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Bio202 Lab 10:
Nematoda, Mollusca,
and Annelida
Chapters 37 & 38
Phylum Nematoda
Nematodes, commonly called roundworms
Ubiquitous--found everywhere, span all
habitable environments
bilaterally symmetrical
Cylindrical
Unsegmented (unlike most tapeworms)
Phylum Nematoda
Pseudocoelomate – body cavity between
mesoderm and endoderm
Contrast
with Acoelomate, Coelomate (Fig 38.1)
advanced animal characteristics
complete
digestive tract and other internal body
cavities
Most species of nematodes are free living,
though the most infamous species cause
disease.
Phylum Mollusca
Mollusks are far more diverse than most people
realize.
Snails,
Clams, Octopuses, Squid, Chitons
Occur in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats.
Bilaterally symmetrical
Coelomate – body cavity bounded by mesoderm
Contrast with Acoelomate, Pseudocoelomate (Fig
38.1)
Phylum Mollusca
Protostomes
Bilateral
Metazoan
Determinate,
spiral cleavage
Cleavage
Spiral
Cleavage
In
Mollusk
Embryo
Spiral
Cleavage
In
Mollusk
Embryo
Phylum Mollusca
Protostomes
formation
of a mouth and anus directly from a
blastopore (opening in blastula)
formation of the coelom by splitting of the
embryonic mesoderm
Blastula and blastospores
Solid ball of cells (morula) develops fluid-filled center (blastocoel).
Blastospores are produced by budding of blastula
Phylum Mollusca
Mollusks are far more diverse than most people
realize.
Snails,
Clams, Octopuses, Squid, Chitons
Bilaterally symmetrical
Protostome
Coelomate
Occur in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial
habitats.
Phylum Mollusca
Visceral mass – tissue forming center of body
muscular foot used in locomotion
many mollusks have a head
most mollusks form a shell, and are classified
by shell type
Radula
organ
used for scraping, drilling, or capturing prey.
Not found in Bivalves
Phylum Mollusca
circulatory system
Heart
usually,
an open system through which the
blood circulates freely.
Class Polyplacophora (chitons)
Shell
eight
dorsal overlapping plates
Foot
ovaly
flattened
extends from back to front (dorsoventral)
Mouth
scraping
Chiton sp.
radula.
Class Gastropoda (snails)
Gastropods are terrestrial as well as
aquatic.
shell
single
and often coiled, sometimes absent.
Mouth
has
a radula.
Class Bivalvia (clams, oysters)
Shell
Foot
flattened on the sides (laterally)
often used to burrow
Mouth
in two dorsally hinged halves (valves).
no radula.
Cilliated gills used for filter feeding
can filter particles as small as a virus; oyster harvesting is
quickly shut down following a pollution alert.
Anodonta sp.
Pinctada sp.
Class Cephalopoda (octopus, squid)
Shell
Usually
absent
single and coiled if present (very rarely).
Foot
modified
into tentacles
image-forming eyes
mouth usually with pinching beak.
Loligo sp.
Phylum Annelida (Segmented Worms)
Segmented
segments
are divided internally by septa
bilaterally symmetrical
Protostome
coelomates.
Cerebral ganglion (brain) is well developed
circulatory system is closed
digestive tract is complete.
Class Polychaeta (marine worms)
Body is distinctly segmented (believed to
be an adaptation to burrowing).
Segmentation allows fine control of
annelids’ hydrostatic skeleton in concert
with circular and longitudinal muscles to
alternately expand and contract segments
to aid burrowing.
Class Polychaeta (marine worms)
paired appendages of each body segment
are apparent in polychaetes. This
arrangement of appendages indicates a
common ancestry with arthropods (next
chapter)
Leeches are the most modern and highly
modified of the annelids, as is true for
parasitic groups of other phyla. Why is
that a common theme?
Class Polychaeta (marine worms)
body is distinctly segmentedThe most anterior
(toward the rear) segment (prostomium) has
sense organs as a head.
Parapodia:
paired, lateral appendages extending from
the body segments
Setae: small, bristlelike appendages often occuring in
pairs on lateral and ventral (frontal) surfaces
Nereis sp.
Aphrodita sp.
Chaetopterus sp.
Class Oligochaeta (oligochaetes)
Segmentation
Distinct
No
parapodia
Prostomium (38.12)
Fleshy, small lobe before mouth.
Setae
present but small
Lumbricus terrestris
Class Hirudinea (leeches)
Body
Flattened
anterior
(frontal) and posterior suckers
no head development.
Segmentation
greatly
reduced
No setae
Hirudo medicinalis