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Flatworms, Roundworms, and Rotifers

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Flatworms, Roundworms, and Rotifers Rupp Bio II Honors Chapter 36 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Flatworms, Roundworms, and Rotifers


1
Flatworms, Roundworms, and Rotifers
  • Rupp
  • Bio II Honors
  • Chapter 36

2
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • More commonly known as flatworms
  • 3 germ layer development
  • Bilateral symmetry

3
Structure and Function of Flatworms
  • Simplest organisms with bilateral symmetry
  • Acoelomatesgases exchanged through skin by
    diffusion
  • Gastrovascular cavityonly one openingfood in
    and wastes out
  • Anterior endsensory organs
  • 18,000 speciesthree classes
  • Turbellariafree-living
  • Trematodaparasitic
  • Cestodaparasitic
  • Parasitic worms are simpler than free-living

4
Class Turbellaria
  • 4,500 species
  • Mostly marine
  • Freshwater planarianDugesia
  • Spade-shaped anterior and tapered posterior
  • Wave-like motion with mucus and cilia

5
Planarian Digestion
  • Scavenge dead and decaying plant and animal
    matter
  • Ingest through a pharynx
  • Highly branched gastrovascular cavity to deliver
    nutrients throughout body

6
Planarian Excretion
7
Planarian Nervous System
  • Cerebral ganglia at anteriorsimple brain
  • Ladder-like arrangement of nerves
  • Eyespots to sense intensity and direction of light

8
Planarian Reproduction
  • Hermaphrodites
  • Sexual Reproduction involves simultaneous
    fertilizationeach one fertilizes the other
  • Eggs are laid in protective capsules
  • Asexual reproduction
  • Fission or regeneration

9
Class Trematoda, the Flukes
  • 9,000 species of flukesleaf-shaped flatworms
    that are parasitic
  • Some live in and others live on

10
Trematode Structure
  • Cling to host with anterior and ventral sucker
  • Anterior sucker surrounds the mouth and draws in
    host fluids
  • Nervous system is similar to planarians, but no
    eyespots
  • Tegument is a continuous sheet of fused cells
  • Made of proteins and carbohydrates that resist
    host defenses

11
Trematode Reproduction
  • Hermaphroditic
  • Eggs are stored in a long coiled uterus
  • Capable of producing tens of thousands of eggs at
    a time

12
Schistosoma Life Cycle
  • Humans are the primary host
  • Sexual reproduction in humans and eggs are
    excreted
  • Larva enter snail intermediate host
  • Development of tail while in snail
  • Cycle repeats

13
Schistosomiasis
  • If not all eggs leave the human host some can be
    carried to lungs, bladder, liver, etc.
  • 200-300 million people affected per year
  • Asia
  • Africa
  • S. America

14
Class Cestoda
  • 5,000 Species
  • Commonly known as tapeworms
  • Live in the intestines of almost vertebrates
  • Humans may have any of 7 different species
  • Source is raw or undercooked food
  • Symptoms
  • Digestive problems
  • Weight loss
  • Lack of energy
  • Anemia

15
Cestode Structure
  • Tegument to protect from host defenses
  • Anterior scolexhas hooks and suckers
  • Proglottidssections of the wormthe older ones
    are situated to the posterior

16
Cestode Structure
  • Excretory and nervous system is similar to
    flatworms
  • No eyespots, mouth, gastrovascular cavity, or
    digestive organs
  • Nutrients are absorbed through the tegument

17
Tapeworm Reproduction
  • Hermaphroditic
  • Reproductive organs in each proglottid
  • As proglottids move to the posterior they mature
    and produce eggs
  • 100,000 eggs
  • Fertilized by sperm from another proglottidself
    or other worm

18
Taeniarhyncus (Beef Tapeworm) Life Cycle
19
Taenia solium (Pork Tapeworm)
20
Phylum Nematoda and Rotifera
  • Bilaterally symmetrical
  • Fluid-filled coelom

21
Phylum Nematoda
  • Commonly known as roundworms
  • Psuedocoelomates
  • 1cm to 4ft in length
  • Digestive tract with mouth and anus
  • Allows specialization
  • Digestion
  • Absorption
  • Typically separate sexes
  • Cuticleprotective outer layer
  • 80,000 species known, but potentially 500,000
    species
  • Free-living on land and in fresh and salt water

22
Caenorhabditis elegans
  • Research species
  • Simple system consisting of less than 1,000 cells
  • 6 chromosomes
  • 6,000 genes that are human homologs
  • 20,000 genes

23
Genus Ascaris
  • Found in pig, horse, and human intestines
  • Adult females are larger
  • Males have hooked tails to hold females during
    mating
  • Females can produce 200,000 eggs per day that can
    be ingested through contaminated food and water

24
Ascaris Life Cycle
25
Hookworms
  • Intestinal parasite
  • Cutting plates that clamp intestinal wall
  • Feed on host blood and can cause anemia
  • 400 million affected, 90 of infections in the
    tropics

26
Hookworm Life Cycle
27
Genus Trichinella
  • Humans and pigs
  • Trichinosis
  • Muscle pain
  • Stiffness
  • Death if severe infection and many cysts in heart

28
Other Parasitic Roundworms
  • Pinworm or Enterobius
  • Affects 16 of adults and 30 of kids in U.S.
  • No serious side effects
  • Resemble small white threads
  • Live in lower intestine
  • Females lays eggs around anus at night
  • Spread by scratching and touching
  • Filarial Worms
  • Disease causing roundworms
  • Affects 250 million in the tropics
  • The most dangerous live in lymph system
  • Transferred via mosquitos
  • Large infections cause elephantiasis
  • One species causes dog heartworm

29
Phylum Rotifera
  • Psuedocoelomates
  • Approx. 1,750 species
  • Typically transparent free-living organisms found
    in freshwater
  • Males are typically smaller
  • Can survive drought by becoming dehydrated and
    re-hydrating under proper conditions

30
Rotifer Structure
  • Digestive system
  • Mouth, mastax, stomach, intestines, cloaca, anus
  • Flame cells and excretory tubules
  • Cephalization
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