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Cnidarians

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Cnidarians Jellyfish, Hydra, Corals, Sea Anemones, Sea Fans and Sea Pens Cnidarians Soft-bodied animals Stinging tentacles Sac Body Plan Tissue Level of Organization ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cnidarians


1
Cnidarians
  • Jellyfish, Hydra, Corals, Sea Anemones,
  • Sea Fans and Sea Pens

2
Cnidarians
  • Soft-bodied animals
  • Stinging tentacles
  • Sac Body Plan
  • Tissue Level of Organization
  • Radial Symmetry

3
  • Two basic body forms
  • Medusa (bell- shaped) and
  • Polyp (flower-like)

4
Structure
  • Mouth both entry of food and exit of wastes
  • Tentacles contain spring-loaded nematocysts to
    sting and immobilize their prey
  • Tentacles guide paralyzed food into the mouth
  • Gastrovascular cavity food is digested here

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nematocysts
7
?loaded
Discharged ?
8
  • Many cnidarians do not have to eat due to
    symbiotic relationships with autotrophic protists
  • The protists live in the gastroderm of the animal
  • Some cnidarians are so dependent on the
    relationship that they will die if not kept in
    bright sunlight

9
  • Some cnidarians have long, tube-shaped branching
    gastrovascular cavities
  • They do not need to send wastes back through the
    mouth wastes simply diffuse out through the cell
    walls of the epidermis

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  • Cnidarians sense their environments using chemo
    and touch receptors in the epidermal layer

12
Sensory Receptors
  • Simple sensory organs surround the medusa bell
  • 1. statocysts are used for balance
  • 2. Ocelli (eye spots) detect light

Statocysts ?
13
  • Cnidarians lack true muscle cells, but have cells
    that change shape when stimulated by the nerve
    net therefore, they can move.

14
  • The medusa can open and close like an umbrella,
    allowing it to move by jet propulsion when
    water is forced out of the medusa

15
Asexual Reproduction
  • Polyps produce new polyps or medusae by budding

16
Sexual Reproduction
  • Mature medusa release gametes into the water
  • After fertilization, the zygote becomes a
    ciliated larvae that swims around
  • Eventually, the larva attaches to a hard surface
    and grows into a polyp

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18
Hydras- a Hydrozoan
  • Spend most of life as polyp
  • Can move with a somersaulting movement

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20
Portuguese Man-Of-War
  • A type of hydrozoan that grows in a colony
  • One of the polyps becomes a float to keep the
    colony on the surface
  • They may produce very long tentacles the poison
    in the nematocysts is very strong and causes
    humans great pain

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22
Jellyfish
  • Most of life is as a medusa

23
Box jelly ?
  • The sting of most jelly fish are harmless to
    humans, but the tiny, Australian jellyfish can
    kill you in 3-20 minutes.

24
Sea Anemones Coral
  • Only have the polyp stage
  • Most ecologically important invertebrates
  • Sea anemones are solitary polyps

25
Sea anemones
26
Clownfish and Sea Anemone symbiotic
relationship tentacles protect clown fish from
predators, clownfish protects tentacles from
being eaten
27
Corals
  • Grow in shallow, tropical water
  • Produce skeletons of CaCO3
  • Most are colonial, creating coral reefs
  • Entire ecosystems revolve around coral reefs

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  • Coral reefs also protect the land from the ocean
    swells and waves

32
  • Corals produce chemicals to prevent being
    overgrown by other organisms. Some of these
    chemicals have been used as anti-cancer
    medications
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