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Arthropods and Echinoderms Chapter 7
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Review What Invertebrates have we learned about so far? Porifera – sponges Cnidaria – jellyfishes, sea anemones, coral Ctenophora – comb jellies Molluscs – snails, bivalves, octopuses, squid, cuttlefish
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Objectives 1.Explain the basic characteristics of arthropods 2.Differences between copepods, barnacles, krill, and decapods 3.Explain the body structure of echinoderms
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There are a lot of them! Largest phylum on earth 1,000,000 + species and several million undiscovered 3 out of every 4 animals on earth are arthropods The largest group are the __________? Insects!
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Arthropod Characteristics Exoskeleton: – Tough, non-living external skeleton – Made of chitin – Protection, support, flexibility Segmented, bilaterally symmetrical body
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Marine Arthropods Majority of marine arthropods are crustaceans Barnacles, shrimps, lobsters, crabs, and a variety of others
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Crustaceans: Copepods Use mouth parts to capture food zooplankton Large antennae used to swim
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Crustaceans: Barnacles Filter feeders Usually attached to surfaces (whales and crabs and rocks) Bodies enclosed by heavy plates Use cirri to sweep the water and feed
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Crustaceans: Krill Most numerous animals on earth Exceed total human weight on the planet Major piece of the marine food chain
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Crustaceans: Decapods (10 legs) Largest group of crustaceans (10,000 species) Includes shrimp, lobsters, crabs Largest crustaceans in size 14 lb Alaskan King Crab
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Echinoderms Sea stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, and others Radially symmetrical – No head! Have an endoskeleton – Skeleton secreted within tissues (like ours) Water vascular system – Network of water filled canals
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Tube Feet Tube feet are muscular extensions of water canals Used for attachment, locomotion, reception of chemical and mechanical stimuli, and eating.
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Sea Urchins Round, rigid shell Movable spines Sucker-tipped tube feet – Breathe through these via gas exchange—no gills or lungs – Use to pass prey down back to mouth Mouth on bottom and anus on top
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Sea Urchins Aristotle’s lantern – Jaws in the mouth – 5 teeth, self-sharpening – Able to dig holes in stones to use as hideaway Behavior can signal poor water quality – Lack of movement and drooping spines High intensity grazers – They love algae and kelp Sea Otters help protect kelp forests from destruction Sea Urchin Sex
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Sand Dollar Adapted to live in sandy bottoms Deposit feeders Is this one dead or alive?
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Sand Dollar Have tube feet Adapted to living in soft bottoms by having flattened bodies and short spines Has a less developed Aristotle’s Lantern – Feed on small particles – 5 doves Chews food for up to 15 minutes before swallowing – Takes up to two days to digest
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Sunflower starfish 24 arms – Juveniles start with 5 Fast! 40 inches per minute 15,000 tube feet Up to 1m (39 in) across Can swallow an entire urchin, digest it, and expel its test (skeleton)
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Video Footage of CA Coast
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