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The Triploblasitc, Acoelomate Body Plan

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The body consists of an anterior scolex solely for attachment to the host's gut and a string of proglottids, each of which possesses both male and female organs aka ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Triploblasitc, Acoelomate Body Plan


1
The Triploblasitc, Acoelomate Body Plan
  • Zoology Chapter 10
  • Biology Chapter 27

2
Acoelmates, Pseudocoelomates, and Coelomates
3
All animals in this chapter are
  • Triploblastic have three primary germ layers
  • Acoelomate without a coelom
  • Classified into three phyla
  • Phylum Platyhelminthes (flatworms)
  • Phylum Nemertea (unsegmented)
  • Phylum Gastrotricha (bottom dwellers)

4
Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • aka Flatworms
  • Most common
  • planarian
  • Contains over 34,000
  • species
  • Currently, no uniquely defining characters
    (synapomorphies) in this phylum
  • Adult size from 1 mm or less to 25 m
  • Live in marine, freshwater, and damp terrestrial
    habitats

5
Flatworm Characteristics
  • Bilateral Symmetry
  • Cephalization (have a so
  • called head)
  • Mesoderm tissue includes a
  • loose tissue (parenchyma)
  • that fills spaces between
  • specialized tissues, organs,
  • and body wall.
  • May provide skeletal support, nutrient storage,
    motility, transport of materials, oxygen storage,
    etc.

6
Form and Function in Flatworms
  • Most cells are close to external environment ?
    materials can pass easily into and out of their
    bodies (via diffusion)
  • Rely on diffusion for respiration, excretion, and
    circulation
  • Other functions vary among species (free-living
    or parasitic)

7
4 Classes of Platyhelminthes
  • Free-living flatworms
  • Class Turbellaria
  • Parasitic Species
  • Class Monogenea
  • Class Trematoda
  • Class Cestoidea

8
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9
Class Turbellaria
  • Mostly free-living bottom dwellers in freshwater
    and marine environments
  • Crawl on stones, sand, or vegetation
  • Named for the turbulence that their beating cilia
    create in the water

10
Class Turbellaria cont.
  • Over 3,000 species
  • Few terrestrial species live in humid tropics and
    subtropics
  • Less than 1 cm long (rare terrestrial/tropic up
    to 60 cm long)
  • First group of bilaterally symmetrical animals to
    appear

11
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12
Feeding
  • Carnivores (small invert.),
  • scavengers (dead), some
  • herbivores (algae)
  • Sensory cells (chemoreceptors) on their heads
    help detect food far away
  • Digestive cavity has a single opening (or mouth)
    through which food and waste pass

13
Feeding cont.
  • Pharynx muscular
  • tube that extends
  • out of the mouth and
  • pumps food into the
  • digestive cavity or gut
  • highly branched gut transports food to all parts
    of the body (this is lacking in many parasitic
    species)

14
Locomotion
  • Cilia on epidermal cells help to glide through
    the water and over the bottom of a stream or pond
  • A layer of mucus is laid down to aid in adhesion
    and help cilia gain traction

15
Locomotion cont.
  • Muscle cells controlled by the nervous system
    allow them to twist and turn so that they are
    able to react rapidly to environmental stimuli
  • Dorsoventral muscles essential for maintaining
    flatness (ie-for diffusion)

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17
Exchanges with Environment
  • Do not have respiratory organs ? done via
    diffusion
  • Respiratory gases (CO2 and O2)
  • Metabolic wastes (ammonia)
  • Depends on environment
  • Marine osmotic equilibrium
  • Freshwater hypertonic

18
Excretion
  • Protonephridia is a network of fine tubules for
    excretion of metabolic wastes.
  • Flame cells are ciliated and induce currents to
    push fluids through tubules.

19
  • Tubules eventually merge and open to the outside
    of the body wall through a minute opening called
    a nephridiopore.

20
Nervous System Sense Organs
  • Subepidermal nerve plexus (resembles cnidarians
    but depends on species)
  • Mechanoreceptor (excited by pressure) at anterior
    end detects body position(due to gravity)
  • Cerebral ganglia more centralized nerve
  • net (brain)
  • Longitudinal nerve cords
  • ladderlike appearance
  • (evolutionary
  • advancement
  • to a nervous system)

21
  • Auricles sensory lobes on side of head aid in
    food location (chemoreceptor)
  • Ocelli eye spots orient in direction of light
    (photoreceptor)
  • See how it works

22
Reproduction
  • Asexual reproduction
  • Budding or fission
  • Regeneration

23
Reproduction cont.
  • Can reproduce either asexually or sexually
  • Asexual planarian detaches its tail end and
    each half regrows the lost parts (referred to as
    zooids).
  • Sexual each Planaria gives and receives sperm.
  • Benefits to sexual over asexual?
  • Have both testes and ovaries (hermaphroditic)
  • Eggs develop inside the body and are shed in
    capsules called cocoons
  • Weeks later the eggs hatch and grow into adults.
  • Can also reproduce by regeneration
    (fragmentation)
  • If it is cut into two halves, both halves may
    become two new Planaria.

24
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25
Turbellariareview
  • What type of
  • symmetry?
  • How do they
  • feed?
  • What type of
  • sensory organs?
  • How do they
  • reproduce?

26
Parasitic worms
  • Class Monogenea
  • Class Trematoda
  • Class Cestoidea

27
Class Monogenea
  • External parasites (ectoparasitic)
  • Commonly found on the gills, skin or fins of
    fishes and lower aquatic invertebrates
  • Have a series of hooks that enable them to attach
    while feeding
  • Have one generation in their life cycle from egg
    to adult

28
Class Trematoda
  • 8,000 parasitic species (aka flukes)
  • Internal parasites (endoparasitic)
  • Complex life cycles specialized in parasitism in
    animal or human tissues
  • One or more suckers around anterior end (oral
    sucker)

29
Subclass Digeneans
  • Life cycle involves two - four hosts and a number
    of developmental stages, including two types of
    free-living larvae (most complex in the animal
    kingdom)
  • The definitive (final) host of adult is always a
    vertebrate
  • Snails are common intermediate hosts

30
  1. Eggs reach freshwater and Miracidium (ciliated
    larva) swims out
  2. Finds host (snail)
  3. Penetrates snail, loses cilia, develops into a
    sporocyst (contain embryonic cells)
  4. Develops into daughter sporocysts (hundreds can
    form from one miracidium)
  5. Hundreds of next larval stage are produced
    (cercariae)
  6. Cercariae leave the snail and find 2nd or final
    host
  7. Penetrates host and becomes a Metacercaria
  8. When the definitive host eats the 2nd
    intermediate host, it becomes an adult

31
The species that infect humans can be divided
into groupsSchistosomes non-Schistosomes
  • Dicrocoelium dendriticum and Opisthorchis sp.
    liver flukes of mammals
  • blood flukes, Schistosoma spp. are among most
    widespread and serious parasites of humans

32
Schistosomiasomes (blood flukes)
33
Class Cestoidea
  • aka tapeworms
  • Most highly specialized class
  • of flatworms
  • Intestinal parasites
  • No digestive tract ? reside in digestive system
    of vertebrates
  • Absorb nutrients across body wall
  • Adults range from 1mm to 25 m in length

34
  • The body consists of an anterior scolex solely
    for attachment to the host's gut and a string of
    proglottids, each of which possesses both male
    and female organs

35
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36
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37
Phylum Nemertea
  • aka ribbon worms
  • or proboscis worms
  • 900 species
  • More closely related to other acoelomates than to
    any flatworm
  • Longest of any invertebrate (30 m but 2x as long
    when fully extended)

38
Phylum Nemertea
  • Unsegmented
  • Proboscis tipped
  • with barbs to capture prey (see it in action!)
  • Complete digestive tract with an anus
  • Closed circulatory system (w/o a heart)

39
Phylum Gastrotricha
  • 500 species
  • Bottom dwellers in both marine freshwater
  • Range from 0.1 mm to 4 mm
  • Dorsal contains scales, bristles,
  • or spines
  • Have a forked tail
  • Development is direct
  • (there is no larval stage)
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