Invertebrates 1: Powerpoint
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Transcript Invertebrates 1: Powerpoint
Invertebrates 1
Introduction, Porifera, Cnidaria
Lecture outline
1. Overview: Invertebrate lectures
2. What is an animal?
3. Introduction to major phyla in
Kingdom Animalia
4. Basic phylogeny of Kingdom
Animalia
5. Phylum Porifera
6. Phylum Cnidaria
1. Overview of Invertebrate
portion of course
Evolutionary relationships
Body plan
How animal meets its basic needs
Relationship of structure and function
Selected aspects of life-history and
ecology
2. What is an animal?
Eukaryotic
Multicellular: Multiple cell types (Not just many
cells)
Heterotrophic
No cell wall
Characteristics of early development (unique!)
Blastula and gastrula stages unique to animals
Sponges, have precursors to these stages
Phylum Porifera: sponges
Phylum Cnidaria:
Have Cnidocytes
Phylum Ctenophora:
The comb jellies
Phylum Platyhelminthes:
The flatworms
Phylum Nematoda:
The roundworms
Phylum Annelida:
The segmented worms
Phylum Mollusca:
The “soft-bodied” animals
Phylum Arthropoda:
Jointed appendages
Phylum Echinodermata:
Spiny-skinned
Phylum Chordata:
Animals with notochords
4. Phylogenetic overview
Presumed to be monophyletic
Hypothesis assumes all animals evolve from a
single common ancestor
That ancestor thought to be a sponge-like protist
called a choanoflagellate
Modern choanoflagellate
Found in aquatic habitats
Some propose
polyphyletic origins
Cite Cambrian explosion
Phylogenetic overview (“traditional”)
Multicellularity separates the
ancestral protists from all animals
Multicellularity
Different types of cells!
Development of two true
tissue layers
Separates Phylum Porifera from all
others
Sponges
All other groups (2-3 tissues)
Development of a third germ
layer and bilateral symmetry
Cnidarians, Ctenophores
Radial symmetry, 2 layers
(Porifera)
All others
Bilateral symmetry, 3 layers
Further developments
(briefly)
Body cavities
Acoelomate
Pseudocoelomates
Coelomates
Further developments
(briefly)
5. Phylum Porifera: The
sponges
Evolutionary relationships
Simplest multicellular animals
Main cell type, choanocyte, resembles
choanoflagellate cell
Considered "multicellular" rather than
colonial, because there are different cell
types.
Not much, if any cooperation between cells
No real "tissues", no "systems" of any type (no
nervous system, circulatory system, etc.)
Sponge structure
Review key parts…
Water movement and
feeding
Role of flagellum
Role of collar
Movement of
particles
Phagocytosis
Protection
Sponges are sessile…
Toxins/warning coloration (this is why many
sponges are brightly colored)
Painful or sharp covering (spicules)
Regenerative ability
Camouflage (if not toxic)
Bore into shells.
NOTE: Nudibranch predators co-opt
sponge defenses (toxins, spicules)
Phylum Cnidaria
Evolutionary relationships
Diverge from the Porifera in the
following ways:
Diploblastic: two true tissue layers
Ectoderm and endoderm
No mesoderm
Radiata: One of two phyla to exhibit radial
symmetry
Where Cnidarians fit in…
Cnidarians, Ctenophores
Radial symmetry, 2 layers
(Porifera)
All others
Bilateral symmetry, 3 layers
Body organization
Polyps and medusae
Key features
Polyps and medusae
Tissue layers
Mesoglia
Secreted from the tissue layers
Gastrovascular cavity
Functions
Not a true body cavity!
Nervous system: nerve net
Ectoderm, gastroderm (=endoderm)
No other major body systems
Tentacles with cnidocytes (stinging cells)
Nervous system features
True neurons
Conduction can be unidirectional or
bidirectional along neurons
Nerve net with no direct pathways
Have simple sensory organs
Cnidocytes/nematocysts
How do they work?
Life-history strategies