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Nematoda

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... Most common in shallow water Unsegmented bodies up to 35 cm long Studded introvert used for locomotion Cryptic Burrow in sediments or hide in shelters Deposit ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nematoda


1
  • Nematoda
  • Free living and parasitic forms
  • Cosmopolitan/Ubiquitous
  • Mostly in sediments (free living) or hosts
    (parasitic)
  • Common in fine muds
  • Organic rich areas
  • Described species 12,000
  • May be up to 500,000 species total!
  • Extremely abundant!!
  • Up to hundreds of individuals per ml of sediment
  • 90,000 in one rotting apple (not marine)
  • Hydrostatic skeleton
  • Longitudinal muscles only
  • Move by whipping back and forth

2
  • Other Worms
  • Sipuncula (Peanut worms)
  • Exclusively marine (250 species)
  • Most common in shallow water
  • Unsegmented bodies up to 35 cm long
  • Studded introvert used for locomotion
  • Cryptic
  • Burrow in sediments or hide in shelters
  • Deposit feeders
  • Consume detritus and microbes

3
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4
  • Other Worms
  • Sipuncula (Peanut worms)
  • Exclusively marine (250 species)
  • Most common in shallow water
  • Unsegmented bodies up to 35 cm long
  • Studded introvert used for locomotion
  • Cryptic
  • Burrow in sediments or hide in shelters
  • Deposit feeders
  • Consume detritus and microbes

5
Fig. 7.3
6
  • Other Worms
  • Echiura (Spoon worms)
  • Exclusively marine (150 species)
  • Deposit feeders
  • Feed with non-retractable proboscis
  • Live in burrows
  • U-shaped or L-shaped
  • Typically small but may get large in deep sea

7
  • Other Worms
  • Pogonophora (Beard worms)
  • Long, thin worms (135 species)
  • Most common in deep sea
  • No mouth or gut
  • Not parasitic
  • Anterior end of body is tuft of up to several
    thousand tentacles
  • Tentacles absorb dissolved nutrients
  • Symbiotic bacteria utilize nutrients to
    manufacture food
  • Vestimentifera
  • Large deep-sea animals
  • Found at many hydrothermal vents

8
Fig. 7.17
9
  • Other Worms
  • Pogonophora (Beard worms)
  • Long, thin worms (135 species)
  • Most common in deep sea
  • No mouth or gut
  • Not parasitic
  • Anterior end of body is tuft of up to several
    thousand tentacles
  • Tentacles absorb dissolved nutrients
  • Symbiotic bacteria utilize nutrients to
    manufacture food
  • Vestimentifera
  • Large deep-sea animals
  • Found at many hydrothermal vents

10
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11
  • Annelida
  • Segmented worms
  • Body composed of repeated segments
  • Gut runs through all segments in body cavity
    (coelom)
  • Coelom filled with fluid hydrostatic skeleton
  • Longitudinal and radial muscles
  • Efficient locomotion and burrowing
  • More than 15,000 species
  • Cosmopolitan

12
  • Annelida
  • Polychaeta
  • 10,000 species (mostly marine)
  • Body segments bear pairs of parapodia
  • Parapodia used for locomotion, feeding
  • Often tipped with setae
  • Closed circulatory system
  • Efficient transport of blood, gases
  • Gas exchange
  • Small species exchange gases across body wall
  • Large species have gills for gas exchange
  • Highly vascularized with capillaries and thin
    body walls

13
Fig. 7.15
14
  • Annelida
  • Polychaeta
  • Spawning Palolo worm
  • Larva Trochophore
  • Band of cilia around body tuft on apex
  • Same larval stage in Mollusca, Echiura, Sipuncula
  • Diverse lifestyles
  • Free-living predators
  • Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws
  • Burrowing deposit feeders
  • Burrowing suspension feeders
  • Tube building suspension feeders
  • Tubes may be calcium carbonate, agglutinated or
    parchment
  • Solitary
  • Colonial

15
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16
  • Annelida
  • Polychaeta
  • Larva Trochophore
  • Band of cilia around body tuft on apex
  • Same larval stage in Mollusca, Echiura, Sipuncula
  • Diverse lifestyles
  • Free-living predators
  • Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws
  • Burrowing deposit feeders
  • Burrowing suspension feeders
  • Tube building suspension feeders
  • Tubes may be calcium carbonate, agglutinated or
    parchment
  • Solitary
  • Colonial

17
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18
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19
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20
  • Annelida
  • Polychaeta
  • Larva Trochophore
  • Band of cilia around body tuft on apex
  • Same larval stage in Mollusca, Echiura, Sipuncula
  • Diverse lifestyles
  • Free-living predators
  • Often well-developed eyes and sense organs, jaws
  • Burrowing deposit feeders
  • Burrowing suspension feeders
  • Tube building suspension feeders
  • Tubes may be calcium carbonate, agglutinated or
    parchment
  • Solitary
  • Colonial
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