Ch25 Inverts) Part 2
Ch25 Inverts) Part 2
Ch25 Inverts) Part 2
Invertebrates
Part 2
Cone Snails
Cone Snail Radula
Videos: Cone Snails
http://grimwade.biochem.unimelb.ed
u.au/cone/about.html
Body Plan of a Clam
left mantle
mouth
retractor muscle
retractor muscle
foot
left gill shell
palps Figure 25.21
Page 429
Cephalopods
Only the nautilus retains external
shell
Other cephalopods are streamlined,
active swimmers
All move by jet propulsion
– Water is forced out of mantle cavity
through a funnel-shaped siphon
Have large brains relative to body
size
Cuttlefish Body Plan
Closed circulatory system with heart
and accessory heart
Figure 25.22 esophagus
Page 429 digestive kidney stomach
gland
brain
arm
jaw
mantle
reproductive internal
siphon ink sac heart accessory organ shell
tentacle radula anus gill heart
Video: Unknown deep-sea squid
recorded by Tiburon
http://www.mbari.org/news/news_re
leases/2001/dec21_clague/Squid_clo
seup.mov
Question 20
20.Name three characteristics of
mollusks.
Answer 20
20. Name three characteristics of
mollusks.
Bilateral, soft-bodied, coelomate
Gastropods
Chitins
Bivalves
Cephalopods
Question 22
22.What is torsion? To which class
of mollusks does it pertain?
Answer 22
22.What is torsion? To which class
of mollusks does it pertain?
Torsion:
the rotation of the visceral
mass so that the anus is in a
“forward” position.
Gastropods (snails)
Question 23
23. In bivalves, what does the “foot”
do?
Answer 23
23. In bivalves, what does the “foot”
do?
It is used to “dig” into the substrate.
Question 24
24.Which mollusks use” jet”
propulsion as a means of
locomotion?
Answer 24
24.Which mollusks use” jet”
propulsion as a means of
locomotion? cephalopods
Annelids: Phylum Annelida
Segmented, coelomate worms
Class Polychaeta
Class Oligochaeta
Class Hirudinea
Polychaetes
“jaws”
toothlike
structures
Most are marine pharynx
(everted)
Bristles extend antenna
palp
from paired, (food handling)
fleshy parapods tentacle
on each eyes
segment chemical-
sensing pit
Head end is
specialized
parapod
Fig. 25.24c
Page 430
Leeches - Class Hirudinea
segmentation
http://www.micrographia.com/specbiol/helmint/annelhom/hiru0100/ol654waw.htm
Hirudin: Anticoagulant
“Hirudin: An anticoagulant ("bloodthinner"). Hirudin is the
active principle in the salivary secretion of leeches. The
name hirudin is from Hirudo medicinalis, the name of the
medicinal leech.
In 1884 John Haycraft in Strasbourg found that leeches
contained a substance with anticoagulant properties. This
anticoagulant in leech saliva was isolated in the 1950s and
found to be an antithrombin (an inhibitor of thrombin). The
primary chemical structure of hirudin was determined in
1976.
The anticoagulant drugs desirudin and lepirudin (brand
name: Refludan) are genetically engineered recombinant
forms of hirudin.”
http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=3762
Leech Toon
Earthworm - An Oligochaete
No parapodia, few bristles per
segment
Dorsal blood vessel
Circular muscle
Longitudinal Coelom
muscle
Nephridium
Nerve cord
Figure
Seta (retracted)
25.25a Nerve cord
Page 431
Earthworm Nephridium
bladderlike storage nephridium’s thin loop reabsorbs some
region of nephridium solutes, relinquishes them to blood
blood
vessels
body
wall
Figure
funnel (coelomic fluid external pore (fluid containing 25.25b
with waste enters here) wastes discharged here) Page 431
Earthworm Circulatory System
Hearts
Figure 25.25c
Page 431
Earthworm Digestive System
Coelomic chambers
Crop Gizzard
Esophagus
Pharynx
Mouth
Figure 25.25d
Page 431
Earthworm Nervous System
Brain
Annelida
Question 26
26.What are three characteristics
that distinguish earthworms from
nematodes?
Answer 26
26.What are three characteristics
that distinguish earthworms from
nematodes?
Closed
circulatory system,
segmentation, coelomate, setae
Question 27
27.
What the three classes of
annelida?
Answer 27
27.
What the three classes of
annelida?
Class Polychaeta
Class Oligochaeta
Class Hirudinea
Arthropods: (Stop!!!!)
Phylum Arthropoda
The
phylum with the greatest
number of species
Four lineages:
– Trilobites (all extinct)
– Chelicerates (spiders, mites,
scorpions)
– Crustaceans (crabs, shrimps,
barnacles)
– Uniramians (insects, centipedes,
Adaptations for Success
Figure 25.26
Page 432
Question 28
28. What is the name for the phylum
that contains spiders, crabs and
insects?
Answer 28
28. What is the name for the phylum
that contains spiders, crabs and
insects? What does the term literally
mean?
Originated in seas
A few are still marine: horseshoe
crabs, sea spiders
The arachnids are all terrestrial
Spiders Mites
Scorpions Chiggers
“Daddy longlegs” Ticks
Body Plan of a Spider
poison
gland
food-handling
appendages
(three pairs)
swimmerets tail
fin
first leg
Figure 25.30
Page 435
Important Pond Crustaceans
Copepods (Phylum: Arthropoda)
Most have a single medial eye
http://www.museum.vic.gov.au/crust/copbiol.html
Ostracods
These crustaceans live in freshwater,
brackish and marine environments
Crayfish (decapoda)
Copepods
Ostracods
Question 31
31. Crustaceans have two/three
pairs of antennae and two/three pair
of food getting appendages.
Answer 31
31.Crustaceans have two/three
pairs of antennae and two/three
pairs of food getting appendages.
Millipedes and Centipedes
(Uniramians)
Segmented bodies with many legs
Millipedes
– Two pairs of legs per “segment”
– Scavengers
Centipedes
– Flattened, with one pair of legs per
segment
– Predators
Insect Body Plan
Malpighian
tubules attach to
midgut and serve in elimination of
wastes
Insect Body Plan
Insect Headparts
Butterfly Mosquito
Grasshopper
antenna labrum
mandible
Fly
maxilla
palps
labium
Figure 25.32
Page 436
Insect Diversity
The only winged invertebrates
Incomplete metamorphosis
Different stages exploit
different resources at
different times
egg nymphs adult
Complete
metamorphosis
Figure 25.38
Page 439
Question 32
32. Insects and the two/three pairs
of legs and usually have two/three
pairs of wings.
Answer 32
32. Insects and the two/three pairs
of legs and usually have two/three
pairs of wings.
Echinoderms
Deuterostomes
Do not
Body wall has spines post
photos
on
or plates Internet
No brain
Adults are radial withSea urchin
bilateral features
Sea cucumber
Figure 25.39
Page 440
Brittle star
Echinoderm Diversity
Sea cucumbers
Body Plan of a Sea Star
sieve
gonad coelom
plate
anus
upper
stomach
lower
stomach
digestive gland
eyespot
Figure 25.40a
Page 441
Water Vascular System
sieve plate
ampulla
Figure
25.40b
Page 441
Question 33
33.To which phylum do starfish and
sea urchins belong?
Answer 33
33.To which phylum do starfish and
sea urchins belong?
Echinodermata
Question 34
34.What are three characteristics of
the echinoderms?
Answer 34
34. What are three characteristics of
the echinoderms?
Deuterostomes
bilateral/radial symmetry
no brain
water vascular system
“spiny skins”
Question 35
35.What are three types of
echinoderms?
Answer 35
35. What are three types of echinoderms?
Crinoids (sea lilies and feather stars)
Sea stars
Brittle stars
Sea urchins, heart urchins, sand dollars
Sea cucumbers
New Zealand Giant Squid