Quiz 1
Siphonoglyph
Ciliated groove in pharynx, directs water into GV cavity, allowing for diffusion to begin.
Gonophores
In hydrozoan floating colonies, sacs containing ovaries or testes
Trypanosoma
Protozoa, phylum Euglenozoa, class Kinetoplastida responsible for african sleeping sickness attack host's CNS, transmitted by Tsetse fly single flagellum at end of animal with kinetoplast at other end squiggles between RBCs
Pedal disk
Used to attach anemone to a substrate
Hypostome
a conical structure at the oral end of a hydra/tubularia that bears the mouth surrounded by tentacles
Monophyly
all descendants share ancestor arthropoda
Trends in cnidarian evolution
anthozoa --> scyphozoa --> hydrozoa ancestral=polyp (adult) --> planula derived= polyp (asexual) --> medusa (sexual) --> planula septa decreases in complexity reduced body size=less complex septa evolution here does not mean increasing complexity; reducing complexity may be favorable
Bilaterally symmetrical
arthropods, annelids, chordates
Grantia
class calcarea, subphylum cellularia, sponge syconoid, marine lives in clusters, but each tube is an individual sponge (vase-like shape) large spicules arranged collar-like around osculum
Leucosolenia
class calcarea, subphylum cellularia, sponge tube-like asconoid with incurrent pores that lead directly to the spongocoel lives in clusters, usually not exceeding 10 cm in height
Cliona
class demospongiae, subphylum cellularia, sponge boring sponge, monaxon grows on shells of oysters and other mollusks, but may also be on other calcareous substances greater the water current and light intensity, the greater the boring rate found in shallow marine waters and usually yellowish
Potato sponge
class demospongiae, subphylum cellularia, sponge leuconoid occurs in bays and near-shore waters in sand and mud substrates
Commercial sponge
class demospongiae, subphylum cellularia, sponge leuconoid once the common household sponge before the invention of synthetic sponges, still sold as bath or car wash sponges used to be harvested by the millions and are still commonly used in Europe
Clathria prolifera
class demospongiae, subphylum cellularia, sponge redbeard sponge very bright red in life commonly occurs in oyster beds and on rocks in shallow water large colonies may be several cm in length poisonous to the touch
Anthozoa
class of Cnidarians all polyps enteron divided by septa (may be complete or incomplete), tertiary (knub-like) possess spirocysts (Zoantharia) and ptycocysts (Ceriantharia); adhesive tubules, threadlike solitary or colonial grow laterally= stolons or coenosarc grow vertically=lateral zooids and axial polyp
Demospongiae
class of cellularia, sponge 85% sponge diversity all leuconoid siliceous spicules when present (monaxonic, tetraxonic, polyaxonic) organic collagen (spongin) common household sponges, potato sponge, Clathria prolifera, Cliona
Hydrozoa
class of cnidaria polyp form dominant column=pedicel oral end=hydranth mostly colonial, some solitary FW and SW L form (with theca, blastostyle), A form oral mound=hypostome pedal disk, nematocysts on epidermis, tentacles capitate (knobby) or filiform (thread like)
Kinetoplastida
class of phylum euglenozoa of protozoa free-living and parasitic locomotion by undulating membrane and flagella DNA in nucleus and kinetoplast maintains shape by pellicular microtubles Trypanosoma (sleeping sickness)
Calcarea
class of subphylum cellularia, porifera spicules of CaCO3 (needle-like monaxons, triaxons, tetraxons) all 3 body types all marine leucosolenia, grantia
Actinopoda
class radiolaria marine, planktonic form silicon dioxide (glass) skeletons with spines axopodia, ray feet, pseudopods strengthened with microtubule many have photosynthetic symbionts may comprise 30% of ocean sediment (radiolarian ooze)
Radially symmetrical
cnidaria
Amoebozoa
common protozoans in freshwater blob-like structure, move via pseudopodia feeds by phagocytosis free-living may form tests parasitic forms cause amebic dystentery amoeba proteus, difflugia (test-forming)
Choanocytes
create water flow, filter food
Porocytes
cylindrical cells, act as ostia
Endoderm forms...
digestive tract and associated organs (stomach, colon, liver, etc.)
Cnidaria
diploblastic (ectoderm and endoderm) with mesoglea middle layer planula (free swimming), polyp (sexual or asexual, sessile), medusa (almost always sexual, free swimming) radial symmetry possess cnidae (in cnidocytes), nematocytes (stinging cells) large coelonteron (GV cavity, digestion, reproduction, gas exchange) bidirectional nerve net many have zooxanthellae symbionts
Ectoderm forms...
epidermis and nervous system
Pseudocoelomate
false cavity nematoda
Hydranth
feeding polyps with tentacles in cnidaria tubularia
Deuterostomes
form anus from blastopore
Foraminiferea
form elaborate organic or calcareous tests amoeboid in shape mostly benthic, some planktonic important geologic indicators
Protostomes
form mouth from blastopore
Paraphyly
group doesn't include all descendants reptiles, doesn't include birds
Polyphyly
group includes those not sharing immediate ancestor protozoa
Pinacocytes
line outer layer, like skin
Cnidaria phylogeny
modern molecular analysis=planula (larva) --> polyp (adult, sexual) traditional view= planula --> polyp (jv, asexual) --> medusa (sexual) Anthozoan life-style may be ancestral, medusa-form (Scyphozoa and Hydrozoa) derived
Leuconoid
most complex, many folds no atrium, water may leave any pore
Protozoans
mostly unicellular, heterotrophic eukaryotes move via cilia, flagella, or pseudopodia some contain photosynthetic endosymbionts free-living, colonial, parasitic high surface to volume ratio operate at low Reynold's numbers
Mesoderm forms...
muscle, skeletal, connective tissue, circulatory system, gonads
Asymmetrical body symmetry
no symmetry porifera
Acontia
numerous stinging cells on thread-like structures on the metridium of class anthozoa
Metridium
order actiniaria, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria anemone found on rocks, floats, breakwaters, etc. in low intertidal and subtidal areas
Bundosoma
order actiniaria, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria common sea anemone of jetties and bays of TX can crawl about, but when attached to a rock it's hard to remove prefers holes and crevices as attachment sites stalk is brownish or white and often covered with prominent adhesive papillae tentacles striped with blue or red often
Calliactis tricolor
order actiniaria, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria often found in symbiosis with various crab species found on shells inhabited by hermit crabs or others often deliberately placed on the shell by the crab even though it's capable of moving releases bright orange acontia from its column base when disturbed
Black coral
order antipatharia, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria axial skeleton is hard and black form plant like colonies in deeper tropical waters very valuable for jewelry
Corynactis californica
order corallimorpharia, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria common on pilings and rocky shores of Pacific coast tentacles are capitate (knobbed) and arranged in tight rings most contain powerful nematocysts cherry red in life
Gorgonia
order gorgonacea, subclass octocorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria sea fans common on coral reefs of Caribbean and Indo-Pacific plant-like and characterized by a ladder-like lattice structure polyps located along lattice, which is positioned to allow current pass through it yellow or purple and may have parasitic snails dried tissues with proteins
Leptogorgia
order gorgonacea, subclass octocorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria sea whips commonly found washed ashore along Gulf coast; offshore live anchored to shells or other hard substrates have a central, axial rod of gorgonin, surrounded by a yellow or red, leathery coenenchyme in which the polyps are embedded bear protective spicules parasitized by barnacles and snails dried tissues with protein core
Siphonophora
order of class hydrozoa, cnidaria colonial, usually pelagic pneumatophore=float physalia physalis
Leptothecatae
order of class hydrozoa, cnidaria l-forms with theca statocysts on medusa blastostyle gives rise to medusa buds (part of gonangium) obelia, plumularia, aglaophenia
Scleractinia
order of subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria true corals sclerosepta, colonial reef building corals contain zooxanthellae astrangia, pocilopora, brain coral
Virgularia presbytes
order pennatulacea, subclass octocorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria common sea pen in the sandy bottoms off TX beaches axial skeleton composed of calcium carbonate, which is flexible in life but rigid when preserved looks like threading on a screw
Renilla
order pennatulacea, subclass octocorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria sea pansy reddish to purplish lives on sandy bottoms of coastal waters flattened disc (rachis) where polyps are located peduncle anchors it into sand colony of zooids; longer, larger autozooids are the feeding zooids which catch food in their eight, feathery tentacles; shorter, smaller siphonozooids create a flow of water across the colony and through the disc circulation facilitates the exchange of gases and maintains the inflation of the disc
Stylatula
order pennatulacea, subclass octocorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria sea pens comprised of a long, axial polyp and a central, axial rod of calcareous spicules feather-like appearance, reminiscent of a writing quill live in burrows in sandy or muddy bottoms of shallow marine waters
Pocilopora
order scleractinia, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria common Pacific reef coral branching type of coral found in waters having relatively mild currents and low wave action light brown
Brain coral
order scleractinia, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria common on tropical reefs grows in rounded nodules, gets name from convoluted structure of skeleton
Astrangia
order scleractinia, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria grows in small branching clumps along the bases of southern TX jetties, or encrusts on shells 24 or more tentacles arranged in 3 rings, with nematocysts being distributed over the tentacles
Physalia physalis
order siphonophora, class hydrozoa, cnidaria portuguese man o war not a true jellyfish but actually a colony of highly modified polyps polyps make up pneumatophore (float), gastrozooids, gonozooids, and defnesive/prey capturing tentacles (dactylozooids) which may extend for several m below float tentacles contain a large number of potent nematocysts, causing sickness or shock
Tubipora
order stolonifera, subclass octocorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria pipe organ coral polyps joined at bases by stolons or by a basal mat skeleton composed of spicules fused into parallel tubes shallow water in tropical Pacific red from Fe in water
Zoanthids
order zoanthidea, subclass hexacorallia, class anthozoa, cnidaria trumpet-shaped body and the flat oral field distinguishable from sea anemones by simple siphonoglyph
Diploblastic
organisms with only 2 layers includes sponges and cnidarians
Radiolarians
phylum actinopoda of protozoa entirely marine and predominantly planktonic silicon dioxide skeletons pseudopodia radiate out from body surface
Plasmodium
phylum alveolata, subphylum apicomplexa causes malaria, requires mosquito as host and vector secondary host is usually a bird, but four species use humans dark spots or rings within cytoplasm of blood cells (must use high power)
Paramecium
phylum alveolata, subphylum ciliophora common in both FW and SW cilia around entire margin of animal used for locomotion (spiral swimming) and feeding trichocysts (defensive extrusomes) sensitivity to pH helps find food
Didinium
phylum alveolata, subphylum ciliophora predator of paramecium; mouths open wide enough to ingest prey several times their own size short proboscis containing extrusomes (defensive and/or prey capture functions) possesses poisonous toxicysts and sticky mucocysts for feeding
Vorticella
phylum alveolata, subphylum ciliophora stalked ciliate, stalk being attached to vegetation or other substrate cilia (located at top) set up a current that draws in food particles stalk is used for both feeding and protection, retracting when disturbed has a prominent ribbon-shaped macronucleus
Amoeba proteus
phylum amoebozoa very common in freshwater ponds (contractile vacuole) move by pseudopodia feed by engulfment nucleus, food vacuoles, contractile vacuoles, endoplasm
Termite flagellates
phylum axostylata of the protozoans mutualistic symbionts living in gut of termite engulf particles with pseudopodia located at their posterior end can have hundreds of flagella pear-shaped fuzzy cells with large distinctive nucleus and flagella
Axostylata
phylum of protozoa mostly parasitic or symbiotic mutualists flagellar locomotion axostyls, parabasal, attractophores rostral cap anterior to nucleus Trichonympha (termite endosymbionts), oxymonads, parabasaliads
Choanoflagellata
phylum of protozoa often colonial single flagellum from microvilli collar, for food and locomotion food particles trapped in collar sister taxon to metazoa near identical to choanocytes of sponges
Cnidaria life cycle
polyp-phase dominant in Hydrozoa medusa dominant in Scyphozoa polyp-phase only in Anthozoa
Euglena
protozoa, kingdom protista, phylum euglenozoa, class euglenoidea can utilize chlorophyll for food production, but can survive without them if other food is available chlorplasts and paramylon bodies differ in shape and abundance depending on species move by flagella or in inch worm fashion
Euglenoidea
protozoa, phylum euglenozoa flagellar, anterior locomotion; characteristic inch-worm like movement chloroplasts with paramylon bodies (starch storage center) central nucleus with prominent nucleolus stigma (eye spot) at base of flagella Euglena
Sclerocytes
secrete minerals to form spicules or organic fiber spongin
Foraminiferans
shelled amoebas mostly marine and usually very small, although some may get fist-sized shells made of calcium carbonate or sand single-celled organisms, usually having multiple chambers and reticulopods shells serve as important geologic indicators
Asconoid
simple, without in-folding most constrained by size because little surface area
Syconoid
some in-folding and canals increasing surface area
Nematocytes
specialized organelles within cnidocytes that eject a stinging thread
Porifera life cycle
sperm produced by choanocytes released into water eggs are formed by transformation of archeocytes fertilization takes place in mesohyl, release larva out osculum most sponges are hermaphrodites with internal fertilization
Octocorallia
subclass of class anthozoa of cnidaria eight tentacle polyps Stolonifera=tubipora Gorgonacea=leptogorgia, gorgonia Pennatulacea=renilla, stylatula, virgularia presbytes
Hexacorallia
subclass of class anthozoa of cnidaria septa multiples of 6 Zoanthids=single siphonoglyph (air tube) Actiniaria=two siphonogylphs, large solitary polyps; Metridium, Bunodosoma, Calliactis tricolor Scleractinia Corallimorpharia Antipatharia
Hydra
suborder capitata, order anthoathecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidaria FW, solitary, common reproduction both asexual by budding and sexual
Tubularia
suborder capitata, order anthoathecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidaria marine hydroid, grows in small, plant-like clusters on rocks, pilings, and floating debris
Millepora
suborder capitata, order anthothecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidaria fire coral, not true coral very small polyps that secrete a CaCO3 skeleton and is usually white to yellowish, rarely red abundant in tropical waters sting is very painful and results in a burn-like wound that can take several weeks to heal digestive gastrozooids (large pores) and feeding dactylozooids (small pores)
Porpita
suborder capitata, order anthothecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidaria pelagic colonial hydroid looks like velella but lacks sail, flat disk tropical species
Velella
suborder capitata, order anthothecate, class hyrdozoa, cnidaria by the wind sailor floats on the ocean surface driven by the wind on the sail, which is developed from the float blue-colored when alive
Stylaster roseus
suborder filifera, order anthoathecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidiaria Caribbean species of hydrocoral, found in strong currents and clean waters exhibits varying morphologies, branching or encrusting, depending on the strength of current in which they are found
Allopora porphyra
suborder filifera, order anthothecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidaria rare Pacific hydrocoral purple encrusting form found in strong currents (chocolate straws) purple branching form found in quiet waters
Capitata
suborder of order anthoathecatae, class hydrozoa, cnidaria capitates with knobbed tentacles hydra, tubularia, millepora, velella, porpita
Filifera
suborder of order anthothecate threadlike tentacles, filiform stylaster roseus, allopora porphyra
Dinoflagellata
subphylum of phylum alveolata alveoli sacs may be filled with cellulose two flagella for locomotion, transverse and longitudinal, nestled within groove some are photosynthetic crimson tides from blooms Ceratium, Gymnodinium, Pfiesteria
Apicomplexa
subphylum of phylum alveolata characteristic alveolar sacs in membrane sporozoans without cilia or flagella mostly parasitic, life cycle requires multiple vectors and hosts plasmodium (malaria), toxoplasma gondii, cryptosporidia
Ciliophora
subphylum of phylum alveolata locomotion by cilia alveolar sacs in membrane macronucleus (somatic growth) and micronucleus (reproduction) free-living forms=didinium, paramecium stalked form=vorticella
Hexactinellida
subphylum symplasma, sponge syconoid or leuconoid all marine, mostly deep sea syncytial tissue (multinucleated mass of cytoplasm) spicules are triaxon, siliceous "glass sponges", Euplectella
Euplectella
subphylum symplasma/hexactinellida, sponge venus flower basket deep-sea (500-5000 m) sieve plate over osculum increases structural strength glass fibers at base are used to anchor the sponge to the substrate
Archeocytes
transport sperm to oocyte, repair, etc. amoeboid
Coelomate
true body cavity annelids, echinoderms, arthropods, chordates
Porifera
two epithelial layers=pinacoderm (outer) and choanoderm (inner) mesohyl between with archeocytes, sclerocytes, spongin water current through ostia (pores), exit via osculum central cavity=atrium/spongocoel flagellated larva, usually without mouth monoecious/hermaphrodite, usually internal fertilization totipotent cells
Oocyte
unfertilized egg
Acoelomate
without body cavity platyhelminthes