Chapter 31: Sponges, Cnidarians, Ctenophores, and Protostomes
The poriferans, or sponges, are characterized by flagellate collar cells (choanocytes), which generate a water current that brings food and oxygen to the cells.
Collar cells also trap and phagocytize food particles.
The sponge body is a sac with tiny openings through which water enters; a central cavity, or spongocoel; and an open end, or osculum, through which water exits.
The cells of sponges are loosely associated; they do not form true tissues.
Cnidarians are characterized by radial symmetry, two tissue layers, and cnidocytes, cells containing stinging organelles called nematocysts.
The gastrovascular cavity has a single opening that serves as both mouth and anus.
Nerve cells form irregular, non directional nerve netsthat connect sensory cells
with contractile and gland cells.
The life cycle of many cnidarians includes a sessile polyp stage (a form with a dorsal mouth surrounded by tentacles) and a free-swimming medusa (jellyfish) stage.
Phylum Cnidaria includes four groups.
Hydrozoa (hydras, hydroids, and the Portuguese man-of-war) are typically polyps and may be solitary or colonial.
Scyphozoa (jellyfish) are generally medusae.
Cubozoa, the “box jellyfish,” have complex eyes that form blurred images.
Anthozoa (sea anemones and corals) are polyps and may be solitary or colonial; anthozoans differ from hydrozoans in the organization of the gastrovascular cavity.
Ctenophores, or comb jellies, are fragile, luminescent marine predators with biradial symmetry.
Ctenophores have eight rows of cilia that resemble combs.
They are diploblastic and have tentacles with adhesive glue cells.
The Lophotrochozoa make up a clade that includes some of the flatworms, nemerteans, mollusks, annelids, the lophophorate phyla, and rotifers.
The true coelom is a fluid-filled body cavity completely lined by mesoderm that lies between the digestive tube and the outer body wall.
The coelom brings about the tube-within-a- tube body plan.
The body wall is the outer tube.
The inner tube is the digestive tube.
The coelom can serve as a hydrostatic skeleton in which contracting muscles push against a tube of fluid.
The coelom is a space in which internal organs, including gonads, can develop; it helps transport materials and protects internal organs.
Cephalization, the evolution of a head with the concentration of sense organs and nerve cells at the anterior end, increases the effectiveness of a bilateral animal to actively find food, shelter, and mates and to detect enemies.
The flatworms are acoelomate (have no coelom) animals with bilateral symmetry, cephalization, three definite tissue layers, and well-developed organs.
Many flatworms are hermaphrodites: a single animal produces both sperm and eggs.
Flatworms have a ladder-type nervous system, typically consisting of sense organs and a simple brain composed of two ganglia.
The ganglia are connected to two nerve cords that extend the length of the body.
Protonephridia function in osmoregulation and disposal of metabolic wastes.
Four groups of flatworms are recognized: class Turbellaria comprises free-living
Flatworms, including planarians; classes Trematoda and Monogenea include the parasitic flukes; and class Cestoda includes the parasitic tapeworms.
The parasitic flukes and tapeworms typically have suckers or hooks for holding on to their hosts; they have complicated life cycles with intermediate hosts and produce large numbers of eggs.
Nemerteans (ribbon worms) are characterized by the proboscis, a muscular tube used in capturing food and in defense.
Nemerteans have a complete digestive tract with mouth and anus, and a circulatory system.
The coelom is reduced.
Mollusks are soft-bodied animals typically covered by a shell.
They have a ventral foot for locomotion and a pair of folds called the mantle that covers the visceral mass, a concentration of body organs.
Mollusks have an open circulatory system except for cephalopods, which have a closed circulatory system.
A rasplike radula functions as a scraper in feeding in all groups except the bivalves, which are filter feeders.
Typically, marine mollusks have a free-swimming, ciliated trochophore larva.
Polyplacophorans are chitons, mollusks with shells consisting of eight overlapping dorsal plates.
The gastropods, which include the snails, slugs, and their relatives, have a well-developed head with tentacles.
The body undergoes torsion, a twisting of the visceral mass.
Bivalves are aquatic clams, scallops, and oysters.
A two-part shell, hinged dorsally, encloses the bodies of these filter feeders.
Cephalopods include the squids, octopuses, and Nautilus.
These active, predatory swimmers have tentacles surrounding the mouth, which is located in the large head.
The annelids, the segmented worms, include many aquatic worms, earthworms, and leeches.
Annelids have long bodies with segmentation both internally and externally; their large, compartmentalized coelom serves as a hydrostatic skeleton.
Polychaetes are marine annelids characterized by parapodia, appendages used for locomotion and gas exchange.
The parapodia bear many bristlelike structures called setae.
Polychaetes also differ from other annelids in having a well-defined head with sense organs.
Oligochaetes, the group that includes the earthworms, are characterized by a few short setae per segment.
The body is divided into more than one hundred segments separated internally by septa.
Leeches belong to the group Hirudinida.
Setae and appendages are absent.
Parasitic leeches are equipped with suckers for holding on to their host.
The lophophorates, marine animals that have a lophophore, include the brachiopods, phoronids, and bryozoans.
The lophophore, a ciliated ring of tentacles surrounding the mouth, is specialized for capturing suspended particles in the water.
Rotifers are pseudocoelomates that are thought to have evolved from animals with a true coelom.
They have a crown of cilia at their anterior end.
Ecdysozoa is one of the three major animal clades; its validity is based on many types of evidence, including molecular data.
Members of this group go through the process of ecdysis, or molting, during which an animal sheds its outer covering; the covering is then replaced by the growth of a new one.
Nematodes, or roundworms, have a pseudocoelom.
The body is covered by a tough cuticle that helps prevent desiccation.
Parasitic nematodes that infect humans include Ascaris, hookworms, trichina worms, and pinworms.
Arthropods are segmented animals with paired, jointed appendages and an armorlike exoskeleton of chitin.
Molting is necessary for the arthropod to grow.
Arthropods have an open circulatory system with a dorsal heart that pumps hemolymph.
Aquatic forms have gills for gas exchange; terrestrial forms have either tracheae or book lungs.
The arthropods along with the onychophorans (velvet worms) and tardigrades (water bears) make up the clade Panarthropoda.
Based on molecular and other data, arthropods are currently assigned to five main groups: extinct trilobites and extant Myriapoda, Chelicerata, Crustacea, and hexapoda.
The trilobites are extinct marine arthropods covered by a hard, segmented shell.
Each segment had a pair of biramous appendages, appendages with two jointed branches: an inner walking leg and an outer gill branch.
Subphylum Myriapoda includes Chilopoda, the centipedes, and Diplopoda, the millipedes.
Members of this subphylum have uniramous appendages, that is unbranched appendages, and a single pair of antennae.
Subphylum Chelicerata includes the merostomes (horseshoe crabs) and the arachnids (spiders, mites, and their relatives).
The chelicerate body consists of a cephalothorax and abdomen; there are six pairs of uniramous, jointed appendages, of which four pairs serve as legs.
The first appendages are chelicerae, and the second are pedipalps.
These appendages are adapted for manipulation of food, locomotion, defense, or copulation.
Chelicerates have no antennae and no mandibles.
Crustaceans include lobsters, crabs, shrimp, pill bugs, and barnacles, and their many relatives.
The body typically consists of a cephalothorax and abdomen.
Crustaceans vary greatly in the appearance and in the number of biramous appendages.
Crustaceans have two pairs of antennae that sense taste and touch, and a pair of mandibles used for chewing.
Two pairs of maxillae, posterior to the mandibles, manipulate and hold food.
The decapod crustaceans typically have five pairs of walking legs.
Subphylum Hexapoda includes Insecta.
An insect is an articulated, tracheated hexapod; its body consists of head, thorax, and abdomen.
Insects have uniramous appendages, a single pair of antennae, tracheae for gas exchange, and Malpighian tubules for excretion.
The biological success of the insects can be attributed to their many adaptations, including a versatile exoskeleton, segmentation, specialized jointed appendages, highly developed sense organs, and ability to fly.
Complete metamorphosis, transition during the life cycle from one developmental stage to another, includes egg, larva, pupa, and adult stages.
Complete metamorphosis reduces competition within the same species
Effective reproductive strategies, effective mechanisms for defense and offense, and the ability to communicate have evolved in insects.
The poriferans, or sponges, are characterized by flagellate collar cells (choanocytes), which generate a water current that brings food and oxygen to the cells.
Collar cells also trap and phagocytize food particles.
The sponge body is a sac with tiny openings through which water enters; a central cavity, or spongocoel; and an open end, or osculum, through which water exits.
The cells of sponges are loosely associated; they do not form true tissues.
Cnidarians are characterized by radial symmetry, two tissue layers, and cnidocytes, cells containing stinging organelles called nematocysts.
The gastrovascular cavity has a single opening that serves as both mouth and anus.
Nerve cells form irregular, non directional nerve netsthat connect sensory cells
with contractile and gland cells.
The life cycle of many cnidarians includes a sessile polyp stage (a form with a dorsal mouth surrounded by tentacles) and a free-swimming medusa (jellyfish) stage.
Phylum Cnidaria includes four groups.
Hydrozoa (hydras, hydroids, and the Portuguese man-of-war) are typically polyps and may be solitary or colonial.
Scyphozoa (jellyfish) are generally medusae.
Cubozoa, the “box jellyfish,” have complex eyes that form blurred images.
Anthozoa (sea anemones and corals) are polyps and may be solitary or colonial; anthozoans differ from hydrozoans in the organization of the gastrovascular cavity.
Ctenophores, or comb jellies, are fragile, luminescent marine predators with biradial symmetry.
Ctenophores have eight rows of cilia that resemble combs.
They are diploblastic and have tentacles with adhesive glue cells.
The Lophotrochozoa make up a clade that includes some of the flatworms, nemerteans, mollusks, annelids, the lophophorate phyla, and rotifers.
The true coelom is a fluid-filled body cavity completely lined by mesoderm that lies between the digestive tube and the outer body wall.
The coelom brings about the tube-within-a- tube body plan.
The body wall is the outer tube.
The inner tube is the digestive tube.
The coelom can serve as a hydrostatic skeleton in which contracting muscles push against a tube of fluid.
The coelom is a space in which internal organs, including gonads, can develop; it helps transport materials and protects internal organs.
Cephalization, the evolution of a head with the concentration of sense organs and nerve cells at the anterior end, increases the effectiveness of a bilateral animal to actively find food, shelter, and mates and to detect enemies.
The flatworms are acoelomate (have no coelom) animals with bilateral symmetry, cephalization, three definite tissue layers, and well-developed organs.
Many flatworms are hermaphrodites: a single animal produces both sperm and eggs.
Flatworms have a ladder-type nervous system, typically consisting of sense organs and a simple brain composed of two ganglia.
The ganglia are connected to two nerve cords that extend the length of the body.
Protonephridia function in osmoregulation and disposal of metabolic wastes.
Four groups of flatworms are recognized: class Turbellaria comprises free-living
Flatworms, including planarians; classes Trematoda and Monogenea include the parasitic flukes; and class Cestoda includes the parasitic tapeworms.
The parasitic flukes and tapeworms typically have suckers or hooks for holding on to their hosts; they have complicated life cycles with intermediate hosts and produce large numbers of eggs.
Nemerteans (ribbon worms) are characterized by the proboscis, a muscular tube used in capturing food and in defense.
Nemerteans have a complete digestive tract with mouth and anus, and a circulatory system.
The coelom is reduced.
Mollusks are soft-bodied animals typically covered by a shell.
They have a ventral foot for locomotion and a pair of folds called the mantle that covers the visceral mass, a concentration of body organs.
Mollusks have an open circulatory system except for cephalopods, which have a closed circulatory system.
A rasplike radula functions as a scraper in feeding in all groups except the bivalves, which are filter feeders.
Typically, marine mollusks have a free-swimming, ciliated trochophore larva.
Polyplacophorans are chitons, mollusks with shells consisting of eight overlapping dorsal plates.
The gastropods, which include the snails, slugs, and their relatives, have a well-developed head with tentacles.
The body undergoes torsion, a twisting of the visceral mass.
Bivalves are aquatic clams, scallops, and oysters.
A two-part shell, hinged dorsally, encloses the bodies of these filter feeders.
Cephalopods include the squids, octopuses, and Nautilus.
These active, predatory swimmers have tentacles surrounding the mouth, which is located in the large head.
The annelids, the segmented worms, include many aquatic worms, earthworms, and leeches.
Annelids have long bodies with segmentation both internally and externally; their large, compartmentalized coelom serves as a hydrostatic skeleton.
Polychaetes are marine annelids characterized by parapodia, appendages used for locomotion and gas exchange.
The parapodia bear many bristlelike structures called setae.
Polychaetes also differ from other annelids in having a well-defined head with sense organs.
Oligochaetes, the group that includes the earthworms, are characterized by a few short setae per segment.
The body is divided into more than one hundred segments separated internally by septa.
Leeches belong to the group Hirudinida.
Setae and appendages are absent.
Parasitic leeches are equipped with suckers for holding on to their host.
The lophophorates, marine animals that have a lophophore, include the brachiopods, phoronids, and bryozoans.
The lophophore, a ciliated ring of tentacles surrounding the mouth, is specialized for capturing suspended particles in the water.
Rotifers are pseudocoelomates that are thought to have evolved from animals with a true coelom.
They have a crown of cilia at their anterior end.
Ecdysozoa is one of the three major animal clades; its validity is based on many types of evidence, including molecular data.
Members of this group go through the process of ecdysis, or molting, during which an animal sheds its outer covering; the covering is then replaced by the growth of a new one.
Nematodes, or roundworms, have a pseudocoelom.
The body is covered by a tough cuticle that helps prevent desiccation.
Parasitic nematodes that infect humans include Ascaris, hookworms, trichina worms, and pinworms.
Arthropods are segmented animals with paired, jointed appendages and an armorlike exoskeleton of chitin.
Molting is necessary for the arthropod to grow.
Arthropods have an open circulatory system with a dorsal heart that pumps hemolymph.
Aquatic forms have gills for gas exchange; terrestrial forms have either tracheae or book lungs.
The arthropods along with the onychophorans (velvet worms) and tardigrades (water bears) make up the clade Panarthropoda.
Based on molecular and other data, arthropods are currently assigned to five main groups: extinct trilobites and extant Myriapoda, Chelicerata, Crustacea, and hexapoda.
The trilobites are extinct marine arthropods covered by a hard, segmented shell.
Each segment had a pair of biramous appendages, appendages with two jointed branches: an inner walking leg and an outer gill branch.
Subphylum Myriapoda includes Chilopoda, the centipedes, and Diplopoda, the millipedes.
Members of this subphylum have uniramous appendages, that is unbranched appendages, and a single pair of antennae.
Subphylum Chelicerata includes the merostomes (horseshoe crabs) and the arachnids (spiders, mites, and their relatives).
The chelicerate body consists of a cephalothorax and abdomen; there are six pairs of uniramous, jointed appendages, of which four pairs serve as legs.
The first appendages are chelicerae, and the second are pedipalps.
These appendages are adapted for manipulation of food, locomotion, defense, or copulation.
Chelicerates have no antennae and no mandibles.
Crustaceans include lobsters, crabs, shrimp, pill bugs, and barnacles, and their many relatives.
The body typically consists of a cephalothorax and abdomen.
Crustaceans vary greatly in the appearance and in the number of biramous appendages.
Crustaceans have two pairs of antennae that sense taste and touch, and a pair of mandibles used for chewing.
Two pairs of maxillae, posterior to the mandibles, manipulate and hold food.
The decapod crustaceans typically have five pairs of walking legs.
Subphylum Hexapoda includes Insecta.
An insect is an articulated, tracheated hexapod; its body consists of head, thorax, and abdomen.
Insects have uniramous appendages, a single pair of antennae, tracheae for gas exchange, and Malpighian tubules for excretion.
The biological success of the insects can be attributed to their many adaptations, including a versatile exoskeleton, segmentation, specialized jointed appendages, highly developed sense organs, and ability to fly.
Complete metamorphosis, transition during the life cycle from one developmental stage to another, includes egg, larva, pupa, and adult stages.
Complete metamorphosis reduces competition within the same species
Effective reproductive strategies, effective mechanisms for defense and offense, and the ability to communicate have evolved in insects.