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Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates
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Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus

Chapter 33Introduction to Invertebrates

Page 2: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

One view of animal diversity based on body-plan grades

Page 3: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline (five concepts)

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Discovery Channel Video

Page 4: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Sponges – Porifera (Calcarea and Silicea)

Page 5: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.4 Anatomy of a sponge

Sponge spiculesReproduction = hermaphroditic

Page 6: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.7 Cnidarians: Hydrozoans (top left), jelly (top right), sea anemone (bottom left), coral polyps (bottom right)

Page 7: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.5 Polyp and medusa forms of cnidarians

Page 8: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.6 A cnidocyte of a hydra

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWJat3byA8Y

Page 9: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.8 The life cycle of the hydrozoan Obelia

Page 10: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.8 The life cycle of the hydrozoan Obelia

Page 11: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.8 The life cycle of the hydrozoan Obelia

Page 12: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 13: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 14: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.8 A ctenophore, or comb jelly

One-way digestive tractNo nematocysts

Page 15: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Platyhelminthes: A marine flatworm (class Turbellaria)

Page 16: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.10 Anatomy of a planarian

Page 17: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 18: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.12 Anatomy of a tapeworm

Page 19: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.11The life history of a blood fluke, Schistosoma mansoni (Trematoda)

Page 20: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

• Total persons infected (global): 200 million • Total persons infected (Africa): 170 million (second most prevalent parasitic disease in Africa) • Persons with associated morbidity: 120 million • Mortality Unknown, but 20 million severely infected

Page 21: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

A feature of many members of the phylum of the Platyhelminthes (flatworms) is their complex life cycle. Understanding the life cycles of flatworm parasites is of great importance to human health because:

A. it emphasizes the beneficial relationship between humans and their environment.

B. although these parasites are of little importance in modern society, they must be studied before they are completely eliminated.

C. flatworms may secrete important chemicals for human use.

D. it helps us to understand the evolutionary relationships between the different parasites.

E. it may be possible to find a portion of that life cycle where the parasite is vulnerable and can be controlled.

Page 22: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 23: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.13 Rotifers (pseudo-coelomates)

Reproduction by pathenogenesis

Page 24: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 25: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.14 Lophophorates: Bryozoan (left aka Ectoprocts), Phonorids (middle), and Brachiopod (right) – all coelomates

Page 26: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Bryozoans: Colonial animals that superficially resemble

mosses

Page 27: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Nemertea – proboscis worms (pseudoceolomates)

Page 28: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 29: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 30: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Gastropods: Nudibranchs (‘sea slug’, top left and top right), terrestrial snail (bottom left), deer cowrie (bottom right)

Page 31: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.15 Basic body plan of mollusks

Page 32: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 33: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.16 A chiton

Page 34: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.18. The result of torsion in a gastropod(twisting of the visceral mass during embryonic development resulting in

the anus being near the anterior mouth).

Page 35: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.20 Anatomy of a clam

Page 36: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Dreissena polymorphaZebra mussel

Page 37: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 38: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 39: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 40: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

See also 33.21. Cephalopods: Squid (top left and bottom left), nautilus (top right), octopus (bottom right)

Page 41: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 42: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Annelida: External anatomy of an earthworm (note segmentation)

Lumbricus sp.

Tubifex sp.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Texxu3p7I8&feature=related

Page 43: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.24. Anatomy of an earthworm

Page 44: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 45: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Annelids, the segmented worms: Polychaete (left), feather-duster worm (middle); Hirudinea (leech, right)

Page 46: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 47: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.26 Free-living nematode

Vinegar eel

Page 48: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Two American ‘Worm People’ Win Nobel for RNA Work

This year’s Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to two American researchers, Andrew Z. Fire and Craig C. Mello, for a far-reaching discovery about how genes are controlled within living cells.

The finding by Drs. Fire and Mello made sense of a series of puzzling results obtained mostly by plant biologists, including some who were trying to change the color of petunias. By clarifying what was happening, they discovered an unexpected system of gene regulation in living cells and began an explosive phase of research in a field known variously as RNA interference or gene silencing. This natural method of switching genes off has turned out to be a superb research tool, allowing scientists to understand the role of new genes by suppressing them. The method may also lead to a new class of drugs that switch off unwanted processes in disease. Two gene-silencing drugs designed to treat macular degeneration are already in clinical trials.

Dr. Fire, now at Stanford University, worked at the Carnegie Institution of Washington when he made the discovery. Dr. Mello, a frequent collaborator, is at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester. Both are “worm people,” as scientists who do their biology in the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans call themselves.

Prior to their discovery, plant biologists over many decades had found odd exceptions to Mendel’s laws of heredity, including some unexplained effects produced by injecting RNA, the less-well-known cousin of DNA, into plants. Both are chemicals called nucleic acids, but DNA is longer and more stable and is used by the cell for the archival function of storing genetic information. RNA is shorter and more active, and performs many of the cell’s more difficult tasks, like making copies of the genes in DNA and directing the synthesis of the proteins specified by the genes………………

Page 49: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.27 Parasite nematode, Trichinella spiralis in human muscle tissue

Trichinosis: may be contracted from undercooked meat – fever diarrhea, swelling, rarely fatal

Page 50: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 51: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.30 External anatomy of an arthropod (jointed appendages)

Exoskeleton made of chitin

Page 52: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Trachae in terrestrial arthropod species:tiny chitin-lined airtubes that bring oxygen into the cells.

Bumblebee.org

Page 53: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.28 A trilobite fossil

Page 54: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 55: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.31. Horseshoe crabs (living fossils) Limulus polyphemus

(Arachnida)

Subphylum: Cheliceriformes

Page 56: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chelicerata: Claw-like feeding appendages

Subphylum: Cheliceriformes

Page 57: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Arachnids: Scorpion (left), honeybee air tube filledwith parasitic mites (right)

Subphylum: Cheliceriformes

Page 58: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Subphylum: Cheliceriformes

Page 59: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.33. Spider anatomy

Page 60: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Subphylum Myriapoda (millipedes and centipedes)

Page 61: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.35 Subphylum Hexapoda: Anatomy of a grasshopper, an insect

Page 62: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Subphylum Hexapoda: beetle

Page 63: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.37. Subphylum HexapodaMetamorphosis of a butterfly

Page 64: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 65: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 66: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.39 Subphylum Crustacea: Lobster (top left), banded coral shrimp (bottom left), barnacles (right)

Page 67: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Chapter 33 Outline

33.1 Sponges are basal animals that lack true tissues

33.2 Cnidarians are an ancient phylum of eumetazoans

33.3 Lophotrochozoans have the widest range of animal body forms (flatworms, rotifers, lophophorates, molluscs, annelids)

33.4. Ecdysozoans is the most species-rich group (nematodes, arthropods)

33.5 Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes

Page 68: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Echinoderm Diversity

Page 69: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.
Page 70: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Blood star, Hencricia levisuscula

Page 71: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

33.40. Anatomy of a sea star

Page 72: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

Ch. 33Review(p. 695)

Page 73: Ochre sea stars, Pisaster ochraceus Chapter 33 Introduction to Invertebrates.

You discover an animal that has a true coelom and an exoskeleton that includes the modified poly-saccharide chitin. Select the phylum to which this animal most likely belongs.

A. Nematoda (roundworms)

B. Porifera (sponges)

C. Arthropoda (crustaceans, insects, and others)

D. Mollusca (mollusks)

E. Platyhelminthes (flatworms)