34-1 Phylum Platyhelminthes
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Transcript 34-1 Phylum Platyhelminthes
Flatworms, Roundworms, &
Rotifers
Chapter 34
Phylum Platyhelminthes
Section 34.1
General Structure:
3 germ layers – ectoderm,
mesoderm, and endoderm
acoelomates
Bilateral symmetry
Anterior and posterior ends
Dorsal and ventral surfaces only
Flat body plan
Flatworms!
General Functions:
Exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide
directly with the environment to cells
by diffusion
No circulatory system or respiratory
system needed
Only one opening where food and
wastes pass through!
Cephalization
Classification:
Four Classes:
1. Turbellaria - non-parasitic
2. Trematoda- parasitic
3. Monogenea - parasitic
4. Cestoda –parasitic
1. Class Turbellaria:
4,500 species
Mostly marine
Swim in wavelike
motion
Glide over solid surfaces
on layer of mucus
Example: Planarian
Dugesia
freshwater
Video
Planarian Body Plan:
Planarian Organ Systems:
Digestive System:
Scavengers & predators
Decaying plants & animal matter
Prey on smaller organism
Pharynx – throat that extends to the
middle of body
video
Planarian Organ Systems:
Excretory System:
Flame Cells – enclosed tufts of cilia that
draw excess water together and
excretes it through pores
video
Planarian Organ Systems:
Nervous System:
Cerebral ganglia: two
clusters of nerve cells at
anterior
“Brain”
Can learn
Eyespots: sense direction
and intensity of light
Other senses: touch, water
currents, chemicals
Planarian Organ Systems:
Reproductive System:
Sexual:
Video
Hermaphrodites
Eggs laid in protective capsule
Hatch in 2-3 weeks
Asexual:
Regeneration
video
2. Class Trematoda &
3. Class Monogenea:
Both are parasitic flukes
Leaf-shaped flatworms
Endoparasites:
Live in blood, intestines, lungs, liver, etc.
Ectoparasites:
Live on external surfaces of aquatic
hosts
Structure of Flukes
Anterior & ventral suckers for
attachment to host
Nervous system like planarian
Except NO eyespots
Tegument – outer layer that
protects from host’s immune and
digestive system
Liver fluke
Reproduction of flukes:
Most are hermaphroditic
May release 10,000+ eggs at a time!
Complicated life cycle (p. 692)
Life Cycle:
Primary host: adult parasite gets
nourishment from this host
Sexual reproduction
Intermediate host: larvae derive
nourishment here
Asexual reproduction
Fluke Diseases in Humans
Swimmer’s itch: minor skin irritation
and swelling
Small brown fluke in lakes (in Ohio)
Dies within skin because humans are not
ideal hosts
Schistomiasis (blood fluke): disease
that causes tissue damage, bleeding,
tissue decay and possible death
Lungs, intestine, bladder, & liver
200 million people affected worldwide
Schistosoma
Animation!
Secondary or
Intermediate host
• snail
Primary host
• human
Swimmer’s itch
4. Class Cestoda
5,000 species of tapeworms
Can live in intestines of most
vertebrates
Enter through undercooked food with
eggs or larvae (cyst)
Symptoms of infection:
Digestive problems
Weight loss
Lack of energy
anemia
Structure:
Tegument to protect from host
Also absorbs nutrients from host
Scolex: knob-shaped organ with
hooks and suckers to attach to host
Proglottids: body sections after a
short neck
Up to 2,000 per tapeworm!
Reproduction:
Hermaphrodites
Each proglottid has ovaries and testes
Filled with 100,000+ eggs each!
Eggs fertilized by sperm of different
proglottid
Life Cycle:
Cysts: dormant larvae surrounded by
protective covering in animal muscle
Phylum Nematoda & Rotifera
Section 34.2
General Characteristics:
Bilateral symmetry
Fluid filled body cavity
pseudocoelomate
Holds internal organs
Storage for sperm & eggs
Supports body
Structure that muscles can contract
against
Phylum Nematoda
Roundworms
Long, slender bodies that taper at
both ends
1mm to 4ft
Digestive tract with 2 openings
Anterior – mouth
Posterior – anus
One directional movement
Continued…
Most have separate sexes
Cuticle – protective covering
Free-living on land, salt and
freshwater
15,000 species known
150 species parasitic to plants and
animals
Humans are host to 50 species!
Ascaris:
Roundworm parasite that
lives in intestine
Pigs, horses, & humans
Can totally block host’s
intestine
Up to a foot in length
Female produces 200,000
eggs/day
Gross!
Life Cycle:
Eggs leave with feces and enter soil
Enter humans with contaminated
food and water
Larvae enter intestines and
move to blood stream, then
lungs, coughed up and swallowed back
to intestines where they mate and reproduce
Hookworms:
Another intestinal parasite
Mouth has cutting plates that clamp
onto intestine wall
Feed on host’s blood which may lead to
anemia
May cause slow mental and physical
development in children
Affects 1 billion people in tropical and
subtropical regions
Hookworm
Enter host by boring through the feet
Life Cycle:
Eggs leave with
feces
Larvae develop in
soil
Enter host’s feet
Hitch a ride with blood to the lungs
Coughed up and swallowed to
intestines where adult develop
Trichinella:
Infect humans and pigs
Adults embed in walls of intestine
Larvae travel via blood to muscles
Form cysts
Humans get it from eating
undercooked pork
Causes disease trichinosis
Muscle pain & stiffness
Can cause death
Other Parasitic Roundworms
1. Pinworm – most common in U.S.
Live and mate in lower intestine
Female crawls out at night and lays eggs
around anus
Person scratches during sleep and
spreads eggs to everything touched
Eggs ingested and hatch
Pinworm
2. Filarial worms – 250 million people
infected in tropics
Found in lymphatic system (collects
excess fluid from blood vessels)
Can cause elephantiasis
Swollen limbs, skin hardens & thickens
Can cause heartworm
in dogs and cats
Spread by mosquitoes
Elephantiasis
Phylum Rotifera
Most are transparent (see-through)
Free-living in freshwater
100 to 50 micrometers
No water = dry up and look like
grains of sand; when water is present
again they go back to normal
Cool adaptation!
Rotifer Structures:
Cilia – sweep food into mouth
Mastax – breaks down food
Stomach
Intestine – absorbs nutrients
Cloaca – digestive, reproductive, and
excretory systems empty here
Universal hole
Flame cells – pull excess water
together
Anus – hole to the outside
Body Parts:
Have cerebral ganglia and eyespots
Reproduction by:
Parthenogenesis – unfertilized eggs
become adult females