What are they? Invertebrate Animals. Invertebrates Animals that do not have a backbone or any bone...
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What are they?
Invertebrate Animals
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Invertebrates
Animals that do not have a backbone or any bone tissue.
Most are limited in size because of support.
Ocean-dwelling can grow larger.
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Sponges: Phylum Porifera
Simplest multicellular animals on Earth.
Sessile: they are attached to one spot and do not move.
Most in ocean, some freshwater.
Body is a collection of cells organized into a body wall.
Feed on plankton and tiny organisms in water.
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Sponges: Phylum Porifera
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Specialized Cells
Pore cells- small openings in body, lead to larger canals.
The canals open into central space, where small cells with flagella carry water throughout sponge.
Some cells act as filters for food and O2.
Others digest the materials.
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Structure
Most sponges have spicules, spines made of hard material that provide shape and support for sponge. Provide protection from
other animals. Osculum: expels
water that has been filtered.
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Reproduction
Asexual- budding.
Sexual- Male cells released into water, and sometimes female
cells are also. Fertilization occurs in the water or inside the cell wall. Fertilized egg becomes larva: immature form of an
organism. Larva can swim and attach to ocean floor, where they
become sessile.
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Cnidarians
Invertebrate Animals
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Cnidarians: Phylum Cnidaria
Found in water
Jellyfish, corals, sea anemones, and hydras
Eat plankton, fish, and clams
Most are sessile, but can pull in food from around them.
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Cnidarians
All have tentacles– fingerlike extensions that go into the water.
Specialized stinging cells for capturing prey and protection from predators. Contains a nematocyst – has a filament inside that is
released when prey comes in contact. Wraps around or poisons prey Cnidarians
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Cnidarians
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Tissue and Body Systems
Flexible layers of tissue that, along with cells, make up the body system.
Organized around single body opening.
Tentacles bring prey into the opening, which leads to a cavity (gut) where digestion takes place.
Tissue and Body Systems
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Tissue and Body Systems
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Tissue and Body Systems
Even though they are sessile most their lives, they still move their bodies.
Adult jellyfish swim.
They sense and respond to prey that tough their tentacles; works like a simple nervous system, a network of nerve cells that form a nerve net.
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Reproduction
Buds are produced and carried away from the sessile parent in the water – asexual.
Male cells are carried to female eggs, resulting in free swimming larva – sexual.
Water is essential for cnidarian reproduction.
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Life Cycle
Jellyfish have several stages.
When a larva settles on the ocean floor, it grows into a sessile polyp.
The polyp develops buds that are eventually released; they are called medusas.
A medusa is an adult jellyfish; mobile.
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Body Plan
Most have radial symmetry: the body is organized around a central point, the mouth that open to the gut.
Allows them to capture food from all directions.
Forces them to move by pushing down against the water to propel forward.
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Worms
Invertebrate Animals
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Body Plan
Most worms have bilateral symmetry: one half looks just like the other half.
Have a forward end where the mouth is (its head) and a rear end for expelling wastes.
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Worm body systems
Some are simple, some are very complex.
Tube-shaped body with a digestive tract.
Take in oxygen through their skin, so must live in moist environments or water.
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Segmented Worms – Annelida
Bodies are broken into segments.
Earthworms have organs that make up systems; digestive system leads to the excretory system to remove waste.
Burrowing and feeding adds nutrients to the soil it goes through.
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Segmented Worms – Annelida
Several layers of muscle tissue.
Hair-like bristles help anchor them to the soil.
Nervous system with a brain and a nerve cord.
Circulatory system with several hearts that pump blood throughout the body.
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Segmented Worms – Annelida
Can reproduce sexually or asexually.
Earthworms have male and female parts on one worm.
Worms exchange male rep. cells to fertilize their female eggs, which then hatch into larvae.
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Flatworms -
Simplest bodies
Some move with cilia instead of muscles.
Absorb nutrients through skin.
Many are parasites, such as the tapeworm, that live off of their host organism.
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Roundworms -
They have muscles to moves; Nervous system and digestive system.
Found almost everywhere on Earth; great decomposers on land and in water.
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Dissection – directional terms
Anterior: the front (head) endPosterior: the back (rear) end
Ventral: the belly sideDorsal: the back side
Lateral: the sidesMedial: the middle
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Dissection – anatomical terms
Setae: small bristles that help anchor the earthworm
Clitellum: larger glands between the segments; aids in reproduction
Aortic arches: heartsClosed circulatory system: the blood
remains inside of the blood vesselsOpen circulatory system: the blood flows
out of the blood vessels
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Dissection – anatomical terms
Nerve ganglion: simple nervous system; like a brain
Nerve cord: runs through entire worm; like spinal cord
Dissection Video
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Mollusks (mollusca)
Invertebrate Animals
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Mollusks
All have soft bodies, and many have hard shells to protect them.
Oysters, clams, snails, mussels, octopi, squids, and slugs, etc.
Land, freshwater, and saltwater
Most have well developed body systems.
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Mollusks
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Mollusks
Reproduce sexually
All mollusks have a muscular foot and a mantle- a layer of folded skin that protects its internal organs.
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Bivalves
Shells that are made of two matching halves.
When closed, the shell completed covers the body.
No distinct head, but they have a mouth and sensory organs.
Clams, oysters, mussels
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Bivalves
Filter-feeders: filter food from surrounding water.
Moves by pushing its foot in and out of the shell; can burrow into the sand using foot.
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Bivalves
Takes in oxygen through gills- organs that filter dissolved oxygen from water.
Made of many folds of tissue to create a larger surface area, allowing for higher oxygen intake.
Gills also filter food from water.
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Gastropods
Most diverse group
Land: snails and slugsWater: conches, whelks, periwinkles
Most have spiral shaped shell.
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Gastropods
Head is at end of foot; has eyes and tentacles.
Most have a radula: shreds their food
Some eat animals, most eat plants/algae.
Land = lungs; water = gills
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Cephalopods
Live in saltwater: octopi, squid, chambered nautiluses
Most well-developed body system: Brain Nerves Pair of eyes near mouth Foot has tentacles for prey Mantle moves water through the siphon for movement Gills Three hearts
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Cephalopods
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Cephalopods
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Cephalopods
No protective shell, except nautilus – separate chambers mostly filled with gas to help float.
Some change color, some release ink to confuse predators, move freely.
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Adaptations
This is a very diverse group that has adapted to survive in different types of environments.
The foot Bivalve: simple structure moving in and out of shell. Gastropods: muscles in food allow organisms to glide
over the surface to get food. Cephalopods: foot has tentacles to pull food into
mouth and help in movement.
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Echinoderms (echinodermata)
Invertebrate Animals
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Echinoderms
Live in the ocean.
Adults have radial symmetry with mouth in the center.
Feed off ocean floor.
Sea stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, sand dollars
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Spines and Skeletons
They all have spines, some large (urchin) and some small (sea cucumbers).
Skeleton is not made of bone – made of stiff, hard plates that lie just below the skin.
Some are able to move with flexible skeleton (sea stars), some are not able to move (sand dollars).
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Spines and Skeletons
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Water Vascular System
Water-filled tubes that radiate out from the center of the body.
Tiny opening along top of body bring water into the tubes.
Each tube has a series of tube feet at its base.
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Tube Feet
The tube feet have muscles that act like suctions to stick to the ocean floor.
Tube feet can also help in finding and eating food:
Sea star can surround clam, use tube feet to pull shell apart, and then use its stomach to start digesting the internal mollusk.
Ocean Life
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Arthropods (arthropoda)
Invertebrate Animals
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Arthropods
Segmented body covered by a hard outer skeleton.
Over ¾ of all invertebrates are arthropods.
Insects, crustaceans (shrimp), arachnids (spiders).
Appeared about 420 million years ago.
Land and water dwelling
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Exoskeleton and Jointed Parts
Exoskeleton: strong outer covering made of chitin that completely covers the body.
Has joints- where it is thin and flexible- to allow movement.
Normally has three sections: head, thorax, abdomen.
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Exoskeleton and Jointed Parts
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Exoskeleton and Jointed Parts
Legs and other parts, such as antennae.
Muscles attach in between segments to help arthropods move.
They must shed their exoskeleton as they grow because it doesn’t; called molting
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Body Systems
Nervous system with brain and sensory organs
Digestive system with stomach and intestines
Open circulatory system – heart moves blood into the body directly with no blood vessels.
Reproduce sexually.
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Insects
Three body segments, a pair of antennae, and six legs attached to the thorax.
Obtain oxygen through spiracles.
Many colors and shapes allow them to blend with surroundings.
Compound eyes and antennae, wings, etc.
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Insects
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Insects
Many are herbivores with adaptations for the type of plant they eat.
Butterflies have tube like mouths to reach nectar.
Some insects help plants by acting as pollinators.
Some insects harm plants by eating/crushing parts of their bodies.
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Insects
Some are social insects, like bees and ants, that live in groups to survive.
They work together to find food, maintain shelter, and care for offspring.
Usually one female, the queen, produces and lays eggs. (reproduce sexually)
Bees
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Insects
Undergo metamorphosis during their life cycle, where their body structure changes dramatically.
Complete: Begins as an egg, then larva, then pupa, and then adult.
Incomplete/Simple: begin as egg, then hatches into a smaller version of the adult. Also called direct development. Complete vs. Incomplete
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Arthropods
Invertebrate Animals
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Crustaceans
Most live in the water – lobster, crab, krill, copepods; some live on land – pill bugs.
Three or more pairs of legs and two pair of antennae.
Larger crustaceans have gills.
Most have circulatory system – heart, no vessels
Reproduce sexually; hatch from eggs.
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Crustaceans – Eating Habits
Some each plants and small animals (lobster/shrimp)
Many are scavengers
Some are filter feeders (barnacles)
Beasts or Beauties?
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Arachnids
Exoskeleton, jointed limbs, segmented bodies; four pair of legs, no antennae, two body segments.
Some are parasites (ticks/mites), others are predators (spiders/scorpions). Predators sting, bite, or inject venom into their prey.
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Arachnids
Some get oxygen through spiracles.
Some spiders have respiratory organs called book lungs.
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Spiders
Largest group of arachnids.
Produce silk to spin webs to capture food.
Silk comes out of spinnerets.
Spiders
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Millipedes
Two pair of walking legs on each body segment.
Move slowly and eat decaying leaves and plants.
Emit foul odor that can harm predators.
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Centipedes
Move more quickly.
One pair of walking legs per body segment.
Antennae and jaw-like mouth, as well as pincers on their last segment.
They are predators; use jaws/pincers to paralyze prey.