Biology Chapter 27 (Worms and Mollusks)
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Transcript Biology Chapter 27 (Worms and Mollusks)
Worms and Mollusks
Chapter 27
Phylum:Platyhelminthes
(flat) (worm)
Simplest bilateral symmetric animals
showing a head and tail region.
3 layers: endoderm, ectoderm,
mesoderm
Known as acoelomates (without a
coelom)
coelom : a fluid-filled body cavity
General body structure:
Feeding
Free-living flatworms
Tiny
can eat:
aquatic animals
Dead animals
Single opening to function as a mouth and
anus.
Possess a pharynx
Respiration, circulation,
excretion
Breath
through
diffusion
Flame cells:
specialized cells
used for
removing excess
water.
Planarians (c. Turbellaria)
Free-living
freshwater flatworm.
Possess a digestive tract, mouth,
pharynx, and branched intestine.
Feed on small microscopic animals
No skeletal,circulatory,or
respiratory system
Planarians continued
Small
brain with
two nerve cords
Hermaphrodites
Internal
fertilization
Can also
reproduce
asexually.
Parasitic flukes (c. Trematoda)
Usually two or
more hosts. (Page
687)
Primary host:
human (site of
asexual
reproduction)
Causes the disease
schistosomiasis
Tapeworms (c. Cestoda)
Parasites. Example: beef tapeworm
Head region (scolex) : contains suckers and
hooks used to attach to a host organism.
Proglottids : square body segments used for
reproduction
Phylum: Nematoda
(roundworms)
Long cylindrical bodies
Often covered with a thick cuticle
1 mm to 1 meter in length
Both free-living and parasitic
*** 2 body openings***
Major difference from the flatworms
Food and wastes will NOT be mixed
Form and function
Eat small animals, bacteria, algae,
fungi, etc
Exchange gases through diffusion
Possess a simple nervous system
Move through contracting muscles
Reproduce sexually
Trichina worm
Causes trichinosis
Often present in pigs. Grow to about one
millimeter in length and become cysts in pig
muscles.
People eat contaminated pork and larval
cysts develop into adults in human
intestines.
New larvae can end up in human muscles.
Ways to prevent trichinosis:
1.
2.
3.
Thoroughly cook pork products
Feed hogs uncontaminated feed
Freeze pork immediately after packaging
Filaria
Roundworm that
causes the disease
elephantiasis.
Carried by mosquitoes
Infects bloodstream
and blocks lymph
nodes resulting in
severe swelling.
Ascarid worms
Affects
more
than 1 billion
people
Affect people,
horses, pigs,
chicken, cattle,
dogs, cats etc.
Pinworms and Hookworms
PINWORMS
Most common nematode infection in N.
America
Especially infants and toddlers.
HOOKWORMS
Often
will enter
through the feet.
Common in areas
where sewage
disposal is
inadequate
Phylum: Annelida
Also known as the segmented worms.
The body is divided into separate body
segments.
Marine,fresh water,and on land.
Parasitic and free-living. ex.
…more annelid facts
“tube within a tube” body plan.
Closed circulatory system, 2 openings
respiration
Aquatic annelids breathe using gills
Land-dwelling annelids breathe through the
skin
excretion
Nephridia
: excretory organs
that filter nitrogenous waste in
the ceolom.
Reproduction
Hermaphroditic. eggs and sperm released at
the clitellum
C.
Oligochaeta
First segment = prostomium
Setae = small hair-like extensions
on ventral surface used for
locomotion.
Possess many “hearts”
The “hearts” of an earthworm:
Ecology of Earthworms
Help to aerate the soil
2) Provide nutrients in to the soil in
fecal matter
3) Participate in a wide range of
food chains
1)
Mainly
freshwater.
Suckers on both ends of body
Saliva of leeches contain enzymes
that prevent blood from clotting
(anticoagulants)
Leech Anatomy
Attaches
to prey with posterior sucker,
and uses anterior sucker to “suck”
blood.
Medicinal uses of leeches
Used
to be used for “leeching” by early
physicians to rid a sick person of “bad”
blood.
Still used in surgery to prevent blood
clotting and unwanted swelling due to
excess blood.
Phylum: Mollusca
Second largest phyla of animals after the
arthropods.
Found in fresh water, salt water, and on land
ex.
Mollusk characteristics:
Soft bodies, 3 cell tissue layers
Many are used for food and jewelry
Possess a foot = large ventral muscle used
for movement.
Most have a radula (exception: bivalves)
Mantle - fold of skin that surrounds the
body organs
1. bivalves
2 parts to their shells.
Strong adductor muscles to keep the shell
closed
Incurrent siphon – carries water and food
into the mantle cavity
Excurrent siphon – siphon where water is
expelled.
Examples of bivalves:
pearls
Mother-of-pearl inner
smooth part of bivlave
shell.
Made primarily by
oysters when a foreign
object gets lodged
inside between mantle
and shell.
Come in many colors
Reproduction and nutrition
Bivalves
are filter-feeders. (plankton
and small invertebrates)
Separate sexes
Sperm is released by the excurrent
siphon and enters a female via the
incurrent siphon where fertilization
takes place.
2. gastropods
Largest class of mollusks
Most possess a single shell.exception: slug
3. cephalopods
Most advanced mollusks
All are marine predators
Use tentacles to gather and manipulate food
Can swim rapidly by expelling a jet of
water from their mantle cavity.
Some may discharge an inky fluid for
defense
Octopus (8 arms) squid (10 tentacles)
examples: