Pseudocoelomates - Biology Junction
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Transcript Pseudocoelomates - Biology Junction
Pseudocoelomates
Aschelminths
Achelminth Phyla
Gastrotricha
Rotifera
Kinorhyncha
Nematoda
Nematomorpha
Acanthocephala
Loricifera
Priapulida
Entoprocta
Pseudocoelomates
Define pseudocoelomate.
formed directly from the cavity of the
blastula
The cavity is small
Mostly filled with intestine and oviducts
or testes.
Gastrotricha
Microscopic
Marine and freshwater
species
Common in lakes,
ponds and seashore
sands
Rotifera
Ciliated crown or corona at the anterior end
Carnivorous or parasitic
Most common in freshwater environments
Body structure:
– Head has corona
– Trunk has ridged plates and spines
– Foot has toes for attachment.
Rotifera
Kinorhyncha
About 150 species
Lives in marine
sediment
Uses head as an
anchor, pulls body
after it.
Sexes are separate
Feed on algae and
bacteria
Nematodes
bilaterally symmetrical
worm-like
surrounded by a cuticle secreted by
epidermal cells
longitudinal muscles only
Nervous System - Nematodes
Simple ring of nervous tissue around
pharynx
dorsal and ventral nerve cords running
the length of the body
Nematode Movement
Contract longitudinal muscles
High internal pressure causes the body
to flex
Moves by thrashing back and forth
No cilia or flagella
Excretory Systems
Some have specialized cells that
excrete nitrogenous wastes
Others have canals
Others have canals plus specialized
cells
Nematodes do not have flame cells
Nematode Reproduction
Most nematodes are dioecious
Males use special copulatory spines
The sperm move by pseudopodia, like
amoebas
Nematode Diversity
Close to 500,000 species
Some species are generalists
Others are much more specialized
– one species of nematode is known only
from felt coasters placed under beer mugs
in a few towns in Germany.
Nematode Lifestyles
Many free living
Many also parasitic
Play critical ecological roles as
decomposers and predators on
microorganisms
Nematode-Caused Diseases
Roundworms - more than ½ the world's
humans
Hookworms
Trichinosis
Pinworms infestations - extremely
common parasite in the United States
– can be transmitted from human to human
by eggs floating in household dust
Filariasis (elephantiasis)
Onchocerciasis (river blindness).
Nematomorpha – Horsehair
Worms or Gordian Worms
Up to 1m long, but very slender animals
(1-3mm).
Free-living as adults
Often find adults in very clean streams
Juveniles are Arthropod Parasites
Acanthocephala - spiny headed
worms
2-host parasites
– Must have invertebrate host
Spiny protrusible proboscis
About 1150 species
Dioecious
Both circular and longitudinal
muscles
Acanthocephalans - Nutrition
Nutrition by diffusion
Proboscis attaches to host intestine
Cause extensive damage to the
intestinal walls
Economic importance: Some forms
cause serious discomfort and ill-health
to domestic livestock
Excretion
Protonephridia lined with flame cells
Reproduction
Reproductive structures are contained
in strange ligament sacs.
In males two testes are contained within
this sheath.
Loricifera
Discovered in 1974
Dioecious
Have a large brain
Little else is known
about them.
Priapulida – The Penis Worms
Only 9 species
All marine worms
Found in colder
water
Predaceous
Fossils date back
to Middle
Cambrian.
Entoprocta (Bryozoa)
Ciliary feeding device - LOPHOPHORE
Were known as Bryozoa (moss
animals)
4000 species
Few > 0.5 mm long
All aquatic (marine and freshwater)
Ectoproct Feeding
Entoprocta
Most are colonial
Lives in secreted exoskeleton (zoecium) that
may be:
–
–
–
–
Gelatinous
Chitinous
Stiffened with calcium
Impregnated with sand.
Some ectoprocts could be mistaken for
hydroids but their tentacles are ciliated.
Ectoproct
Colony