Invertebrates
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Transcript Invertebrates
Animals with out Backbones
Asymmetrical animals that are a variety of colors, shapes, and
sizes
Sponges
Phylum Porifera- means pore-bearer
Sessile organisms
Filter Feeders
Feed by filtering small particles of food from water
Reproduction
Hermaphrodites- produce both sperm and eggs
Fertilization
Internal
External
Jellyfish, Corals, and Sea Anemones
Cnidarians
Two body forms
Polyp- the stage that has a tube-shaped body form with
a mouth surrounded by tentacles
Medusa- body form shaped like an umbrella with
tentacles hanging down
Digestion
Nematocyst- a capsule that contains a coiled, threadlike
tube that may be sticky or barbed and contain a toxin.
Capture prey
Gastrovascular Cavity- a space inside the body where
digestion takes place, one opening (Mouth)
Cnidarians
Nerve Net
Conducts nerve impulses from all parts of the body
No control center
Impulses produce contractions of the muscle like cells
Reproduction
Asexually- budding of the polyp
Sexually- eggs and sperm released into the water
Tapeworms, Flukes, Planarians
Flatworms
Contain a brain like structure called the Ganglion
Sends messages to body through two nerve cords
Receive messages from Eyespots and Sensory Pits
Digestive System
Contains one opening the Mouth
Tapeworms and Flatworms are parasitic
Roundworms
Smaller then Flatworms
Tapered at both ends
First Animals with two openings in the digestive
system
Free-living and Parasitic
Mollusks
Bilateral Symmetry
Two body openings
Muscular Foot
Mantle
A thin membrane that surrounds the internal organs
Secretes the shell
Mollusks
Gastropods- one shelled mollusk
Stomach-footed
Includes
Snails, Slugs, and Sea Slugs
Simple Nervous System
Small Brain and associated nerves
Circulatory System
Contain a heart
Have open circulatory system- heart pumps blood to vessels then to
open spaces
First with Respiratory structures called Gills
First with Evolved Excretory structures
Nephridia- organs that remove waste from body
Mollusks
Bivalves- two shelled mollusks
Clams, oysters, and scallops
Sessile animals- filter feed
Cephalopods- head footed mollusks
Octopus, squid and chambered nautilus
Closed Circulator System
Foot is Tentacles
Advanced Nervous System
Bristleworms, Earthworms, Leeches
Segmented Worms
Body divided into Segments
Allows for specialization
Bilateral with two digestive openings
Jointed-Leg Animals
Arthropods
Jointed appendages allowed for more powerful movements
and increased locomotion
Exoskeleton-protects and provides structure for internal
organs
Most Molt (Shedding of Exoskeleton) in order to increase
size
Respiration- three types of respiration structures
Gills- Crabs, Lobsters
Tracheal Tubes- branching networks of hollow air passages
with openings in side called Spiracles- Insects
Book Lungs- air-filled chambers that contain leaflike platesSpiders
Arthropods
Groups of Arthropods
Arachnids- Spiders, Scorpions, Mites, Ticks
Crustaceans- Crabs, Lobsters, Shrimps, Crayfish,
Barnacles, water fleas, Pill bugs
Centipedes
Millipedes
Insects
Starfishes, Brittle Stars, Sea Urchins and Sand Dollars, Sea
Cucumbers, Sea Lilies and Feather Stars
Echinoderms
Contain an Internal Skeleton
Radial Symmetry
Water Vascular System- used to move, exchange gas,
capture food, and excrete waste
Tube-Feet with Suction Cups on the end with the
Ampulla (round muscular structure) on the opposite
end that works like an eyedropper
Hydraulic water pressure system
Simple Nervous System-Nerve Net with cells that
detect light and touch
Sea Squirts and Lancelets
Invertebrate Chordates
Contain no Backbone
All Chordates have the following
Notochord- long, semi-ridgid, rod-like structure
Dorsal Nerve Cord- a bundle of nerves housed in a
fluid filled canal above the notochord
Gill Slits
Invertebrate Chordates
Sea Squirts
Sessile
As adults the y only contain Gill Slits
As larva they posses all the features common to
chordates
Lancelets
Retain all Chordate features in Adult life
Live in Borrows