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Sponges Cnidarians Ctenophores
Parazoa and Radiata Sponges Cnidarians Ctenophores
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Phylum Porifera: The Sponges
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General Information Mainly marine organisms; evolved from choanoflagellates May have algae or bacteria that give them color Larva are flagellated, adults considered sessile Many disease-fighting compounds holdfast
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Tube Sponges Encrusting Sponges
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Characteristics Can reproduce sexually or asexually
Gas exchange and excretion - diffusion at individual cells Supported by skeletal fibers: spicules or spongin Simple animals made of few specialized cells; NO tissues Asymmetrical Body with ostia Most are filter feeders / suspension feeders 1 family is carnivorous
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Anatomy of a Sponge: Osculum Spongocoel Choanocyte Amoebocyte Mesohyl
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Suspension Feeding & Gas Exchange
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Sponge Reproduction: Asexual reproduction
Buds or gemmules Sexually – most sponges are hermaphrodites Cells become egg/sperm Sperm released into water Fertilization occurs in mesohyl (egg) Zygote becomes flagellated larva that leaves in flow of water
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Phylum Cnidaria Jellyfish Box jelly Sea anemone Coral
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Main Characteristics Diploblastic, radial symmetry
Cnidocytes with nematocysts concentrated in tentacles Gastrovascular cavity with 1 opening 2 layers separated by mesoglea Gas exchange and excretion occur by diffusion
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Discharging of Nematocysts
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Structure cont… Nerve nets Contractile cells
Connect sensory cells to contractile cells Sense organs around edge of body Ex. photoreceptors Contractile cells Not true muscles Act as hydrostatic skeleton
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Cnidarians come in 2 forms:
Medusa – tentacles down Polyp – tentacles up Many alternate between medusa and polyp during life cycle
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4 Classes of Cnidaria Hydrozoa Scyphozoa Cuboza Anthozoa
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Cnidarians are Carnivores
Feed on fish, larva, comb jellies, other zooplankton Sting prey with their tentacles Mouth gastrovascular cavity mouth Jellyfish.asf
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A word about corals: Many have symbiotic zooxanthellae
Environmental issue: Coral Bleaching
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Portuguese Man-of-War
Interesting Facts… Portuguese Man-of-War Colonial Has sail-like float Tentacles can grow up to 165 feet and are nearly invisible
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More interesting facts…
Box Jellies More toxic than Man-of-War Stings can lead to heart failure within minutes Tentacles may reach 15 feet
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CTENOPHORA: THE COMB JELLIES
Diploblastic??; Biradial Symmetry Swim with 8 rows of ciliary combs Have 2 long tentacles with sticky cells Colloblasts Eat large amounts of fish larva & plankton Mouth + 2 anal pores Introduced/Invasive species (Black Sea)
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