animal phyla

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Page 1: Animal Phyla
Page 2: Animal Phyla
Page 3: Animal Phyla

Phylum Porifera

•Sessile•Feed by filtering food particles from water that passes through pores in their body

•Sponges•Simplest animals•Lack true tissues and organs•Asymmetrical

Page 4: Animal Phyla
Page 5: Animal Phyla

Phylum Cnidaria•Jellyfish, Sea Anemone, Coral

•Tentacles with stinging cells

•Sessile or slow-moving

•Tentacles move food into the mouth, then into a digestive sac called the gastrovascular cavity

•Undigested food and wastes exit back through the mouth

•Radial symmetry

Page 6: Animal Phyla
Page 7: Animal Phyla

Phylum Platyhelminthes

•Flatworms•Mobile•Most are free-living carnivores

-Muscular tube projects through the mouth and sucks in food-Food is then transported to the gastrovascular cavity-Undigested food and wastes exit through the mouth

•But some are parasitic that absorb digested food from inside a host

-Flukes-Tapeworms

Page 8: Animal Phyla
Page 9: Animal Phyla

Phylum Nematoda•Roundworms

•Complete digestive tract has two openings. a mouth and an anus, at opposite ends of a continuous tube

•Decomposers, parasitic, or free-living

•Human parasitic examples: pinworm & hookworm

Page 10: Animal Phyla
Page 11: Animal Phyla

Phylum Annelida-segmented worms (earthworms, leeches)

-longitudinal and circular muscle fibers surrounding body wall

-closed circulatory system: blood remains contained within vessels

Page 12: Animal Phyla
Page 13: Animal Phyla

Phylum Mollusca

-snails, slugs, oysters, clams, octopuses, and squids

Page 14: Animal Phyla

Phylum Mollusca AnatomyFoot – muscular mass of tissue that functions in locomotion (video clip)

Mantle – outgrowth of body surface that drapes over the animal – produces the shell in certain mollusks – functions in respiration, waste disposal, and sensory reception

Page 15: Animal Phyla

Mollusks have an open circulatory system

– a heart pumps blood into vessels– the vessels open into chambers where the organs are bathed in blood

Page 16: Animal Phyla
Page 17: Animal Phyla

Phylum Echinodermata-sea urchins, sea stars, sea cucumbers

-spines and plates under the skin make up the endoskeleton (but with no central spine)

-the water vascular system is a network of water-filled canals that aid movement

-tube feet function in locomotion, feeding, and respiration

Page 18: Animal Phyla
Page 19: Animal Phyla

Phylum ArthropodaMost numerous and diverse animals

•75% of animals belong to this phylum•global population is 1 billion billion (1018)

1. crustaceans (lobsters, crabs, shrimp)2. arachnids (spiders, scorpions, mites, ticks)3. insects4. centipedes and millipedes

Page 20: Animal Phyla

General Characteristics of Phylum Arthropoda

Segmented body (different segments):• head – sensory antennae, eyes, mouthparts• thorax – midsection that bears jointed

appendages• abdomen – houses digestive and reproductive

organs

Page 21: Animal Phyla

General Characteristics of Phylum Arthropoda

-open circulatory system with a copper-based blood called hemolyph-unlike humans, arthropod blood does not carry oxygen

Page 22: Animal Phyla

General Characteristics of Phylum ArthropodaHow do arthropods get oxygen to their tissues?

Aquatic arthropods have gills

Terrestrial arthropods have trachea – a system of air tubes

Page 23: Animal Phyla

Exoskeleton – external skeleton that consists of proteins

mixed with chitin

– protection, avoid dehydration

Must molt periodically

General Characteristics of Phylum Arthropoda

Page 24: Animal Phyla

CrustaceansHead and thorax is fused cephalothoraxHave antennae; mostly aquatic

Copepods play an enormous role in the food chain of marine and freshwater communities

Page 25: Animal Phyla

ArachnidsHead and thorax is fused cephalothoraxNo antennae; mostly terrestrial

Two pairs of mouthparts:

1. Fanglike mouthparts used to paralyze prey with poison

2. Mouthparts used to manipulate prey once it is paralyzed

Page 26: Animal Phyla

Insects – the most successful arthropods

Entomology – study of insects

Reasons for success:

-ability to fly-diverse feeding habits-ability to metamorphasize

Page 27: Animal Phyla

Many arthropods, including insects, have compound eyes

Compound eyes consist of many eyes (can be over 1,000!)

Excellent in detecting motion, however, poor image resolution

Page 28: Animal Phyla

MetamorphosisMetamorphosis – a process in which body form changes from the sexually immature to the sexually mature stage

Incomplete metamorphosis:

-change is not dramatic-molting causes insect to grow

Complete metamorphosis:

-larval stage function in eating and growing-adult stage functions in moving and reproducing

Page 29: Animal Phyla

Phylum Chordata

Page 30: Animal Phyla

Notochord – flexible rod that extends down the length of the body

Invertebrate chordates – notochord becomes skeletonVertebrate chordates – notochord disintegrates

Chordates are named after a structure that is found in all chordate embryos