for jet
    propulsion
  • Nerve net and nerve ring
  • Statocyst sensory structures that orient the
    medusa while swimming

34
Phylum Cnideria
  • Hydra is the freshwater hydrozoan.
  • Hangs from the undersurface of plants.
  • Lacks a medusa stage
  • Reproduces sexually and asexually

35
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Class Scyphozoa
  • True jellyfish
  • Bell diameter 2 meters
  • Tentacles length 60 70 meters
  • Always in the medusae stage
  • Only marine
  • Dioecious

36
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Aurelia
  • Feeds on plankton
  • Cyanea
  • Mastigias quinquecirrha
  • Stinging nettle
  • Avoid helmet shaped jellyfish

37
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Class Cubozoa - the amazing box jellies with
    complex eyes and potent toxins
  • Approximately 20 species
  • both polyp and medsae stages
  • resembles the jelly fish with a box shape

38
Phylum Cnidaria
  • More characteristics
  • marine and freshwater
  • grow to be about the size of the human head
  • 3 meter tentacles
  • one tentacle on each of the four corners
  • Chironex fleckeri can kill humans

39
Phylum Cnidaria
  • Class Anthozoa - which includes true corals,
    anemones, and sea pens
  • Marine only
  • Only polyp stage
  • 1 meter of coral reef takes 1000 years to build
  • Great barrier reef is 1600 kilometers long

40
Phylum Ctenophora
  • Phylum Ctenophora
  • Form and Function
  • fewer than 100 species
  • biradial symmetry
  • do not sting
  • contain colloblasts

41
Phylum Ctenophora
  • 3 tissue layers
  • two tentacles
  • complete digestive system
  • luminescence common
  • triploblastic

42
Phylum Ctenophora
  • Class Tentaculata
  • Contain tentacles
  • Tentacle can be retracted
  • Class Nuda
  • No tentacles
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