Porifera Phylum Cnidaria Platyhelminthes Nematoda Common Name “Pore bearer” “Stinging Celled” “Flatworms” “Roundworms” Representative(s) sponges jellyfish, sea anemone, hydra planarian, tapeworm, fluke Ascaris, Trichinella, hookworm, pinworm Habitat mostly marine, aquatic mostly marine, aquatic planarian - pond bottom tapeworm - parasitic parasitic, aquatic, terrestrial (complex cycle) Body Plan (symmetry, # germ layers, body cavity) asymmetric 2 germ layers(no mesoderm) acoelomate radial 2 germ layers acoelomate bilateral 3 germ layers ***1st! acoelomate (1st mesoderm so 1st tissues) bilateral 3 germ layers **pseudocoelomate (only!) Food Getting and Digestion “filter feeders” - food with water in incurrent pores, out excurrent pore (osculum) collar cells -draw water/food in, amebocytes -carry food to other cells (ameboid mvmt) sting / paralyze prey using nematocysts on tentacles, then bring food into mouth with tentacles planarian - extends mouth + pharynx like vacuum on pond bottom; 1 anterior + 2 posterior intestines tapeworm - hooks + suckers to attach to host **1st to have mouth and anus so “tube within tube” Circulation (open/closed, imp details) diffusion diffusion diffusion diffusion, smaller vessels Nervous System none really “nerve net” reflex response to touch, chemicals ***1st ~ cephalization Planarian: Primitive brain + longitudinal, transverse nerve cords; eyespots, auricles (“smell”) Tapeworm: reduced reduced in parasitic forms since environment is constant Reproduction Asexual ~ budding Sexual - hermaphroditic, external fertilization Asexual ~ budding Sexual - egg + sperm, larva, goes thru both body forms in process Asexual ~ fragmentation Sexual - hermaphroditic, planarians - cross fertilize tapeworm - self fertilize Complex life cycles male and female worms Respiration diffusion diffusion diffusion diffusion Movement sessile polyp: mainly sessile but 1) glides on base 2) somersaults 3) flips onto tentacles nerves + muscles control mvmt in planarian some free living, some parasitic (depends on stage) Phylum Annelida Mollusca Arthropoda Echinodermata Common Name “segmented worms” “mollusks” “jointed feet” “spiny skinned” Representative(s) Class Oligochaeta - earthworm Class Polychaeta - sandworm Class Hirudinea - leech Chitons Class Gastropoda - snail, slug Class Bivalvia - clam, oyster Class Cephalopoda -octopus, squid, nautilus Subphyla: Trilobitomorpha - extinct Chelicerata - spider (Arachnida) Crustacea - lobster, crab Uniramia - insect (Insecta) centi + millipede (Myriapoda) starfish (sea star) sea urchin sea cucumber sand dollar Habitat terrestrial, aquatic, parasitic mostly marine (not slug etc) terrestrial, aquatic....anywhere! Mostly marine Body Plan (symmetry, # germ layers, body cavity) bilateral 3 germ layers coelomate (**1st true coelom) bilateral 3 germ layers coelomate bilateral 3 germ layers coelomate radial 3 germ layers coelomate Food Getting and Digestion earthworm: mouth - pharynx - buccal cavity - esophagus - crop - gizzard intestine - anus leeches: external parasites - sucker like mouth to hold on, hirudin prevents blood clots... Bivalve (clam): “filter feeder” - in with water thru incurrent siphon caught in mucus on gills - mouth..... Cephalopod: hunts prey; uses tentacles, puts in mouth mouth, appendages, and eating habits adapted for many diff environments + food sources water vascular system (sieve plate + ring, radial canals + tube feet) used to pry open mollusks (bivalves) - extends stomach out mouth into it! Circulation (open/closed, imp details) closed circulatory system aortic arches, dorsal + ventral blood vessels bivalve (clam): open - blood in sinuses bathe tissues cephalopods: closed - (need more O2 since more active) open circulatory system (sinuses) open circulatory system Nervous System suprapharyngeal ganglion (“brain”) + ventral nerve cord, ganglia in each segment... Bivalves: primitive brain, receptors Cephalopods: complex brain, strategy! Open jars, mazes brain, ventral nerve cord, ganglia, tympanum, complex or simple eyes, antennae basic - ring + radial nerves Reproduction hermaphroditic - cross fertilize (adv can mate with any other earthworm!) ; clitellum secretes cocoon over (see parts) male and female internal fertilization bivalve: sperm in incurrent siphon of female; dev outside cephalopod: squid die after octopus female guards cave male + female internal fertilization 1) some just grow up 2) some must molt 3) some undergo metamorphosis - remember diff b/w lobster? Male + female external fertilization bilateral larva settles + devs into radial adult form Respiration diffusion thru moist skin gills gills (lobster), booklungs (spider), tracheal system with spiracles (grasshopper) diffusion across skin gills Movement earthworm: front setae dig in, pull back end along; hind setae dig in, push fwd sandworm: side feet for swimming (parapodia) clams: extend foot in sand, fills with blood like anchor, pulls rest twd foot; scallops: open + close cephalopods: jet of water + tentacles variety: walking legs, swimmerets, wings, ... Watervascular system (canals + tube feet) Excretion nephridia in ea segment put liquid waste out sides “kidney” Malphigian tubules - put liquid wastes into hindgut + out