Phylum Platyhelminthes
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Transcript Phylum Platyhelminthes
Phylum
Platyhelminthes
Flatworms
Introduction
• # of species: 13,000
• Size: wide range, from very small to very long/big
• 2 type of bodies:
▫ 1) Slender and leaflike
▫ 2) Long and ribbonlike
• 2 types of symbiotic relationships
▫ 1. Free living
▫ 2. Parasites
▫ Adaptations: Organs that help them stick to host
Acoelomate
• Lack a coelom
or pseudocoelom
Characteristics
Diploblastic vs. Triploblastic
• Triploblastic – Organisms with three germ layers
▫ 1. Endoderm
Def – digestive system comes from this
▫ 2. Ectoderm
Def – nervous system comes from this
▫ 3. Mesoderm
Def – Muscular system and reproductive organs comes from
this
Human development (germ layers)
Characteristics
• Symmetry: Bilateral
▫ Description: True anterior and posterior end
• Body: Flattened
• Internal area: One space (with all organs contained
within it)
• Head region: Cephalization present
▫ This is when animals have a well defined head
region
Characteristics
• Excretory system/Osmoregulatory
▫ Main cell type: Flame cell
Description:
Bulb shaped
Function: Excretion of wastes
Consist of: Large amount of cilia (hair-like
appendages), long canals that run the length of
the body
Location: Along the length of body
Flame Cell
Characteristics
• Digestive system: Incomplete (mouth, pharnyx
and intestine)
• Nervous system
▫ Description: pair of ganglia (concentrations of
nervous tissue/cells)
▫ Longitudinal nerve cords
▫ Bilobed brain
▫ Ocelli - light sensitive eyespot
▫ Neurons – sensory, motor and association types
• Muscular system
▫ Description: layers of circular, diagonal and
longitudinal fibers beneath the epidermis
• Epidermis
▫ Cellular or syncytial (nuclei not separated by cell
membrane)
▫ Some are ciliated
▫ Often described as “tegument” rather than a true
epidermis
▫ Unsure if this arrangement relates to parasitism
Characteristics
• Respiratory system
▫ NO real respiratory organs
• Circulatory system
▫ NO real circulatory organs
• Skeletal system
▫ NO skeletal system
Characteristics
• Reproductive System
▫ Most are monoecious
Def: have BOTH male/female reproductive
parts in the SAME individual
▫ Practice cross-fertilization
▫ Asexual reproduction by fission
▫ Regeneration of missing parts
Reproductive System
Have complex
reproductive
systems - well
developed gonads
and accessory
reproductive
organs
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Platyhelminthes
Class Turbellaria
Ex. Planarians
Most are free-living (do not rely on host to live)
Mostly marine/salt-water
Body: soft, flattened
carnivorous
Class
Turbellaria
Prostheceraeus
Class Turbellaria
Dugesia (Ex: Planaria)
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Platyhelminthes
Class Trematoda
Ex. Lung, liver and blood flukes
Symbiotic relationship: parasitic (live in host and harm
the host)
Body: soft, flattened
Oral and ventral suckers with no hooks
Cause Schistosomiasis
▫ Description: world’s second most common infectious
disease, causes severe diarrhea
Liver Fluke Life Cycle
Class Trematoda
Liver and Blood
Flukes
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Platyhelminthes
Class Cestoda
Ex. Ribbon worms, tapeworms
Symbiotic relationship: parasites OR free-living
Body: flat, ribbon-like segmented body
Digestion: No digestive tract so dependent on
host’s digestion
Tegument covered in microthrix (similar to
microvilli which increases surface area)
Scolex
• most specialized structure
• Organ of attachment
Class Cestoda
Ribbon Worms
Class Cestoda
Tape Worms
Phylum
Nematoda (Nemata)
Roundworms
Origin and Diversity
• Location in world: Live everywhere! (oceans,
freshwater, soil, polar regions, tropical zones,
mountains)
• Simplest organism to have complete digestive tract
( mouthanus)
• # of species: hundreds of thousands
• Symbiotic relationship: free-living and parasitic
▫ Ex: Pinworms
▫ Pinworms: can affect crops, domestic animals and humans,
infect 30% of all US children
Characteristics
•
•
•
•
Symmetry: Bilateral
Unsegmented
Germ layers: Triploblastic (three layers)
Adults have a pseudocoelom
▫ Def: closed fluid-filled space acting as a hydrostatic
skeleton
▫ Description: tube-within-a-tube
▫ Function: aids in circulation and dispersal of nutrients and
movement of organism
• Body wall: thickened cuticle
▫ Description: Hardened protective covering
• Muscle layers: mostly longitudinal
Characteristics
• Digestive system
▫ Complete digestive system
▫ “Tube within a tube” arrangement
▫ Food comes in through mouth, leaves through
anus
• Circulatory system
▫ NO true circulatory system/organs
▫ Hydrostatic skeleton – aids in moving materials
• Respiratory system
▫ NO true respiratory system/organs
Characteristics
• Excretory System
▫ Contain a cloaca
▫ A cavity that receives excretory and reproductive systems
products
Nervous System
▫ Cerebral ganglia (nerve ring)
▫ Nerve ring is connected anterior and posterior nerves
▫ Contain many sensory organs (cilia, bristles, eyespots)
• Reproductive System
▫ Contain gonads
▫ Sexes usually separate
▫ Males are smaller than females
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Nematoda
• Examples: Pinworm, filarial worms, Ascaris,
hookworms
• Can be parasitic
▫ Cause: Elephantiasis, inflammation of limbs, death, hearing
loss, intestinal irritation/diarrhea
Trichinella
spiralis
Ingestion of infected muscle
Taenia solium
Pork tapeworm
Trichuris trichiura
“whipworm”
Ascaris lumbricoides
Intestinal
Roundworm
Dirofilaria immitis
Dracunculus medinensis
Phylum
Mollusca
Mollusks
Origin and Diversity
• # of species: 100,000
• Classified by shell type, foot structure and
internal body organization
• Mollusca, means “soft animal”
▫ From the Latin word Mollis which means soft
Characteristics
• Development
▫ Torsion – twisting of the body
Causes the mantle to rest over the head
Allows for body to face the incoming current (of water), so that they
can stay attached to rock surface
• Symmetry: Bilateral
▫ Usually have definite head region
• Bodies: Soft
▫ Some have a protective shell (snail)
▫ Others may have 2 shells (clams) OR internal shell
(octopus)
Characteristics
• Mantle
▫ Soft outer tissue layer
▫ Contained on DORSAL body wall
▫ Secretes a protective shell
• Mantle Cavity
▫ Forms between the mantle and other body tissues
▫ Holds respiratory organs (gills OR lungs)
• Muscular Foot
▫ Used for locomotion
Characteristics
• Visceral Mass/ Coelom
▫ Contains most of mollusk’s internal organs
Includes: heart, gonads, stomach, kidneys
• Circulatory System
▫ Open circulatory system
Blood flows freely over body tissues
Blood is enclosed in vessels in some places
▫ Vessels are open ended
▫ Heart has three chambers
Characteristics
• Digestive System
▫ Digestive tract has two openings
▫ Contains a rasping organ called radula
▫ Anus empties into mantle
• Respiratory System
▫ Gas exchange may occur in gills, lungs, mantle or body
surface
• Reproductive System
▫
▫
▫
▫
Most have separate sexes
All reproduce sexually
Internal fertilization: Squid, some snails
External fertilization: Clams, oysters
Characteristics
• Nervous System
▫ Some have simple system
▫ Contain sensory organs
Touch, smell, taste, vision
▫ Eyes are highly developed
▫ Some contain ganglia: centralized nerve ring
Others have pairs of ganglia
▫ Octopus have very complex nervous systems
Characteristics
• Movement
▫
▫
▫
▫
May slide (snail, slug)
Bury foot and use as a shovel (clams)
Expel water quickly (squid, octopus)
Sessile (don’t move)
• Shell
▫ Made of calcium carbonate
Fossilizes easily
Explains rich fossil record
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Mollusca
Class Polyplacophora
Marine organisms
▫ Found on hard sea bottoms/rocky coasts
▫ Can withstand strong waves
▫ How? By attaching its strong “foot” to rocks
Breathe? Gills along the side of body
Eat? Use? Radula to scrape algae off rocks
Some are predatory (hunt others for food)
Other: Little use to humans (some can be eaten)
Class Polyplacophora
• Ex. Chitons
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Mollusca
Class Gastropoda
Ex. Snails, slugs
Body: Coiled in shape
Head: Well developed
Feeding: Use radula
# of species:
▫ over 40,000
Class
Gastropoda
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Mollusca
Class Bivalvia
# of species: 15, 000
Includes: Clams, oysters
# of shells: two (Bi = two)
Feeding: Filter feeders
Class Bivalvia
Classification
• Kingdom Animalia
▫ Phylum Mollusca
Class Cephalopoda
Includes: Squid, octopus
Shell: Reduced or absent
Head:
▫ Contains well developed eyes
▫ Contains arms and tentacles
Ganglia
▫ Centralized (form a brain)
Class Cephalopoda