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| Invertebrate Zoology  Animalia, Porifera, Ctenophora & Cnidaria (Contact)     
        CLICK on underlined file names and included illustrations to
  enlarge:  ------------------------------------   Kingdom:  ANIMALIA,
  SubKingdom:  Parazoa, Phylum:  Porifera -- Sponges             Three classes of
  Porifera will be discussed as follows: 
  Class:  Calcarea that
  have a skeleton of calcium carbonate spicules and three body forms (Ascon,
  Sycon and Leucon); Class:  Hexactinellida that
  have 6-rayed spicules of silicon dioxide and a Leucon body type.  Most are deep-sea inhabitants and there
  are many elaborate and beautiful forms; Class:  Demospongia,
  the largest group whose skeletons are of silica, spongin or a combination of
  both.  Their spicules are never
  6-rayed and they possess a Leucon body type. 
  Included here are the fresh water sponges.             Porifera have
  their entire body perforated with tiny perforations.  They are multicellular with simple
  tissues.  There are neither organs nor
  organ systems.  The body is porous and
  the pores communicate with a system of channels that carries water currents
  through the body.  No muscle nor nerve
  cells are in evidence, there being only epithelia and connective tissue.  The adults are sessile.  Collar cells or choanocytes exist
  that line the interior of the chambers.               There is an
  intracellular digestion as in the Protozoa where food is taken into cells
  directly.  They are primarily a marine
  group with one family living in fresh water.   ------------------------------------             An example of
  a typical Porifera is Scypha, which lives in shallow marine environments.  It is cylindrical with a prominent crown
  2.5 cm. High.  There is radial
  symmetry and an interior cavity called a false cloaca.  Finger-like chambers radiate out of the
  chamber and others run in from the outside, all of which end blindly.  Connections between the chambers are
  minute incurrents and radial canals, the latter having flagellated
  chambers.  Extremely minute but
  specialized pores, called prosopyles,
  permeate the entire body and interconnect the chambers.  Apopyles occur,
  which are openings into the cloaca and these are larger than the
  prosopyles.  A water current is set up
  by the flagella of the collar cells. 
  The water is directed into the prosopyles, through the apopyles and
  into the cloaca from which it escapes via the osculum to
  the outside of the animal.  Calcium
  carbonate may arise from the mesoglea to form spicules.          
             Respiration
  and Excretion.-- These two function
  are accomplished by simple diffusion through any or all body surfaces.             Support
  and Protection.-- The spicules give
  support and they may consist of calcium carbonate or silicon dioxide.  Protection is afforded by spongin,
  a horny protein, which forms an anastomosing network.  Both the spicules and spongin are secreted
  by the amebocytes.             Locomotion
  and Movement.-- Porifera are
  sessile and immobile.  Every cell can
  change its shape to some degree.  If
  all cells contract at once, there will be a minute shrinkage of the entire
  body.             Sensitivity
  and Conduction.-- There are no
  special organs for sensitivity and conduction, and cells respond to stimuli
  as individuals.  A response may be
  spread out slowly from cell to cell, e.g., one cell passes a stimulus on to
  the next and so forth.             Reproduction.--
  There are two types of reproduction: 
  asexual and sexual.  Asexual
  reproduction may be by budding or gemmules.  Gemmules are a kind of budding found only in
  fresh water Porifera and where a group of amebocytes clump together in a
  spherical mass and then are surrounded by a wall.  These form in the mesoglea and they serve to carry-over the
  organism in winter, drought, etc.  New
  individuals are formed from each gemmule.             In Sexual reproduction the source
  of gametes is in the amebocytes and they are formed by meiosis.  Eggs remain in place in the mesoglea of
  the parent.  Sperm break out of the
  mesoglea and leave the parent.  They
  are taken into the body of another sponge with the water-food current.  A sperm cell is then captured by a collar
  cell and taken into a vacuole and finally transferred to an amebocyte, which
  conveys it to the egg cell.  The
  fertilized egg develops into a flagellated larva in the mesoglea.  Later it escapes to the external
  environment as an amphiblastula.  Such a curious reproductive behavior
  removes this group from a direct evolutionary line in the animals.             Body
  Forms.-- There are three
  body forms in Porifera as noted previously. 
  In the Ascon Type there is one
  large flagellated chamber.  There are
  no apopyles, incurrent or radial canals and the organisms are extremely
  small.               The Sycon Type is similar but with a
  different shape:               The Leucon Type allows for a much
  thicker body wall.  There is a
  reduction of the cloaca, which is divided into a complex series of
  channels.  This type is found in all
  of the larger sponges:               All these body type occur in the
  Calcarea, but Hexactinellida and Demospongia have only the Leucon Type.  The economic importance of sponges has
  been almost entirely for the commercial bath sponge.  Porifera have been regarded as a blind
  alley in evolution.   ------------------------------------   Please see following plates for Example Structures of the
  Porifera:   Plate
  10 = Animalia: Parazoa: Porifera: Scypha sp. Plate 11 = Animalia: Parazoa: Porifera:
  Calcarea & Hexactinellida (Scypha sp., Hyalonema sp.                        & Euplectella
  sp.) Plate 33 = Phylum: Porifera: Noteus sp.
  & Asplancha amphora   ------------------------------------             SubKingdom: 
  Metazoa Phylum:  Ctenophora (Previously
  under Coelenterata).  Included here are the sea gooseberries, sea walnuts and
  sea cucumbers (= not to be confused with the Holothuroidea).  Two Classes are Tentaculata and
  Nuda.  Their name is derived from eight
  meridially arranged comb rows or ctene.  These are a row of locomotory structures
  quite similar to the membranelles of the Ciliata.  They consist of several rows of cilia fused together to form a
  plate or ctene.  There is a symmetry that is a kind of
  hybrid between radial and bilateral symmetry.  Two tentacles are present. 
  Lasso Cells or colloblasts exist,
  which are sticky in nature.  However,
  there are no nematocysts.  There is a
  jelly-like mesoglea and a digestive cavity or gastrovascular cavity with a
  canal system.  Luminescence allows
  these animals to glow in the dark. 
  There is no known economic importance and their evolution is probably
  another blind alley, which evolved from a stock similar to the Cnidaria.   ------------------------------------   Please see following plates for Example Structures of
  the Ctenophora:   Plate 67 = Phylum: Ctenophora -- Transverse
  section to axis of Corallium sp. Plate 68 = Phylum: Ctenophora --
  Structure of an anemone.   ------------------------------------             SubKingdom: 
  Metazoa  Phylum:  Cnidaria (previously
  under Coelenterata).  The Cnidaria are primarily marine animals
  with radial symmetry.  Included are combs,
  corals,
  jelly
  fish Their
  tentacles are equipped with Nematocysts, which are stinging structures used
  in capturing their prey.  Their body form
  is a double walled sac with a large central cavity, which is called the gastrovascular
  cavity or coelenteron.  Three classes discussed here are Hydrozoa,
  Scyphozoa and Anthozoa.     ------------------------------------             The Class Hydrozoa shows extremes in the
  presence or absence of various generations. 
  Some species possess conspicuous polyp stages and suppressed medusoid
  stages.  Some show both equally while
  others show only a pronounced medusoid stage; e.g., Hydra
  spp. has no medusae while Gonionemus
  spp. have mostly medusae.  The
  Order Siphonophora
  (Portuguese Man-of-War)
  affords the best example of polymorphism in the entire Animal Kingdom.  Several kinds of polyps and medusae are
  all together in one body.  Each serves
  a particular function (eg., locomotion, digestion, hunting, etc.).  Some corals, e.g., Elk-horn
  Coral, are also represented
  here.  The Class is characterized by
  having alternation of generations, medusae with a velum, gonads that are
  ectodermal and exteriorly situated, and a completely acellular mesoglea.               The genus Obelia
  is a colonial representative only a few inches high.  There is a branched, plant-like stalk and
  the animal is common in coastal North America where it may be found attached
  to any submerged surface in salt water. 
  The gastrovascular cavity is continuous throughout the colony.              Food
  and Digestion.-- Members of the
  genus are carnivorous.  They use nematocysts
  to catch their food.  These are elaborate inclusions within
  cells.  There is an explosion of a
  thread from the nematocyst when there are physical or chemical stimuli.  The force in ejection probably involves an
  osmotic process.  The thread contains
  a poisonous substance that may kill, paralyze or occasionally trap the prey
  in a sticky secretion.  Nematocysts
  are located in greatest numbers on the tentacles, but they may also be
  scattered throughout the body.              The food is
  stuffed through the mouth and into the gastrovacular cavity.  Digestion commences in the gastrovascular
  cavity, and proteineous enzymes are secreted by the gastrodermis.  Digestion is completed
  intracellularly.  The gastrodermal
  cells can send out pseudopodia, which engulf small solid food particles.  Egestion is also through the mouth.             Circulation.--
  flagellated cells that line the gastrovascular cavity and create a current
  accomplish this.  The epidermis gets
  its food by diffusion across the mesoglea. 
               Respiration.--
  There is a simple diffusion on any or all body surfaces.             Support.--
  They may possess a secreted cuticle, which surrounds the stalks and hydranths
  of the colony or the mesoglea supports the animal.             Protection.--
  This is afforded by the nematocysts, which can sting and paralyze other
  organisms.             Movement.--
  Epithelio-muscular cells are present.  Usually the basal portion of the cell
  extends arms of striated muscles, which are simply extensions of the base of
  the cell.               In the course
  of evolution the muscle cell came
  into being and served solely as such. 
  Muscles are arranged in layers under the epidermis or gastrodermis.               Many hydroids are sessile, so they
  do not move, with the genus Hydra
  being an exception.  Jellyfish and
  related forms are moved by the current, although their tentacles and body as
  a whole may supply some motive force.             Sensitivity.--
  A Nervous System
  is
  present with nerve and
  sensory
  cells which are sensitive to
  all standard environmental stimuli.                 The system
  consists of (1) a plexis of nerve fibers without any organization into nerve
  cords or centralization into ganglia, and (2) transmission of nerve impulses
  is not polarized and the impulse can move in any direction.             There are Reflexes,
  which are primarily concerned with feeding movements.  For example, in Hydra spp. all
  tentacles contract over a food particle and the mouth opens.  Sense Organs are
  found only in medusae.  These are statocysts and
  simple eyes, which are organizations of several cells into a very simple
  organ.             Reproduction.--
  Alternation of Generations is common:               Polymorphism occurs
  where the same species can exist in more than one body form.  The genus Obelia has hydranths,
  reproductive polyps and medusae.             Medusoid Body Form.--
  This is a free-swimming form that is not too fundamentally different from a
  polyp, except that a medusa has much more mesoglea than a polyp.  The principal radii are those that emanate
  from the four corners of the stomach and are called per-radii.  Additional radial canals may occur between
  them.  A velum is found only in the
  Hydrozoa.  Gonads hang
  down from the radial canals and are derived from the epidermis and located
  exteriorly.  Eggs and sperm are shed
  directly into the water.     ------------------------------------   Please see following plates for Example Structures of the
  Hydrozoa:   Plate
  12 = Animalia: Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Obelia sp. Plate
  13 = Animalia: Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Gonionemus sp. Plate
  14 = Animalia: Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Campanula
  sp., Hydra sp., Eudendrium
  sp., Gonionemus sp. Plate 15 = Animalia: Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Tubularia
  sp., Bougainvilla sp.   ------------------------------------             The Class Scyphozoa includes
  the cup animals or jellyfish.  They
  are characterized by a medusa without a velum, gonads that are endodermal in
  origin and located internally.  The
  mesoglea does have some cells and fibers (= loose connective tissue).  Internal tentacles serve as gastric filaments.  The polyps are a very small, inconspicuous
  and short-lived larval form.  All are
  marine species, and their size varies up to about two meters in diameter.              A
  representative species is Aurelia aurita, which is found in inshore waters of
  coastal North America.  The species
  has radial symmetry and no velum. 
  There is a canal system that is much more complex than that found in
  the Hydrozoa.  There are oral
  lobes where
  the corner of the mouth is pulled far out and bears nematocysts on tentacles.  A subgenital pit has
  no obvious function, but may serve to make a closer contact between seawater
  and the stomach.               Food
  and Digestion.-- Aurelia is
  carnivorous and may catch some larger fish. 
  It has a stomach that is subdivided into four lobes:               Digestion
  begins extracellularly and terminates intracellularly as in the
  Hydrozoa.  Gastric tentacles secrete
  enzymes and bear nematocysts; they also create a water current.             Respiration
  and Excretion.-- These are
  accomplished by simple diffusion as in the Hydrozoa.             Support.--
  Only the mesoglea, which may be rather stiff, supports the organism.             Movement.--
  There are muscles of the epithelio-muscular variety that allow for
  movement.  The muscles occur in strong
  bands around the circular portion of the body.  However, most movement is planktonic.              Sensitivity
  and Conduction.-- These are very
  similar to the Hydrozoa except that the sense organs are more elaborate and
  are called Tentaculocysts.  Each contains a statocyst,
  eyespot
  and olfactory pits.  There is a diffuse conduction through a
  network of neurons without any coordination.             Life
  History.-- Auralia is
  dioecious.  Eggs and sperm are borne
  internally in the endodermis. 
  Fertilization occurs in the digestive cavity.  The development of eggs begins in the gastrovascular
  cavity and is completed at the tips of the mesenteries where they give rise
  to a hollow planula larva, which possesses an archenteron.  The larva develops into a small polyp
  called a scyphistoma, which is very
  inconspicuous.               A peculiar
  budding type occurs where a linear arrangement of buds is assumed.  This is called the Strobila
  Stage.               Buds detach to form free ephyra,
  which are actually juvenile adults. 
  These are a free-swimming stage that gradually grows into the adult.               An alternation of generations
  exists but is inconspicuous.             Commensals and Symbionts.--
  Some fish are able to live inside the tentacle mass and are not injured by
  the nematocysts.  Also, some jellyfish
  have symbiotic algae in their cells.   ------------------------------------             The Class Anthozoa includes
  the "flower animals," which includes
  the sea anemones, horny corals and calcareous corals.  There is only a polyp stage.  The oral end of a polyp is expanded into a
  disc, which bears tentacles either on the rim or scattered over the disc.               They have a stomodaeum
  or gullet, which is ectoderm that has turned
  in at the mouth.  The gastrovascular
  cavity is subdivided by vertical partitions called mesenteries
  or septa. 
  These greatly increase the surface area in the gastrovascular
  cavity.  Gastric
  filaments exist that are equipped
  with nematocysts and they begin along the sides of the free edges of the
  mesenteries, terminating freely in the gastrovascular cavity.  A mesoglea serves
  as a sort of connective tissue and it consists of cells and fibers.  These are more specialized than in the
  Scyphozoa where there are only scattered cells.  The gonads are endodermal in origin and located internally.             Two Subclasses divide this group as follows:             The Subclass Alcyonaria
  includes the sea
  pens, sea
  pansies, sea
  fans and
  sea whips. 
  All species of Alcyonaria are colonial and possess a horny skeleton
  consisting of proteinaceous material. 
  There is a relatively simple body construction of eight pinnate
  tentacles and eight mesenteries.  The
  polyp organization is simple, but elaborate colonies are formed.             The Subclass Zooantharia
  includes the sea
  anemones
  and stony
  corals.  Their structure is more complicated than
  that of the Alcyonaria.  Sea anemones
  are solitary while corals are mostly colonial.  There are six pairs of septa as in the genus Metridium, and a general
  tendency towards bilateralism.               The stony
  corals have a calcareous skeleton. 
  They occur in the form of cups in which resides a polyp.  A partition of skeletal material has
  pushed into the body wall but does not penetrate the wall, and therefore it
  remains external and is secreted by the epidermis.               The Genus Metridium represents the
  Zooantharia.  The species are from
  inshore waters where they may be found attached to any firm object
  underwater.  There is a cylindrical
  column with a basal disc and several rows of tentacles.  The tentacles are hollow and not as long
  as in the other classes of Cnidaria. 
  The body wall consists of an endodermis, ectodermis and cellular
  mesoglea.             Food
  and Digestion.-- Any animal within
  range of the tentacles is attacked. 
  Small food particles are conducted down the tentacles toward the mouth
  in a regular stream, while larger food particles are passed into the extended
  mouth.  Digestion is the same as in
  other Cnidaria being extra- and intracellular.  Nematocysts occur in the gastric filaments, which sting the
  prey to death.             Circulation.--
  A highly ciliated siphonoglyph is
  a side chamber of the gullet that aids in the process of respiration by
  forcing a current of water down the gullet. 
  Its action also aids in keeping the food constantly stirred up in the
  gastrovascular cavity.               There are six
  pairs of mesenteries, which are referred to as primary
  mesenteries, and two pairs of
  mesenteries that lie on the siphonoglyph and opposite to it, which are called
  directives.  Secondary mesenteries alternate between
  the primaries.  Tertiary and
  quaternary
  mesenteries may also be
  present.  All the mesenteries except
  for the primaries have free edges.  A mesentery
  filament is present, which is a
  vertical tube that joins the free ends of the mesenteries.                 Excretion.--
  The main nitrogenous waste is ammonia and this is released by simple
  diffusion.             Muscles.--
  These are usually the epithelio-muscular cells.             Movement.--
  Sea anemones have very slow, creeping movement by use of muscles inside the
  basal disc, while other members of the group such as the corals are
  stationary.             Sensitivity.--
  There are no sense organs present in the polyp stage, which is the only stage
  present in the Anthozoa (only medusae have sense organs).  However, the polyp tentacles and oral disc
  are most sensitive but do not constitute organs.             Reproduction.--
  Both sexual and asexual reproduction are present.  In sexual reproduction there are separate sexes
  (dioecious).  Gonads are borne
  primarily on secondary mesenteries that are located in back of the free
  edge.  Gametes are shed into the
  gastrovascular cavity and sperm leaves the body to enter that of another
  polyp.  Fertilization takes place in
  the gastrovascular cavity where the eggs develop into the planula larva,
  which is hollow and which swims out and eventually settles on the
  ground.  The polyp reproduces sexually
  again and therefore there is no alternation of generations.             Asexual
  reproduction involves pedal laceration,
  where pieces of the basal disc may break off and leave young polyps behind
  it.  However, continuous asexual
  reproduction results in abnormal individuals.               In some cases
  the more normal type of budding results in the formation of large colonies.             Economic Importance.--
  There is little or no direct economic importance.  However, indirectly corals form islands and their presence
  allows for human habitation.  The
  horny skeletons of red corals have been used as jewelry.  Hydra have been used with some success to
  combat mosquitoes (See 
  Mosquito
  Suppression With Hydra).    ------------------------------------   Review of Cnidaria
  Characteristics             The origin of
  the Cnidaria is obscure, but they are probably derived from a colonial
  flagellate with a solid colony that had a planula larva.  Their Protista features are a final
  digestive phase being intracellular and the absence of specialized excretory
  or respiratory structures.  Their more
  advanced features include well-organized tissues with specialization within
  the tissues (the epidermis is more highly specialized than that of the
  Porifera).  The digestive cavity is
  the initial site of digestion.  There
  are the beginnings of structures that warrant the name of organ.  Muscle cells are present in the form of
  epithelio-muscular cells as well as distinct muscle cells.  Polymorphism and Alternation of
  Generations occur.  Polymorphism is a
  mechanism by which a very simple animal can obtain some division of labor
  without the need for highly specialized tissues.  After polymorphism came into existence, the alternation of
  generation probably arose.  For
  example, the polyp represents the original larval stage, which has become more
  and more prominent, and the medusa because of its sense organs suggests that
  this was the original adult form.   ------------------------------------   Please see following plates for Example Structures of the
  Cnidaria   Plate
  16 = Animalia: Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Aurelia sp. Plate
  17 = Animalia: Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Scyanea sp. & Aurelia
  sp. Plate
  18 = Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Zooantharia: Metridium sp. (Figs. A & B) Plate 19 = Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Zooantharia: Metridium sp. (Fig. C)   ==============   | 
 
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