Worms and Mollusks
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Transcript Worms and Mollusks
WORMS AND MOLLUSKS
Biology 112
FLATWORMS
Phylum Platyhelminthes
Soft, flattened worms with tissues and
internal organ systems
The simplest animals with three germ layers,
bilateral symmetry and cephalization
Acoelomates
No coelom between the tissues of flatworms
A coelom is a fluid-filled body cavity that is
lined with tissue in the mesoderm
BODY FUNCTIONS OF FLATWORMS
All use diffusion for distribution of
nutrients and gases
Some have specialized flame cells used
to remove excess water from the body
Contain a digestive cavity with one
opening – a mouth
A muscular tube, called a pharnyx,
pumps food into the digestive cavity
CLASSIFICATION OF FLATWORMS
1. Tubellarians
-
Free-living flatworms,
can live in fresh and
salt water
Ganglia control the
nervous system
Some contain an
eyespot to detect light
Reproduce asexually
and sexually
Planarians are the
most familiar species
CLASSIFICATION OF FLATWORMS
2. Flukes
- Parasitic
- Infect the internal
organs of their host
- Reproduce sexually
in the primary host
and asexually in the
intermediate host
CLASSIFICATION OF FLATWORMS
3. Tapeworms
- long, flat parasitic
flatworms
- Live in the intestines
of their hosts
ROUNDWORMS
Phylum Nematoda
Unsegmented worms that have
pseudocoeloms
A body cavity that lies between the
endoderm and the mesoderm
tissues
Also have a digestive system with a
mouth and an anus
ROUNDWORMS AND BODY FUNCTIONS
Rely on diffusion for respiration,
circulation and excretion
Muscles and fluid in the
pseudocoelom act as a hydrostatic
skeleton
Reproduce sexually by internal
fertilization
CHARACTERISTICS OF ROUNDWORMS
Most are free-living
but some are
parasitic
Parasitic include:
Trichinosis-causing
worms
Filarial worms
Ascarid worms
Hookworms
ANNELIDS
Phylum Annelida
Earthworms
Segmented bodies
Have a true coelom that is lined with tissue from the
mesoderm
Internal walls called septa separate the segments
that divide the body
Most segments are similar to one another
A few are specialized with eyes or antennae
Many have bristles called setae attached to each
segment
INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF ANNELIDS
Complex organ structures
Many contain a pharynx that is used to get
their food
Food moves through the crop, where it is
stored
Then moves to the gizzard, an organ that
grinds it into smaller pieces
Have a closed circulatory system in which
blood is contained in vessels
EARTHWORMS
Class Oligochaeta
Hermaphroditic
Has both male and female reproductive
organs
When eggs are ready to be fertilized, a
clitellum, a band of thickened segments,
secretes a mucous ring in which fertilization
takes place
Streamlined body with few setae
Can live in fresh water or soil
MOLLUSKS
Phylum Mollusca
Soft-bodied animals that often have
an internal or external shell
Many have a larval stage called a
trochophore
Can be herbivores, carnivores,
detritophores or parasites
BODY PARTS OF A MOLLUSK
Foot
Used for crawling,
burrowing and capturing
prey
Mantle
A thin layer of tissue that
covers most of the body
Visceral mass
Makes up the internal
organs
Shell
Glands secrete calcium
carbonate
BODY SYSTEMS OF THE MOLLUSK
Either closed or open circulatory systems
When it is closed, blood is pumped
through vessels into a large saclike
structures called sinuses
When it is open, blood is contained in
blood vessels throughout the body
Nervous systems varies from simple to
complex
CLASSIFICATION OF MOLLUSKS
Gastropods
Includes pond snails and land slugs
Single-shelled or shell-less
Move by using a muscular foot on their left ventral side
Use a flexible tongue called a radula to eat
Bivalves
Clams, oysters, mussels and scallops
Two-shells held together by muscles
Cephalopods
Includes octopus and squid
Soft-bodied mollusks in which the head is attached to a single
foot
Foot is divided into tentacles
Small internal shells or no shell at all
Have complex sense organs