Phylum Echinodermata.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Echinodermata Spiny Skinned.
Advertisements

Phylum Echinodermata.
Phylum Echinodermata Marine Invertebrates.
Echinoderms “Life with Spiny Skin”. Worms, mollusks, and arthropods all have bilateral symmetry. Worms, mollusks, and arthropods all have bilateral symmetry.
Phylum Echinodermata “Spine skin” Marine (or estuarine) Water vascular system Pentaradial symmetry.
Phylum Echinodermata Unit 4.
KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Echinodermata. Members of the Phylum Echinodermata Date back 570 million years ago 13,000 fossil species Only 7,000 species today.
Chapter 14, Echinoderms. Characteristics of Phylum Echinodermata One of the strangest and most unusual of all the phylums in the animal kingdom Echinoderms.
1 Phylum Echinodermata BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.
Phylum Echinodermata End show End show Jenna Hellack Fall 2000 Echinodermata l Bilateral larvaeradial adults l Bilateral larvae, radial adults. five.
Phylum Echinodermata 1. 2 Defining Characteristics – A complex series of fluid filled canals with numerous flexible feeding and locomotory appendages.
Echinodermata Olivia Johnson, Andrei Anashkin, Heather Schlesier
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS Ex: sea stars, brittle stars, sand dollars, sea urchins, & sea cucumbers All marine “ Spiny-Skinned Animals” - meaning Radial.
Phylum Echinodermata "Spiny Skin" Strangest group in animal kingdom Closest invert relation to the Chordates Endoskeleton just under skin Lack sensory.
“Spiny Skin” ~7,000 species Sea stars, sand dollars, and sea urchins Clip A thin skin covers a hard calcareous platelike exoskeleton.
1 Phylum Echinodermata Echinoderms: Five-Way Symmetry.
Phylum Echinodermata. Echinoderms Sea StarsSea Stars Sea UrchinsSea Urchins Sand DollarsSand Dollars Sea CucumbersSea Cucumbers.
Echinoderm Classes Asteroidea – Sea Stars : Multiple arms radiating from central disk Tube feet on bottom Ophiuroidea – Brittle Stars: Distinct central.
Phylum Echinodermata copyright cmassengale. Diversity  Echinodermata means “spiny skin”  Echinoderms usually inhabit shallow coastal waters and ocean.
Echinoderms Section 38.1.
Phylum Echinodermata. Includes starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumber & sand dollars “Spiny-skinned” Pentaradial Symmetry Coelom, no segmentation endoskeleton.
Echinodermata. A phylogeny can help us do lots more than simply study evolutionary history. It also helps us know what traits are shared by different.
Echinoderms “spiny skinned” Ex: starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, sand dollars.
Holothuroidea- Sea Cucumber Echinoidea – Sea Urchins.
Ch 38 – Echinoderms and Invertebrate Chordates
Echinoderms and Invertebrate Chordates
Preparation for Dissection.  Phylum Echinodermata, class Asteroidea  Brittle Stars are in the class Ophiuroidea  Sharp spines, radial symmetry, and.
Sea Star, Sea Urchin, Sea Cucumber
Starfishes, sea urchins, sea cucumbers
Sea stars, sand dollars, and sea urchins Phylum Echinodermata.
SEA STAR DISSECTION.
Phylum Echinodermata Spiny Skin. Advanced?  Skeleton is internal test comprised of individuals plates of porous high-Mg calcite.  Bilaterally symmetrical.
Phylum Echinodermata: Echinoderms A. General Characteristics 1. Echin- Spiny Dermis- Skin Dermis- Skin 2. Pentaradial: 5 part radial symmetry 3. Water.
Phylum Echinodermata Introduction
CHAPTER 33 INVERTEBRATES Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section E: Deuterostomia 1.Phylum Echinodermata: Echinoderms.
STARFISH DISSECTION
STARFISH DISSECTION. STARFISH LATIN meaning KINGDOM _____________ PHYLUM _____________________________ CLASS _______________________________ ANIMALIA.
Echinoderms The spiny skinned animals. Introduction Echinodermata are all marine, triploblastic unsegmented coelomates Phylum has 3 unique features: –
Phylum Echinodermata Introduction. There are ______ characteristics of echinoderms. All echinoderms have: Spiny skin An internal skeleton A five part.
Basic Features of the Water Vascular System Unique feature of the echinoderms. Unique feature of the echinoderms. Consists of canals and appendages of.
Echinodermata Spiny Skin. Echinoderms, Deuterostomes Adults have pentaradial symmetry but are believed to have evolved from Bilateral ancestors Larval.
Echinoderm review. On the following slides with pictures, try to: name the organism Give the Class for the organism State the number of species in the.
Phylum Echinodermata. ECHINODERMS Invertebrates Inhabit marine environments ranging from coastal shallow waters to ocean trenches more than 10,000 m deep.
Echinoderms.
Phylum Echinodermata.
CHAPTER 33 INVERTEBRATES Section E: Deuterostomia
Chapter 14, Echinoderms.
The Echinoderms Phylum Echinodermata.
Phylum Echinodermata Nada H. Lubbad Phylum Echinodermata.
Phylum Echinodermata There are more than 5000 species of Echinoderms.
Echinoderms.
Chapter 14, Echinoderms.
Phylum Echinodermata The Echinoderms: Sea Stars, Brittle Stars, Sand Dollars, Sea Urchins, Sea Cucumbers, Feather Stars, & Sea Daisies.
“spiny skinned” ~7,000 species
Phylum Echinodermata.
KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Echinodermata
“Spine skin” Marine (or estuarine) Water vascular system
Phylum Echinodermata.
The Coelomates Protostomes Deuterostomes Blastopore  mouth
Phylum Echinodermata.
KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Echinodermata
sea stars, sand dollars, and sea urchins
Unit 6 Echinodermata Sea Stars Sea Urchins Sea Cucumbers Brittle Stars.
Seastars, Sandollars, Sea cucumber, Sea urchins
sea stars, sand dollars, and sea urchins
Phylum Echinodermata.
Phylum Echinodermata “Spiny – skin”.
Higher Invertebrates Echinoderms
Chapter 14, Echinoderms.
Presentation transcript:

Phylum Echinodermata

General Characteristics Adults exhibit pentamerous radial symmetry Radially symmetry is secondary; larvae are bilaterally symmetrical and undergo metamorphosis to become radially symmetrical adults. Echinoderm larva

Poorly ganglionated; possess few sensory structures General Characteristics cont. Poorly ganglionated; possess few sensory structures Body wall contains an endoskeleton of calcareous plates - ossicles

General Characteristics cont. Possess a network of canals throughout the body - water vascular system. The canals are connected to extensions called tube feet (=podia), located on the oral surface The water vascular system is important for locomotion, feeding, and gas exchange. Sexes are separate; gametes shed into the water; fertilization is external

Echinoderm Diversity

Class Asteroidea Typically have 5 arms which merge with a central disc Mouth is located in the center of oral surface which is directed downward

Water Vascular System On the aboral surface is the opening of the water vascular system the madreporite (=sieve plate) Water enters the madreporite and goes through the stone canal canal to the ring canal Water then passes through a radial canal extending into each arm All along the length of these canals are lateral canals that terminate in a bulb-like structures called ampullae equipped with tube feet Tube feet line the grooves on the oral surface - ambulacral grooves

How the Podia Operate Ampulla contract and force fluid into the podia causing it to become extended Suckers at the tips of the podia come into contact with the substrate and adhere to the surface Then the podia contract, thereby forcing water back into the ampulla, and the body is pulled forward

Nutrition Mouth leads to a 2-part stomach: a large cardiac stomach and a smaller pyloric stomach The pyloric stomach connects with digestive glands (=pyloric cecae) that runs into each arm A short intestine extends from from the pyloric stomach to an anus on the aboral surface Associated with the intestine are rectal cecae that pump the fecal wastes out of the anus

Additional Characteristics The endoskelton is made up of calcareous plates that often penetrate the dermis as spines Between the spines and plates are projections called papulae, which function in gas exchange and excretion Other projections on the body wall include tiny jaw-like appendages called pedicellaria

Class Echinoidea Lack arms Body is enclosed in a shell or test Body surface is usually covered with moveable spines

Sea Urchins Spherical body Ambulacral plates bearing tube feet that radiate out toward the aboral surface Use podia and spines during locomotion The spines are moveable and articulate with the with the calcareous ossicles

Sea urchins generally feed by scraping algae off of rocks Accomplished via a complex chewing apparatus called Aristotle's lantern

Class Holothuroidea Lack arms Oral-aboral axis is greatly extended Endoskeleton is reduced to a few ossicles scattered over the surface of the animal making them rather soft bodied Some species crawl along the substrate using podia; others have peristaltic locomotion via muscle contractions Dermal ossicles

At the oral end of the body are a group of tentacles (modified podia) that surround the mouth; used in feeding Have a muscular cloaca that is partly used in gas exchange The actual gas exchange structures are branching structures called respiratory trees

Class Crinoidea Most primitive of the echinoderms Unusual in that the oral surface is directed upward Aboral surface is attached to the substrate by means of a bendable stalk The portion of the crinoid body attached to the stalk is called the crown; bears a number of arms Along the length of the arms are branches called pinnules The arms and the pinnules have ambulacral grooves with suckerless podia (secrete mucus) The ambulacral grooves are heavily ciliated and the cilia is used to direct food to the mouth (=filter feeding)