Topic 13a - Animals I: Invertebrates Flashcards
Key features of animals?
Multicellular No cell wall Heterotrophic Reproduce sexually Motile at some point in their lives Can respond rapidly to external stimuli All animals have an upper (dorsal) and lower (ventral) surface
Major evolutionary advances?
Tissues
Radial=>bilateral symmetry
Protosome=>deutrosome body plan
cuticle moulted => cuticle not moulted
The only animal w/out tissue is?
A sponge (extant group)
A bit about the development of tissues?
Organisation of cells into groups that function as a unit
Coincident w/ development of symmetry
Symmetry is described as which 2 types?
Radial
Bilateral
Which animals have radial symmetry?
Cnidarians (sea jelly, coral, anemones)
Ctenophores (comb jellies)
Which animals have bilateral symmetry?
All except cnidarians & ctenophores
Radially symmetrical animals have?
2 germ layers
typically sessile or drifters
sensory organs distributed evenly around body
no body cavity
Bilaterally symmetrical animals have?
3 germ layers
typically motile
sensory organs & neurons concentrated in head region (cephalisation)
often possess body cavity
Animals w/ bilateral symmetry have how many body plans? Names? Description?
3.
Acoelomates: no separation b/w body wall & digestive tract
Coelomates: digestive tract is in cavity lined completely w/ mesoderm
Pseudocoelomates: body cavity is partially lined w/ mesoderm
See lect. diagram
The distinction b/w protosomes & deutrosomes is based on?
embryonic development
A bit about Protosomes?
“first mouth”
- invagination at gastrula stage becomes the mouth
- incl. roundworms, flatworms, segmented worms, molluscs, arthropods
A bit about Deutrosomes?
“second mouth”
- invagination of gastrula becomes the anus; mouth forms secondarily
- incl. echindoderms & chordates
A bit about moulting in protosomes?
Cuticle is shed periodically (arthropods, roundworms)
Cuticle is not shed (flatworms, segmented worms, molluscs)
List of invertebrates: (phylums)
Porifera Cnidaria Platyhelminthes* Annelida Mollusca Arthropoda* Nematoda Echinodermata
A bit about phylum porifera?
Sponges
mainly in saltwater
repro is sex. or asex. (budding)
No true tissues, but 3 cell types:
epithelial (outer surfaces)
collar (Move h2o through pores via flagella for filtering)
ameboid (move b/w epithelial & collar, digest food, move nutrients around, produce repro cells)
A bit about phylum cnidaria?
jelly fish, anemones, coral
mostly saltwater
all are carnivores -use stinging cells
Two tissue types:
contractile
nerve
Two basic body plans:
polyp (sessile, tubular)
medusa (floating, bell shaped)
A bit about phylum platyhelminthes? **
Flatworms
free living or parasitic
repro sex. or asex (regeneration)
most are hermaphroditic & can self fertilise
possess simple tissues (eye spots, ganglia, nerve cord)
No circulatory or respiratory systems
A bit about parasitic platyhelminthes?
Repro, sexually
Major groups: cestodes (tapeworms) & trematodes (flukes)
Require primary & secondary hosts
-primary is usually vertebrate digestive tract
-2ndary can be vertebrate (tapeworm) or mollusc (fluke)
A bit about phylum annelida?
segmented worms
segmented body
-contributes to complex movement
-each seg. has same muscle groups. excretory organs etc
Repro is sex. (two sexes or hermaphro) or asex (regen)
Closed circulatory system
Tubular, one way gut.
Ladder like nervous system (simple brain in head region, paired ganglia in each seg.)
A bit about phylum mollusca?
clams, snails, slugs, squids, octopods sessile or motile open circulatory sys. Simple nervous sys. repro is sex. 3 major groups: -gastropods (snail/slug) -Bivalves (clams, scallops, mussels, oysters) -Cephalopods (squids, octopuses, cuttlefish, nautiluses)
A bit about phylum arthropoda?**
insects, spiders, arachnids, myriapods & crustaceans
“joint-legged” animals
possess exoskeleton that is periodically shed
special adaptations of arthropods?
Body segments organised in tagma (head, thorax, abdomen)
Tracheal system for gas exchange (series of 02 carrying tubes)
cuticle to prevent water loss
wings for flight (insects)
Metamorphosis (transition through very different life forms adapted for diff. purposes:
-larva (obtaining nutrients)
-pupa (transitional stage)
-adult (repro)
A bit about phylum nematoda?
roundworms ubiquitous (?) Decomposers or parasites simple structure-no circulatory sys. -no respiratory sys. Repro is sex. Parasites can cause disease of plants or animals