Chap 3 Poriferans
Transcription
Chap 3 Poriferans
Porifera The simplest form of multicellular animals (Metazoans) 1 Tree of Life Figure CO 7 2 I. • Invertebrates - Background Kingdom Animalia • • • • 97% of all animal species are invertebrates Animals without a backbone All major groups have marine representatives (some are exclusively marine) (3-15 million species) 3 Phylum Porifera (Sponges) • • Simplest multicellular animals 98% are marine (~9000 species), no terrestrial sponges. Sessile (attached to substrate) Lack nervous system No true musculature Suspension feeders Diversity of shapes, sizes, colors, habitats • • • • • • Found from low tide line to 3.5 miles deep 4 Shapes: Tiny cups, broad branches, tall vases, encrusting round masses 5 •Cellular organization-complex aggregation of specialized cells •No true tissues/organs, cells largely independent from each other •No organs, movable parts, appendages •Thus, cells are plastic, can change from one type to another 6 Phylum Porifera (Sponges)-Gr. “pore-bearers” Complex sponge many chambers, oscula Simple sponge 1 chamber, 1 osculum Body Plan (Structure)- Asymmetrical Ostia – water enters-pumped through these pores Choanocytes – Collar cells; line chambers Osculum – water exits (driven by collar cells acting in synch) Spongin – Elastic protein (spongy texture) Spicules – Calcareous or siliceous structures, structural support, discourage predators Amebocytes (archaeocytes, wandering cells)– Secrete spongin and spicules, transport and store food particles, transform into other types of cells, repair 7 Function of collar cells: 1. Beat flagella to pump water through sponge. 2. Traps food particles 3. Trap sperms in water DIVERSITY Mesophyll: gelatinous, non-living layer adjacent to Choanocytes Contains the Archaeocytes Archaeocytes functions: 1. Digestion of food particles 2. Store digested food 3. Give rise to sperms (flaggelated) and eggs 4. Elimination of waste 5. Secretion of supporting spicules Asconoid Syconoid Pinacocytes: flattened contractile cells covering the outer layer of the sponge Functions: 1. contraction for shape change 2. Regulate water flow Leuconoid 8 Water-OUT through osculum Phylum Porifera (Sponges) Feeding (Digestion is intracellular) Suspension feeders Filter feeders (active suspension feeders) Water/food IN through ostia Reproduction Asexual budding, break off tips of branches “branches” regenerate, identical to parent Sexual 9 •Most are hermaphrodites •both male and female structures produce both types of gametes (eggs and sperm) •Broadcast spawning of sperm (clouds) •swept into sponge •fertilize eggs •eggs develop into larvae •swept out via water currents Fig. 7.3 10 Sponge colony showing buds Amphiblastula Gemmule Forms Parenchymula Development of sponge from amphiblastula 11 Phylum Porifera • 3 classes – defined by internal skeleton • Class Calcarea –CaCO3 spicules –Shallow tropical waters (Leucosolenia) –All forms are present in this Class 12 Phylum: Porifera • Class Demospongiae – Silica, spongin, or both, or lack skeleton – Never of CaCO3 – Bath sponge, rounded, spongin fibers – Encrusting forms, bright colors on rocks and corals – (Spongilla) 13 Phylum: Porifera Class Sclerospongiae -Hard sponge -the smallest class -have skeletons that contain all three kinds of material: calcium carbonate, silica, and spongin -all members are of leuconoid construction 14 Phylum: Porifera • Class Hexactinellida –Glass sponges, silica spicules –Deep waters –Either sycon or leucon constructs –(Euplectella) • Gr. Plecta = lace, this genus is known for lace-like skeleton fused glass spicules 15 16
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PHYLUM PORIFERA
Asconoid Sponges As an incurrent pore or ostium, this opening brings water directly into the sponge. (BLACK) It also serves as a prosopyle, (BLUE) bringing water into contact with the choanocytes ...
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