Lesson 2 | Invertebrate Phyla Student Labs and Activities Page Appropriate For: Launch Lab 25 all students Content Vocabulary ELL 26 all students Lesson Outline ELL 27 all students MiniLab 29 all students Content Practice A 30 AL AL AL Content Practice B 31 AL OL BL Math Skills 32 all students School to Home 33 all students Key Concept Builders 34 Enrichment 38 Challenge 39 Skill Practice 40 AL AL AL all students AL AL BL all students Assessment Lesson Quiz A 42 AL AL AL Lesson Quiz B 43 AL OL BL Teacher Support Answers (with Lesson Outlines) OL On Level BL Beyond Level ELL English-Language Learner Teacher evaluation will determine which activities to use or modify to meet any ELL student’s proficiency level. 24 Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. AL Approaching Level T4 Name Date Launch Lab Class LESSON 2: 10 minutes What does an invertebrate look like? Some invertebrates have features that are similar to yours, such as eyes and legs. Others have little in common with you. What do you see when you look at invertebrates close-up? Procedure 1. Read and complete a lab safety form. 2. Examine a collection of invertebrates, and record your observations in your Science Journal. 4. Make a Venn diagram in your Science Journal to compare similarities and contrast differences among invertebrates. 3. Use a magnifying lens to further examine the invertebrates. Record any additional observations. Think About This Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1. Which two invertebrates were the most dissimilar? Why? 2. Did you see any details using a magnifying lens that you missed by looking just with your eyes? 3. Key Concept What characteristics do you think all the invertebrates you looked at have in common? Animal Diversity 25 Name Date Class Content Vocabulary LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Directions: In this word search puzzle, find and circle the three terms below. On each line, write the term from the word bank that correctly completes each sentence. NOTE: You may need to change a term to its plural form. appendage exoskeleton internal M K V K S E J K A X I X C U H P H R N P S U O O R Y J K I X P H G J I S G D N N R E X H D Y X K T X Q T N C V P A E E E I E C D O J Q C R S X L F D A O O B N M D M U E F G O N A V S I Q L C T E Q L N S A D K U P Z O J S U W O Y W O Z Q E N 1. One main characteristic of arthropods is that they have pairs of jointed . 2. Unlike vertebrates, invertebrates have no support structures. 3. Insects, spiders, shrimp, and other arthropods have outer coverings, also called , that protect and support their bodies. 26 Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. E Name Date Class Lesson Outline LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla A. Characteristics of Invertebrates 1. In most cases, invertebrates have no structures to help support their bodies. 2. Invertebrates also tend to be and to move more than vertebrates. 3. Each invertebrate phylum contains animals with body plans and physical characteristics. B. Sponges and Cnidarians 1. The simplest of the invertebrates are the to the phylum , which belong . 2. All sponges are and have no tissues, , or organ systems. 3. The phylum includes jellyfish and corals. a. Unlike sponges, cnidarians have symmetry. Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. b. Cnidarians have that are used for capturing food. C. Flatworms and Roundworms 1. All flatworms have symmetry with nerve, muscle, and digestive and a simple 2. Roundworms, also called phylum . , belong to the . a. A roundworm’s digestive system has two openings: a(n) and a(n) . b. Unlike flatworms, the bodies of roundworms are covered with a stiff outer covering called a(n) and . D. Mollusks and Annelids 1. The phylum includes snails, slugs, clams, and squid. a. All mollusks have symmetry. b. Mollusk bodies are , and some species have hard that protect their bodies. Animal Diversity 27 Name Date Class Lesson Outline continued 2. The phylum includes earthworms, leeches, and marine worms. a. Annelid worms have symmetry and bodies. b. Annelid bodies consist of repeating thin covered with a . E. Arthropods 1. The phylum includes insects, spiders, shrimp, crabs, and their relatives. 2. All arthropods have , which are thick, hard outer coverings that protect and support animals’ bodies. 3. Arthropods have several pairs of jointed , which are structures, such as a leg or an arm, that extend from the central part of the body. 4. All species have three pairs of jointed legs, three body segments, a pair of antennae, and a pair of compound eyes. 5. Spiders, ticks, and scorpions are ; they have pairs of jointed legs and two body segments and and . 6. Crabs, shrimp, and lobsters are two pairs of ; they have one or and jointed . F. Echinoderms 1. The phylum includes sea stars, sea cucumbers, and sea urchins. 2. Echinoderms are more closely related to than to any other phylum. 3. All echinoderms have symmetry. 4. Unlike any other phyla, echinoderms have hard embedded in the skin that support the body and fluid-filled tubes called that allow them to move. 5. Echinoderms have a complete digestive system with a(n) and a(n) 28 . Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. lack Name Date MiniLab Class LESSON 2: 20 minutes How does your arm move? Both arthropods and mammals have jointed appendages. Try doing some simple tasks without bending your appendages to understand how useful jointed appendages are. Procedure 1. Using newspaper and masking tape, wrap your partner’s arm at the elbow so he or she cannot bend it. observations and your partner’s experiences in the table in the Data and Observations section below. 2. Ask your partner to perform the tasks in the data table below. Record your Data and Observations Task Completed? (yes/no) How was behavior changed? Walk 5 m. Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Take a drink of water. Lay down on the ground and then stand up. Analyze and Conclude 1. Summarize Rank the tasks in order from hardest to easiest to perform without jointed appendages. What made the tasks harder to perform? 2. Infer What activities that you must perform in order to survive are impossible without jointed appendages? 3. Key Concept Explain how jointed appendages are necessary for arthropods to survive. Animal Diversity 29 Name Date Content Practice A Class LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Directions: On the line before each statement, write the letter of the correct answer. 1. Most invertebrates have no A. body plans B. internal structures C. external characteristics for support. 2. The simplest of all invertebrates are called A. corals. B. hydras. C. sponges. 3. The specialized cells used by cnidarians to capture food are called A. nematodes. B. appendages. C. nematocysts. 4. Echinoderms live only A. in air. B. on land. C. in oceans. 6. The phylum with the most animal species is A. Mollusca. B. Arthropoda. C. Echinodermata. 7. The phylum Platyhelminthes includes A. clams. B. beetles. C. flatworms. 30 Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 5. An arm or leg that extends from the central part of the body is called a(n) A. appendage. B. nematocyst. C. exoskeleton. Name Date Content Practice B Class LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Directions: Use the diagram to identify characteristics of each invertebrate. Write your answers on the lines provided. Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Sea Anemone Beetle 1. Phylum: 4. Phylum: 2. Symmetry: 5. Symmetry: 3. Unique characteristic: 6. Unique characteristic: Sea Urchin 7. Phylum: 8. Symmetry: 9. Unique characteristic: Animal Diversity 31 Name Date Class Math Skills LESSON 2 Use Percentages Percentages are used to compare a partial amount to a whole amount. A whole amount is equal to 100%. To calculate percentage, multiply a ratio or decimal by 100 and add the 1 is equal to 0.25, which is 25%. percent sign (%). For example, __ 4 You write the number of the whole amount in the denominator of the fraction and the number of the partial amount in the numerator. Scientists have identified about 1,330,000 species of animals. Of those, around 1,270,000 are invertebrates. What percentage of animal species are invertebrates? Step 1 Use the information in the problem to write a fraction. The question asks for the percentage of animal species. Write the number of animal species in the denominator. 1,270,000 _________ 1,330,000 Step 2 Change the fraction to a decimal. 1,270,000 _________ ≈ 0.9549 1,330,000 Step 3 Multiply by 100 and add a % sign. Round to the nearest tenth, if necessary. 0.9549 × 100 = 95.49% ≈ 95.5% 1. Out of every 10,000 described species of nematodes, around 1,875 are parasitic species. What percentage of nematode species are parasitic? 2. Around 98,000 species of arachnids have been described. About 2,000 of those are scorpions. What percentage of arachnid species are scorpions? 32 3. Out of 1,270,000 species of invertebrates, about 900,000 species are arthropods. What percentage of invertebrates are arthropods? 4. All animals are vertebrates or invertebrates. About 60,000 species of vertebrates and about 1,270,000 species of invertebrates are known. What percentage of animals are vertebrates? Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Practice Name Date Class School to Home LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Directions: Use your textbook to complete the activity. Complete the table of invertebrate phyla below. Some answers have been filled in for you. Invertebrate Phyla sponge Distinguishing Characteristics asymmetrical; no tissues, organs, or organ systems; live in water Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Porifera Example Organism Animal Diversity 33 Name Date Key Concept Builder Class LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Key Concept What are the characteristics of invertebrates? Directions: Answer each question on the lines provided. 1. About what percentage of known species are invertebrates? 2. How does the movement of invertebrates compare to that of vertebrates? 3. How does the size of invertebrates compare to that of vertebrates? 5. Do all invertebrates look similar? Explain. 34 Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 4. How does the internal structure of invertebrates compare to that of vertebrates? Name Date Key Concept Builder Class LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Key Concept What are the characteristics of invertebrates? Directions: On each line, give an example of an organism in the phylum and provide a characteristic describing your example. 1. Porifera 2. Cnidaria Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 3. Platyhelminthes 4. Mollusca 5. Annelida 6. Arthropoda 7. Echinodermata Animal Diversity 35 Name Date Class Key Concept Builder LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Key Concept How do the invertebrate phyla differ? Directions: For each set of terms, identify the term that does not belong and explain why it doesn’t. 1. cnidarians, jellyfish, sponges 2. platyhelminthes, radial symmetry, flatworms 3. hydras, nematocysts, roundworms 4. mollusks, octopi, leeches Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 5. slugs, snails, clams 6. shrimp, exoskeleton, jellyfish 7. crustaceans, arachnids, antennae 8. echinoderms, tube feet, crabs 36 Animal Diversity Name Date Class Key Concept Builder LESSON 2 Invertebrate Phyla Key Concept How do the invertebrate phyla differ? Directions: Complete the chart with the correct terms in the space provided. Invertebrate Phyla Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Characteristic Phylum hard plates embedded in the skin 1. bodies made up of repeating segments covered with thin cuticles 2. nematocysts used to capture food 3. soft, flattened bodies only a few cells thick 4. jointed appendages 5. have hard shells to protect soft bodies 6. simplest of all invertebrates 7. Directions: Discuss each question with a partner. Write your answers on the lines provided. 8. In what ways are invertebrate phyla similar? How are they different? 9. How would you identify an unknown invertebrate? Animal Diversity 37 Name Date Enrichment Class LESSON 2 The Invertebrates of a Coral Reef Coral reefs are the most diverse of all marine habitats. They rival rain forests in biodiversity. In addition to fish and many other marine species, coral reefs are home to hundreds of species of invertebrates. surface and can shade out competitors. There are soft corals that wave in the currents, but hard corals are the ones that actually build the reef by leaving behind their stony skeletons when they die. Diverse Residents of the Reefs Where Reefs Grow Fish are not the only life-forms that live on the reef. There are varieties of sea stars, including the black, long-legged brittle star, and unusual and colorful sea cucumbers and slugs as well as long-spined, black sea urchins. Sponges are important in the life of a coral reef. Some sponges have skeletons of calcium and contribute to the mass of a coral reef along with the corals. Giant clams can contribute their shells to the reef as well. Swimming invertebrates of the coral reef include squid, ctenophores, and sea jellies. In the shallow waters, you can find a sea anemone with its tentacles waving in the current. Nearby a colony of tube worms might be doing the same thing to catch drifting food. The coral reef is named for its most famous resident, however. Coral can grow upright like fire coral, or flat like brain coral, or both like elkhorn coral. By growing up and out, elkhorn coral can place its symbiotic algae nearer the sunny Coral reefs grow in clear, sunny, tropical waters. The waters must be clear so the corals’ symbiotic algae can use the energy of the Sun to perform photosynthesis. The waters must be warm so the chemical processes can occur that help coral make calcium carbonate from which the reef is made. Only the thin exterior layer of the reef is living coral. Every successive generation grows on top of the skeletons of the corals that lived before. Threats to Reef Ecosystems Applying Critical-Thinking Skills Directions: Answer each question. 1. Describe How do sponges contribute to the building of a coral reef? 2. Predict Coral reefs occur mainly in warm tropical waters. Where might you look for coral reefs in the far distant future, if the oceans continue to increase in temperature? 3. Infer What does it mean that elkhorn coral can shade out competitors? 38 Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. When coral is stressed, it will evict its algae symbionts. Increasing temperatures are stressing some reefs, and the algae are dying. This causes the coral to have a colorless, bleached-out appearance, and the coral dies, too. This is a process called coral bleaching. Studies have shown that hurricanes have the beneficial effect of cooling the waters around reefs so some of the reefs can recover, at least temporarily. Name Date Class Challenge LESSON 2 Night Crawlers! There are more than a thousand different kinds of earthworms. About thirty species of earthworms live in the United States. One of the most familiar kinds is the common fishing-bait worm called a night crawler, Lumbricus terrestris. These large earthworms are used as bait to catch freshwater fishes and in gardens to produce humus. Write and Illustrate a Brochure about Earthworms Write and illustrate a brochure about how to cultivate earthworms for fun and profit. Begin by doing some research about earthworms. Find the taxonomic classification of the common night crawler. You also should research the structures of this animal. In addition, you should determine what it eats, how it breathes, why it will die if it dries out, how it reproduces, the stages in its life cycle, and how earthworms benefit the environment. Finally, research how to build an earthworm habitat. You can make a brochure by punching holes along the left side of plain, unlined copy paper. Use at least four pages and more if you need them. Weave twine through the holes starting at the top left, turn the twine around at the bottom and weave it back in the other direction to the top. Be sure to weave over and under and reverse to under and over going back. Then tie the twine at the top. Below is an example of how to organize the pages in your brochure. Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. • Put your brochure title on the front page. Then decorate the page and add your name. • On the first inside page of your brochure, provide the taxonomic classification of the common night crawler. Next, diagram an adult worm and label its parts. • On the following pages, briefly describe the information you have discovered about earthworms. For example, include what it eats, how it breathes, why it will die if it dries out, how it reproduces, the stages in its life cycle, how it benefits the environment, and other interesting information you learned in your research. • Next, provide a materials list and instructions for building an earthworm habitat. • Finally, explain how your habitat provides everything the earthworms need. Take research notes and plan your brochure in the space below. Research Notes and Plan: Animal Diversity 39 Name Date Skill Practice Classify Class Lesson 2: 30 minutes How do you build a dichotomous key? A dichotomous key helps you classify animals based on their characteristics. Dichotomous means “divided in two parts.” Each step of the key has two choices. You choose the one that applies to the animal you are studying, and it directs you to the next set of choices. By picking the best choices for an animal’s characteristics, you can classify animals in a list of possibilities. Materials invertebrates magnifying lens Safety Learn It Sorting objects into groups based on common features is called classifying. When classifying, first observe the objects being classified. Then select one feature that is shared by some, but not all, of the objects. Place all the members that share a feature into a subgroup. You can classify members into smaller and smaller subgroups based on characteristics. Try It 1. Read and complete a lab safety form. 2. Study your invertebrate collection. You may want to use a magnifying lens. Step 1 of 3. Now think about the subgroup of animals that have the characteristic in step 1. Divide these animals into two smaller subgroups based on another characteristic. Enter this choice in step 2 of your dichotomous key. 4. Suppose only one animal in your collection falls into a subgroup. Place the identity of the animal in the right column of the table. 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 until the animals are each in their own subgroup and the dichotomous key leads you to the identity of each animal. 40 Animal Diversity Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. your dichotomous key is to divide your collection into two groups based on a characteristic. Use the table below. Name Date Class Skill Practice continued Step Characteristic 1 2 “Go to” / Identity legs present step 2 legs absent step 3 wings present step 4 wings absent pavement ant (Tetramorium caespitum) 3 4 Apply It 6. Identify Remove the labels from your animal collection. Trade your collection and your dichotomous key with a classmate. Identify all the animals in your classmate’s collection using his or her key. Check your answers. 7. Key Concept What characteristics did all the animals you identified have Copyright © Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. in common? Animal Diversity 41