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Sponges and Cnidarians Animals unit
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Mostly live in oceans, but also in freshwater rivers and lakes Adult sponges are attached to hard surfaces underwater. Water currents bring food and oxygen Currents carry away waste. Currents help transport young to new places to live. Sponges
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Sponges are invertebrate animals that usually have no body symmetry and never have tissues or organs. Looks like a tube with pores. Phylum to which they belong means “having pores.” Most sponges have spikes. (as sharp as needles) Spikes support its body keeping it upright. Spikes help sponge protect itself. Body structure
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Sponge eats tiny single-celled organisms. Sponge filters organisms from the water passing through. The collar cells that line the central cavity trap the organisms The jelly-like cells inside the sponge then digest the food. Sponge gets oxygen from water. It is filtered through the cells. Obtaining food and oxygen
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Cnidarians (ny dehr ee unz) are invertebrates that have stinging cells and take food into a central body cavity Cnidarians use stinging cells to capture food and defend themselves. Cnidarians
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Two different body plans, both have a central hollow cavity and tentacles that sting. The vase-shaped body is called POLYP. The polyp’s mouth opens at the top and its tentacles spread out from around the mouth. They are attached to underwater surfaces. The bowl-shaped body is called MEDUSA. Has a life of swimming. Mouths that open downward and tentacles that trail down. Some cnidarians go through a polyp stage and a medusa stage. Others are just one or the other. Body structure Polyp Medusa
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Both types obtain food the same way. Cnidarians use stinging cells to catch the animals they eat. When the stinging cell touches prey, the threadlike structure explodes out of the cell and into the prey. Some stinging cells release venom. When the prey is helpless, the cnidarian uses its tentacles to pull the prey into its mouth. From there, it passes into a hollow cavity, where it is digested. Undigested food is expelled through the mouth. Obtaining food
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Unlike adult sponges (attached to hard surface), many cnidarians can move to escape danger. Jellyfish swim Hydras turn slow somersaults Sea anemones stretch out, shrink down, bend slowly from side to side, and move slowly from place to place. Movement Jellyfish Anemone Hydra
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Life Cycle
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Colony is a group of many individual animals. Coral reef is built by cnidarians. At the beginning of its life to polyp attaches to a solid surface (ship, rock, or shells). Coral reef are home to more species of fishes and invertebrates than any other environment on Earth. Life in a Colony
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