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Marine Invertebrates.

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Presentation on theme: "Marine Invertebrates."— Presentation transcript:

1 Marine Invertebrates

2 Marine Invertebrates Domain Eukarya (Eukaryotes)
Kingdom Animalia (animals) No vertebra (backbone) 97% of all animal species on earth

3 Phylogenetics Embryo cell division
Protostomes (mouth first) Deuterostomes (mouth second) Embryo cell division simple  complex

4 Radial vs. Bilateral Symmetry

5 Pelagic vs. Benthic Zones

6 Suspension vs. Deposit Feeding

7 Sponges Phylum Porifera (“pore bearers”) Structurally simple
No true tissues or organs Aggregate of 4+ kinds of cells Most distinguishing – collar cell (filter feeding) Spicules (CaCO3 or SiO2), spongin (protein mesh) internal skeleton No symmetry (asymmetry)

8 Sponges Active suspension feeders (filter feeders) Benthic spongin

9 Sponges Can reaggregate, regenerate

10 Sponges Reproduction: Asexual Break, regenerate Sexual Broadcast sperm
Internal fertilization Planktonic larvae

11 Sponges Phylum Porifera – 3 classes: Class Calcarea (CaCO3 spicules)
Class Hexactinellida (SiO2 spicules, glass sponges) Class Demospongiae (spongin, maybe SiO2 spicules, 95% of all sponges)

12 Sponges – Different Shapes
Flat, encrusting Finger, rope Tube, vase, barrel Ball

13 Sponges – More Variety ← calcareous “fire”→

14 Glass Sponges Silicon spicules Deep-sea, cold

15 Long Island Sponges ← Red beard sponge (Microciona prolifera)
Finger sponge (Haliclona oculata) Tufted vase sponge (Scypha ciliata) ← Boring sponge (Cliona sp.)

16 Cnidarians Phylum Cnidaria
Stinging cells (nematocysts) for defense and feeding Radial symmetry True tissues, but no organs Planktonic (medusa) or benthic (polyp) – some alternate

17 Cnidarians Body orientation: Medusa – tentacles down Polyp –
tentacles up Radial symmetry: body with gut central mouth circle of tentacles

18 Cnidarians Tissue layers: Epidermis (outer)
Gastrodermis (inner, digestive) Mesoglea (middle, jelly) No organs

19 Cnidarians

20 Cnidarians Phylum Cnidaria – 4 classes:
Class Hydrozoa – hydroids, some jellyfish, siphonophores, “fire coral” Class Cubozoa – box jellyfish Class Scyphozoa – most jellyfish Class Anthozoa – anemones, corals

21 Hydroids Pink-hearted hydroids (Tubuleria sp.)
Snail fur (Hydractinia echinata)→

22 Siphonophores http://life.bio.sunysb.edu/marinebio/plankton.html

23 Hydrozoan Jellyfish Ribbed hydromedusa (Aequorea sp.) NOAA

24 Cubozoan Jellyfish

25 Scyphozoan Jellyfish Lion’s mane (Cyanea capillata)
Sea nettle (Chrysaora spp.) NOAA Moon jelly (Aurelia aurita)

26 Anemones Frilled anemone (Metridium senile)

27 Soft Hexacorals http://www.coralreefecosystems.com/images/blzoos.jpg

28 Tropical Reef-Building Corals
NOAA NOAA

29 Temperate & Deep Reef Corals
(Acropora pruinosa – Japan) (Oculina arbuscula – Atlantic to NC) (Lophelia pertusa – North Atlantic, deep) (Astrangia poculata/danae – Atlantic, inc. LI)

30 Octocorals

31 Cnidarian Reproduction
Spawning of eggs and sperm (Anthozoans) Alternate between planktonic (sexual) and benthic (asexual) stages (other 3 classes) All have planktonic ciliated larva (planula)

32 Comb Jellies Phylum Ctenophora Cilia combs (8 rows), prism effect
Sticky cells (colloblasts), usually on 2 tentacles

33 Comb Jellies Biradial symmetry (radial/bilateral)
True tissues, but not true organs All marine, almost all planktonic Important predators of copepods and larval organisms Large numbers around Long Island Mnemiopsis leidyi

34 Comb Jellies NOAA NOAA

35 Phylogenetics Embryo cell division
Protostomes (mouth first) Deuterostomes (mouth second) Embryo cell division simple  complex

36 Worms, Worms, and More Worms
Flatworms (Platyhelminthes) Ribbon worms (Nemertea) Roundworms (Nematoda) Peanut worms (Sipuncula) Echiuran worms (Echiura) Segmented worms (Annelida)

37 Flatworms Phylum Platyhelminthes
Simplest phylum with true organs, organ systems, bilateral symmetry Central nervous system (brain) No respiratory system (diffusion) Incomplete digestive tract (food, waste through same opening)

38 Flatworms Turbellarians – free-living, colorful, mostly benthic

39 Flatworms Flukes, tapeworms – parasitic

40 Segmented Worms Phylum Annelida Segmented body
Circulatory system (some gills) Mostly benthic Most marine species are polychaetes (bristle worms) Others: Oligochaetes (earthworms) Leeches

41 Segmented Worms Parapodia – appendages for locomotion Setae – bristles

42 Frozen methane hydrate with “ice worms”
Segmented Worms Frozen methane hydrate with “ice worms”

43 Segmented Worms

44 Segmented Worms Hydrothermal vent, cold seep tube worms
Formerly Phylum Pogonophora No mouth, gut, or digestive system Absorb nutrients directly from water or from internal symbiotic chemosynthetic bacteria

45 Segmented Worms

46 Segmented Worms Osedax mucofloris, bone (“zombie”) worm

47 Segmented Worms Leeches not as common in the ocean as freshwater


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