invertebrate survey lab
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Transcript invertebrate survey lab
INVERTEBRATE SURVEY
LAB
Spring 09
CHARACTERISTICS OF ANIMALS
Representatives of the animal kingdom display a
wide diversity in appearance. Regardless, they do
share certain characteristics:
ALL ANIMALS ARE HETEROTROPHIC
ALL ANIMALS ARE MULTICELLULAR
ALL ANIMALS ARE MADE OF EUKARYOTIC CELLS
THAT LACK A CELL WALL
The animal kingdom is divided into several phyla
(categories). Each phylum contains animals which
demonstrate common traits.
These traits allow for a classification system that shows
progressive change in the phyla from simple to more
complex in forms.
KEY TERMS TO KNOW
Body Symmetry
Asymmetry – no specific shape
Radial Symmetry – body plan in which body parts
repeat around the center of the body
Bilateral Symmetry – a single imaginary plane could
divide the organism in to 2 equal halves
Asymmetry
KEY TERMS TO KNOW
• Cephalization
– Cephalization is a concentration of sense
organs and nerve cells in the front of the
body (toward the head).
KEY TERMS TO KNOW
Coelom
Coelom means body cavity (a tube within a
tube).
About the Coelom
– Coelom means body cavity (a tube within a tube).
–
–
–
Acoelomates
• Have NO TRUE body cavity!
Pseudocoelomates
• Have a fluid filled cavity BUT – it is not lined like that of higher-order animals.
Coelomates
• Have a body cavity that separates the body into an inner and outer tube (fully lined).
KEY TERMS TO KNOW
Early Development
Protostomes are
organisms that develop
a mouth first and then
an anus.
Most invertebrates are
protostomes
Deuterostomes are
organisms that develop
an anus first and then a
mouth.
Echinoderms and all
vertebrates are
deuterostomes.
KEY TERMS TO KNOW
Early Development–
During early development,
the cells of most animal
embryos separate into
three layers called germ
layers:
1.
2.
3.
ENDODERM: innermost
layer; develops into the
lining of the digestive tract
& much of the respiratory
system
MESODERM: middle
layer; develops into
muscles and much of the
circulatory, reproductive,
and excretory systems
ECTODERM: outermost
layer; develops into the
sense organs, nerves, and
outer layer of the skin
KEY CONCEPT TO KNOW
TRENDS IN ANIMAL EVOLUTION:
As animals get more
advanced, they have more
specialized features than
those animals found in the
prior phyla.
PHYLUM PORIFERA - SPONGES
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Sponges are:
Multicellular, but do not have tissues!
Filter feeders that sift microscopic food particles from
the water.
Asymmetrical – they have no front or back end!
Sessile – they do not move!
No cephalization!
Early development is protostome.
Habitat is water.
No segmentation!
No germ layers!
No coelom!
ECOLOGY OF SPONGES
Sponges play an important part in the
ecology and survival of numerous aquatic
organisms:
They usually live attached to the sea floor.
They form mutually beneficial relationships
with bacteria, algae, and plantlike protists.
They provide a habitat for snails, sea stars,
sea cucumbers, and shrimp.
PHYLUM PORIFERA - SPONGES
PHYLUM CNIDARIA – JELLYFISH,
SEA ANEMONES, & CORALS
Epidermis
Mesoglea
Gastroderm
Tentacles
Mesoglea
Gastrovascular cavity
Mouth/anus
Mouth/anus
Gastrovascular
cavity
Tentacles
Medusa
Polyp
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
RADIAL SYMMETRY
CARNIVOROUS
NO CEPHALIZATION
MOVEMENT:
Polyps are sessile
Medusas are free swimming
EARLY DEVELOPMENT: protostome & nerve net
SOFT/SAC-LIKE BODY PLAN
2 WAY DIGESTION (ONE OPENING)
Eat & excrete through same hole!
NO COELOM
NO SEGMENTATION
2 GERM LAYERS: ectoderm & endoderm
IMPORTANT FEATURES
They typically have a
life cycle that includes
two different-looking
stages: a polyp and a
medusa:
A polyp is a
cylindrical body with
arm-like tentacles.
• In a polyp, the
mouth points
upward.
• Polyps are usually
sessile (do not
move).
A medusa has a
motile, bell-shaped
body with the mouth
on the bottom.
CNIDARIAN ACTIVITY
Cnidarians are soft-bodied,
carnivorous animals that
have stinging tentacles
arranged in circles around
their mouths.
– They are the simplest
animals to have body
symmetry and specialized
tissues.
– Cnidocytes are stinging
cells that are located along
their tentacles.
– A nematocyst is a poisonfilled, stinging structure that
contains a tiny coiled dart –
used to paralyze and kill
prey.
After paralyzing its prey, a
cnidarian pulls the prey
through its mouth into its
gastrovascular cavity.
– Nutrients are then
transported through the
body by diffusion.
– Cnidarians gather
information from their
environment using
specialized sensory cells.
– Most cnidarians reproduce
both sexually and asexually
• Most sexual reproduction
takes place with external
fertilization (outside the
female’s body).
PHYLUM PLATYHELMINTHES FLATWORMS
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Three germ layers:
ectoderm, mesoderm,
endoderm
Bilateral symmetry
Cephalization is present
Acoelomates - No
coelom
Use diffusion to
transport materials
through body
No segmentation
Movement w/ muscles or
cilia
Early development –
protostomes
Habitat water or moist
dirt
Basic body parts:
mouth, pharynx,
intestine, ganglia, flame
cells
MOVEMENT & REPRODUCTION
IN FLATWORMS
Free-living flatworms typically move in 2 ways:
Cilia help them glide through the water.
Muscle cells allow them to twist and turn.
Most free-living flatworms are hermaphrodites
(have both male and female reproductive organs).
Sexual reproduction involves joining in a pair
and delivering sperm to each other.
Asexual reproduction takes place by fission –
where the organism splits in two and each half
grows into a new organism.
GROUPS OF FLATWORMS
• Turbellarians (picture #1): free-living flatworms that
live in marine or fresh water
• Bottom dwellers
• Flukes (picture #2): parasitic flatworms
• Infect the internal organs of their hosts
• Tapeworms (picture #3): long, flat, parasitic worms
• adapted to life inside the intestines of their hosts
1
2
3
FLUKES – PARASITIC
FLATWORMS
PHYLUM NEMATODA ROUNDWORMS
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Three germ layers
present – ectoderm,
mesoderm, endoderm
Unsegmented
Bilateral symmetry
Cephalization
present
Pseudocoelom
present
Mouth forms first –
protostome
Basic body parts:
mouth, anus,
intestines
Examples: Pinworms
& Nematodes
Roundworms
• Roundworms are unsegmented
worms that have pseudocoeloms
and digestive systems with two
openings – a mouth and an anus
– A pseudocoelom is a “false
coelom” – a body cavity lined
only partially with mesoderm
• Feeding: most are carnivorous
with grasping mouthparts and
spines to catch and eat other
animals
• Respiration, circulation, and
excretion: occurs via diffusion –
they have no internal transport
system
• Response: simple nervous
systems consisting of several
ganglia
• Movement: muscles extend the
length of their body and allow
for movement
• Reproduction: sexual, nonhermaphroditic
ROUNDWORMS & HUMAN
DISEASE
PHYLUM ANNELIDA – EARTHWORMS
& LEECHES
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Three germ layers
present
Bilateral symmetry
present
Cephalization present
True coelom present
Segmentation present
Movement Muscles
Mouth develops first –
protostome
Basic body parts:
mouth, anus, crop,
gizzard, body
segments
– Ex: earthworm
FORM & FUNCTION OF ANNELIDS
• Feeding & Digestion: range
from filter feeders to predators
– They extend their pharynx to
collect prey and the food moves
through the crop where it is
stored and then through the
gizzard where it is ground into
smaller pieces
• Circulation: they have a closed
circulatory system
– Blood is contained within a
network of blood vessels
• Respiration: gills (aquatic
annelids) and diffusion (land
annelids)
• Excretion: digestive wastes
passes out through the anus and
liquid waste is eliminated by
nephridia (filter fluid)
• Response: have well developed
nervous systems that include a
brain and several nerve cords
• Movement: have 2 major groups
of body muscles as part of a
hydrostatic skeleton
• Reproduction: most reproduce
sexually (although some use
external fertilization) and some
are hermaphroditic
GROUPS OF ANNELIDS
• Oligochaetes: Typically have streamlined bodies
and relatively few setae (hairs) compared to
polychaetes (most live in soil or fresh water).
• Leeches: external parasites that suck the blood
and body fluids of their host.
• Polychaetes: marine annelids that have paired,
paddlelike appendages tipped with setae (hairs).
Polychaetes
Oligochaete
Leech
PHYLUM MOLLUSKA – SNAIL,
CLAM, SQUID, OCTOPUS, ETC.
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Ex. Clam, squid, octopus,
snail, oyster, scallop...
Three germ layers
present: ectoderm,
mesoderm, endoderm
Have an external or
internal shell for support
Bilateral symmetry &
Radial Symmetry (Squid)
Cephalization present
Segmentation present
Movement with
muscles
Has a TRUE COELOM
Mouth develops first –
protostome
Basic body parts: gills,
specialized “foot”
THE MOLLUSK BODY PLAN
BODY PLAN & OTHER PROCESSES
•
Body Plan: contains 4 parts –
foot, mantle, shell, visceral mass
– The muscular foot has many
forms, including flat structures for
crawling, spade-shaped structures
for burrowing, and tentacles for
capturing prey
– The mantle is a thin layer of
tissue that covers most of the
mollusk’s body
– The shell is made by glands that
secrete calcium carbonate and
has been reduced or lost in snails
and some other mollusks groups
– The visceral mass lies just below
the mantle and contains the
internal organs
•
Respiration: breathe using gills
(aquatic) or by diffusion (land)
•
Circulation: either open or closed
circulatory system
– Open - blood is pumped through
vessels by a simple heart and
then diffusion into other systems
– Closed – blood is transported
through the body much quicker
than an open circulatory system
and is always contained in vessels
•
Excretion: nephridia
•
Response: complexity of nervous
systems varies
•
Movement: secretion of mucous or jet
propulsion
•
Reproduction: sexually by external
fertilization, sexually by internal
fertilization, and some are
hermaphrodites
GROUPS OF MOLLUSKS
GIANT CLAM
VARIOUS MOLLUSKS
PHYLUM ARTHROPODA –
CRAYFISH, SPIDERS, LOBSTERS,
ETC.
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
Three germ layers
present
Exoskeleton present
that requires molting
(shedding)
Jointed appendages
Bilateral symmetry
Cephalization
present
True coelom present
Segmentation present
Movement Yes
(muscles & skeleton)
Habitat In or Near
Water
Early Development
Protostome
– Ex. Insects, spiders,
crayfish, millipedes,
and centipedes
CRUSTACEAN PARTS
Cephalothorax: formed by fusion of the head
with the thorax (which houses most of the
internal organs)
Abdomen: posterior part of the body
Carapace: part of the exoskeleton that covers
the cephalothorax
Mandible: mouthpart adapted for biting and
grinding food
DECAPODS
The largest group of crustaceans are the
decapods:
– They have 5 pairs of legs
– The 1st pair of legs are chelipeds and bear
large claws
– The walking legs are the next pair
– Behind the walking legs are the swimmerets
(flipper-like appendages for swimming)
Examples: crayfish, lobsters, crabs
HORSESHOE CRABS
• Horseshoe crabs are among the oldest
living arthropods!
SPIDERS & INSECTS
• Horseshoe crabs, spiders,
ticks, and scorpions are
chelicerates
– They have 2 pairs of
appendages attached near
the mouth
• One pair are the chelicerae
that includes fangs
• The other pair, the
pedipalps, are modified to
capture prey
– They have two body sections,
a cephalothorax and abdomen
– nearly all have 4 pairs of
walking legs
– They lack antennae
– They respire using book
gills or lungs
•
The largest group of arachnids are spiders!
– Spiders are arthropods that do not have
jaws for chewing, so they must liquefy
their food to swallow it.
– All spiders produce silk which is stronger
than steel!
• To spin silk into webs, spiders force
liquid silk through spinnerets, which
are organs that contain silk glands
ANATOMY OF SPIDER &
GRASSHOPPER
INSECT RESPONSES
Insects use a multitude of
sense organs to respond to
stimuli:
– Compound eyes are
made of many lenses.
– Chemical receptors are
used for taste and smell.
– Sensory hairs detect
slight movements in
surrounding air or water.
– Well developed ears
detect sounds far above
the human range.
INSECT METAMORPHOSIS
•
The growth and development of insects usually involve metamorphosis
– Metamorphosis is the process of changing shape and form
– Most insects undergo either incomplete or complete metamorphosis
• Incomplete metamorphosis: immature nymphs look much like adult
form
• Complete metamorphosis: immature larvae look nothing like parents
INSECT COMMUNICATION &
SOCIETIES
• Many insects
communicate using
chemical signals
called pheromones.
– Insects can also
communicate using sound,
visual, and other types of
signals.
– Insect communication
usually involves finding a
mate.
• Ants, bees, termites, and
some of their relatives
form complex associations
called societies.
– A society is a group of
closely related animals of
the same species that work
together for the benefit of
the whole group.
– Within a society, individuals
may be specialized to
perform particular tasks in
groups called castes.
PHYLUM ECHINODERMATA –
STARFISH, SEA URCHINS, SAND
DOLLARS & SEA CUCUMBERS
Eyespot
Endoskeletal plates
Anus
Stomach
Digestive glands
Ring canal
Radial canal
Madreporite
Reproductive glands
Tube foot
Sucker
KEY CHARACTERISTICS
3 germ layers present
Bilateral & Radial
symmetry (adults)
No cephalization in
adults
True coelom present
Segmentation present
Movement Tube feet &
water vascular system
Anus forms first –
deuterostome!!! (the only
invertebrate deuterostome)
Basic body parts: spiny
skin, endoskeleton, water
vascular system, tube feet
– Ex: starfish, sea urchins, sand
dollars, sea cucumbers
ENDOSKELETON & WATER
VASCULAR SYSTEM
• Echinoderms are characterized • A unique feature of
echinoderms is a system of
by spiny skin, an
internal tubes called a water
endoskeleton (internal
vascular system:
skeleton), a water vascular
– This system is filled with fluid
system, and suction-cuplike
and carries out many
structures called tube feet.
– Most adult echinoderms
exhibit five-part radial
symmetry
– The body parts are arranged
around a central body like the
spokes of a wheel
essential body functions
(respiration, circulation,
movement)
– It opens to the outside
through filter-like structures
called madreporites
• A tube foot is a structure
that operates much like a
suction cup
CLASSES OF
ECHINODERMS
•
•
•
•
•
Sea urchins and sand dollars
– Unique echinoderms in having
large, solid plates that form a box
around their internal organs
– Many detritivores & Grazers
Brittle Stars
– Common in coral reefs; detritivores &
filter feeders
– Can shed one or more arms if
attacked; arm will distract their
predators
Sea Cucumbers
– Look like pickles; detritus feeders
that move across sea floor
Sea Stars
– Carnivorous & prey on bivalves
– Can repair itself when pulled
apart, each section can become a
new sea star if a portion of the
central cavity still remains.
Sea Lilies and Feather Stars
– Filter feeders with long, feathery arms
– Common in tropical oceans around
coral reefs
ECHINODERMS