Title: Invertebrate Diversity
1InvertebrateDiversity
- Comparison of Increasing Complexity
- Highlight what is bold/underlined
2What is an invertebrate? Name some common
invertebrates? Are snakes invertebrates?
3Introductory Vocabulary Invertebrate animal
without a backbone Coelom fluid-filled space
between body wall and intestine Cephalization
sensory organs concentrated at the anterior end
of the organism Sexual reproduction gametes are
produced and fuse to form unique diploid
offspring Asexual reproduction single parent
produces offspring genetically identical to
itself Hermaphrodite animals with both ovaries
and testes
4Sessile nonmotile animal that doesnt move on
its own Open circulatory system vessels empty
into body spaces called sinuses Closed
circulatory system blood never leaves vessels
as it flows through the body Compound eye eye
with many lenses found in arthropods Notochord
stiff rod found in chordates that becomes the
vertebral column in vertebrates Dorsal nerve cord
bundle of nervous tissue found in chordates
that becomes the spinal cord in
vertebrates Pharyngeal slits openings in the
pharynx found in chordates that give rise to many
structures in vertebrates
5Kingdom Animalia Invertebrate phyla Porifera
-sponges Cnidaria-sea anemones,coral and jelly
fish Platyhelminthes-flatworms (planaria, flukes,
tapeworms) Nematoda -roundworms
6Mollusca-slugs, snails, seashell animals,
octopii and squid Annelida segmented worms
(marine worms, earthworms leeches) Arthropoda
insects, arachnids crustaceans Echinodermata
starfish, sand dollars, sea urchins, sea
cucumbers
7Porifera
- Sponges
- Multicellular no true tissues asymmetric
sessile - spongin- protein fibers for structure spicules
for skeleton - individual cells acting together as an organism
- filter feeders using collar cells (choanocytes)
amoebocytes - Water enters pores and exits osculum
- Asexual reproduction
- fragmentation
- sexual reproduction (hermaphroditic)
- External fertilization
8 Cnideria
- Radial symmetry true tissues sessile and/or
motile - Cnidocytes - stinging barbs to capture prey
- Tentacles to bring prey into gastrovascular
cavity - Two body forms
- Polyp sessile with mouth dorsal
- Medusa motile with mouth ventral (adult)
- Asexual reproduction - budding
- Sexual reproduction - external fertilization
resulting in planulae larvae
Classes of cniderians Hydrozoa hydra, Obelia,
Portuguese man-of-war Scyphozoa
jellyfish Anthozoa sea anemones coral
9Platyhelminthes - flatworms
- bilateral symmetry cephalization acoelomate
organs - Nervous system ganglia nerve cords
- Excretory system flame cells
- Digestive system two-way digestive tract with
common mouth/anus gastrovascular cavity - Respiratory system diffusion through epidermis
- Circulatory system none (diffusion)
- Reproductive system
- Sexual internal fertilization hermaphroditic
lay eggs - Asexual - fragmentation
10Class Trematoda - endoparasites OR
ectoparasites - complex life cycle with more
than one host - primitive or no digestive
system Schistosoma major public health threat
cause liver damage
- Class Cestoda
- Tapeworms
- Parasites
- Attach to intestinal wall of host with scolex
- proglottids segments packed with reproductive
organs - absorb nutrition from host dont need digestive
system
Class Turbellaria - planaria - freeliving -
one of few freshwater species typical flatworm
11Phylum Nematoda - roundworms
- - pseudocoelomate
- - hydrostatic skeleton
- one-way digestive system with separate
mouth/anus - Respiration and circulation by diffusion
- Have longitudinal muscles
- Reproduction sexual complex life-cycle with
multiple hosts - Most are free-living predators in the soil
- Some are parasitic hookworms, pinworms,
Trichinella
12Mollusca
- Coelomate bilateral symmetry organs
exoskeleton (shell) - 3-part body plan
- Visceral mass contains organs
- Mantle secretes shell
- Foot locomotion
- Radula for feeding
- cephalization
- Open circulatory system
- One-way digestive system
- Nephridia excretory organs
- Respiration gills, mantle cavity, and/or
diffusion across skin - Reproduce sexually many hermaphroditic form
trochophore larvae
- Classes of mollusks based on body plan
- Gastropoda stomach-foot snails and slugs
- Bivalvia two-shells clams, oysters, mussels
- Cephalopoda head-foot nautilus, squid,
octopi, cuttlefish
13ANNELIDA
- Oligochaeta earthworms
- Hirudinea leeches
- Polychaeta marine worms
14Major characteristics of all annelids
- Segmentation separated by septa each segment
has organs of each major system - Cephalization including cerebral ganglia
- Ventral nerve cord
- Coelom hydrostatic skeleton
- Organ systems
- Setae bristles for movement
- Parapodia fleshy appendages for movement /or
respiration
15- Earthworms
- Ecologically important scavengers
- Two layers of muscle longitudinal circular
- 5 hearts closed circulatory system
- Nephridia for excretion
- Respiration through epidermis
- Complex digestive system with mouth, pharynx,
esophagus, crop, gizzard, intestine, and anus - Sexual reproduction hermaphroditic clitellum
forms mucus cocoon to protect fertilized eggs
16How are HUMANS separated into body segments?
- Remnants of segmentation are visible in the
embryo as repeated blocks of tissue called
somites and in the vertebral column
17Arthropods
- largest and most diverse phylum includes
insects, crustaceans, spiders - segmented bodies head, thorax, abdomen or
cephalo-thorax abdomen segmentation apparent
on abdomen - jointed appendages (3, 4 or 5 pairs of walking
legs plus assorted other specialized appendages) - Respiration spiracles into trachea gills book
lungs - Excretion through Malpighian tubules
- Incomplete or complete metamorphosis
- exoskeleton of chitin complex muscular system
- ventral nerve cord brain open circulatory
system - compound eyes ecdysis (molting)
18Millipedes 2 pairs of legs per segment -
herbivores or detritovores,
but can be really smelly! -
one pair of antennae Centipedes 1 pair of legs
per segment - predators with jaws
- one pair of antennae
19Insects 3 body regions head, thorax,
abdomen - 3 pairs of legs attached to
thorax - exoskeleton of chitin - jaws
(mandibles)modified for particular feeding
method - wings are extensions of the
exoskeleton 0, 1 or 2 pairs - 1 pair of
antennae - compound eyes
20- Arachnids spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites
- Chelicerae mouthparts modified into pincers or
fangs - Cephalothorax abdomen
- 4 pairs of walking legs
- No antennae
- Simple eyes
- Spinnerets silk glands in spiders
- Book lungs in spiders
- Predators that consume liquified food
- Distantly related to horseshoe crabs
tick
mite
21Crustaceans
Ecologically important copepods krill are
planktonic crustaceans that form the basis of
many marine food chains Crabs, lobsters, shrimp,
crayfish are other well-known crustaceans
called decapods 10 feet First pair of walking
legs often modified into chelipeds (pincers) 2
pair of antennae Compound eyes Sexual
reproduction Cephalothorax covered by
carapace Small appendages on abdomen of of some
called swimmerets Barnacles are sessile
crustaceans Pill bugs (isopods) are terrestrial
crustaceans with gills
22ECHINODERMS most complex of the invertebrates
- Only live in salt water (oceans)
- Five-part radial symmetry in adults larvae are
bilaterally symmetrical - Hard, bumpy, spiny ENDOskeleton composed of
ossicles - Water vascular system with 5 rows of tube feet
that aid them in movement, gas exchange, food
capture and waste excretion. - Skin gills increase respiratory surface area
function in excretion - Feeding in starfish involves everting stomach out
of mouth, digesting prey outside of body, and
then pulling the digested material into the body
other echinoderms tend to be filter feeds or
detritivores - Ex starfish, sand dollar, sea cucumber, sea
urchin, sea cucumber, sea biscuit, brittle stars,
sea lilies, sea daisies, sea pens, feather stars
23Invertebrate Chordates 4 characteristics of all
chordates Notochord Dorsal hollow nerve
cord Pharyngeal gill slits Postanal
tail Invertebrate chordates include tunicates
lancelets all other chordates are vertebrates
tunicate
lancelet