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Basic biology and classification of marine invertebrates
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-Metazoan animal origins: 700 million to 1.4 billion ybp -Cambrian explosion: 600 mybp -evolution is not progressive, no increase in complexity after origination of phyla -many body plans are no longer around -What caused the dramatic radiation of metazoans?
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Burgess shale fossil quarry in the Canadian Rockies
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Some major phyla of marine invertebrates Poriferasponges Cnidariajellyfish, anemones, corals Annelidasegmented worms (e.g. polychates) Molluscaclams, mussels, octopus, squid Bryozoabryozoans Arthropodacrabs, shrimp, copepods, Echinodermataurchins, holothuroids, sea stars Urochordataascidians/tunicates You should know the phyla and examples and general characteristics of animals in each
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Some basic terms: Benthic vs. Pelagic Sessile vs. Mobile Solitary vs. Colonial Sexual vs. Asexual Encrusting vs. Upright Autotrophic, Chemoautotrophic, Heterotrophic Predation, Herbivory, Omnivory, Primary production
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Phylum: Porifera: Sponges -simplest multicellular animals, but not ancestral! -no true tissues -cells are independent and perform specialized functions -very efficient filter feeders -good spatial competitors -incurrent and excurrent canals -asymmetrical
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Sponge anatomy-built around a system of pores, chambers, and canals -choanocyte -spicules
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Phylum Cnidariajellyfish, anemones, corals What makes something a Cnidarian? -all are aquatic -tissues present but no organs -2 basic shapes or phases: polyp & medusa -nematocyst -tentacles -1 opening
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Phylum Cnidariajellyfish, anemones, corals Physalia: man-o-war Cassiopia
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Phylum Cnidariajellyfish, anemones, corals Hydroid Sea Pen
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Phylum Cnidariajellyfish, anemones, corals Colonial reef coral Solitary reef coral Sea fan Anemone
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Phylum Annelida Class Polychaetasegmented marine worms 6000 species Segmentation Setae A variety of feeding modes: Active predators, mucus bag feeders, mud-munchers and passive filter feeders Fire worm
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Feather duster worm Christmas tree worm -serpulids: secrete CaCo3 shell -filter feeders
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Phylum Mollusca Class Gastropoda: snails and limpets Class Polyplacophora chitons Cyphoma Cassis -second most diverse marine animal phyla (100,000+ species) -no segmentation -have complete gut -usually have a calcareous shell
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Phylum Mollusca Class Gastropoda: snails and limpets Cone shell Conus geographus “mini melo” -many predatory snails are highly specialized
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Bivalves: clams, oysters, mussels, scallops Phylum Mollusca Tridacna Giant Clam -some have autotrophic symbionts -most are active filter feeders
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Cephalopods:octopods, squid, nautilus Phylum Mollusca Octopus-8 arms Squid-8 arms + 2 longer tentacles
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Nudibranchs:sea slugs Phylum Mollusca Aplysia Sea Hare -most are specialized predators
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Phylum Bryozoa:bryozoans -passive filter feeders -colonial -zoids
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PhylumArthropoda SubphylumTrilobita SubphylumCheliceratahorseshoe crabs, sea spiders SubphylumCrustaeacrabs, shrimp, barnacles, copepods SubphylumUniramiainsects -by far the largest animal phylum -could represent several independent phyla -mono vs. polyphyletic -all are segmented, but segments are divided into different body regions -appendages are paired and jointed -all have an external skeleton -probably derived from annelids
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PhylumArthropoda SubphylumCheliceratahorseshoe crabs, sea spiders
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PhylumArthropoda SubphylumCrustaeacrabs, shrimp, barnacles, copepods
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Blue crab Barnacles (goose neck)
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Phylum Echinodermata Sea stars -radial symmetry
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Phylum Echinodermata Diadema Pencil urchin Sand dollar
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Phylum Echinodermata Ophioroids (brittle stars) Crinoids
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Phylum Echinodermata Holothuroids Sea cucumbers
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Urochordataascidians/tunicates
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