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| Invertebrate Zoology  Kingdoms:  Protista,  Chromalyeolata  & Animalia(Contact)    CONTENTS   
   CLICK on underlined file names &
  illustrations for details:              Invertebrate zoology is a
  biological discipline that involves the study of invertebrates.  Although vertebrates possess many
  characters in common with invertebrates they are distinguished by possessing
  a backbone.  Invertebrates lack a backbone.  Invertebrates comprise over 95 percent of
  all animal species and certainly more than that percentage in animal
  biomass.  They have been extensively
  used in biological researches of heredity, embryology and regeneration.  They also have had great practical
  importance related to insect damage, the causes of human and animal disease
  and directly as food, pearls, buttons, etc.             As we proceed to examine the
  various characteristics of the different animals it becomes obvious that a
  common bond unites all animals in that we must all respire, consume food,
  excrete wastes and reproduce.             Zoology may also be divided
  further into other principal categories such as:          Arthropodology
  = The study of arthropods, including Arachnology (spiders & mites),
  Entomology (insects) and Carcinology (crustaceans).  Malacology = The study of
  mollusks.  Invertebrate
  Paleontology = The study of extinct
  invertebrates.  For a classification
  of Invertebrates as treated herein please see Table 1.  However, the principal groups may also be
  noted as follows:            
  Arthropoda -- insects, arachnids, crustaceans            Nematoda -- round
  worms            Mollusca --
  squid, snails, bivalves            Annelida --
  segmented worms (earthworms, leeches, polychaetes)            Nemertinea --
  ribbon worms            Platyhelminthes
  -- flat worms           
  Acoelomorpha (controversial phylum: probably Platyhelminthes)           Rotifera -- wheel
  animals           Ctenophora -- Comb jellies            Cnidaria -- jellyfishes, corals, sea
  anemones, hydras            Porifera -- sponges             Echinodermata - starfishes, sea urchin             The arrangement of the
  various subgroups is based on ever increasing complexity and presumed evolution
  of the most primitive [(e.g., Protista (Protozoa)] to the more advanced
  organisms.  Previous names of groups
  are included in parentheses.  There
  continues to be wide disagreement on classification, and although further
  rearrangements are expected as more biological and biochemical data are
  forthcoming, the presented design should enable identification of major
  orders, families and genera. The Protista (Protozoa) are included herein as a
  primitive precursor group.  Emphasis
  has been placed on morphological and behavioral characteristics that are
  easily discernable, and a simple diagrammatic style suitable for lecturing is
  used for most of the illustrations. A binocular microscope with a 20X
  magnification is advisable for those wishing to view living and preserved
  specimens.  Greater detail on a
  particular group or species may be found by referring to publications listed
  in the Bibliography
  or through Internet searches.             This is a self-contained database
  with a minimum of links outside its limits. 
  Independent Internet searches are encouraged for greater detail on a
  particular animal group.   ---------------------------------------    Kingdom: 
  PROTISTA (Protozoa) -- unicellular microbes, plankton   Phylum:  Sarcomastigophora ,
  Class:  Rhizopoda (Sarcodina)        [Mycetozoa have been included in the Myxomycetes or Amoebozoa
  of Mycology]               The above differ also in their
  nuclear content.  Foraminifer and
  Radiolara use asexual reproduction. 
  Flagella also occur in the Sarcodina. 
  There are many that form symbiosis with algae.  For example, Zoochlorellae are Heliozoa
  with green algae; Zooxanthellae are Radiolaria with yellow algae.             Their importance ranks high.  Endomoeba histolytica
  is a notorious intestinal parasite and they serve as an important link in the
  food chain.             The Protista that have been called
  Protozoa, or "First Animals"
  are more like the early primitive animals than any other living forms.  They have changed less than other
  groups.  They are usually
  single-celled animals that may exit in a colony.   But each individual cell retains its independence.  Their simplicity is often deceiving.  Amoebe, for instance, do all the basic
  functions as humans.  However, the cells
  of Protozoa are so complex that they have frequently been regarded as
  "acellular."  There are all
  grades of cellular differentiation from very primitive as in amoeba and
  advanced as in the higher ciliates and flagellates.  There are definite openings for the taking of food
  developed.  Locomotor structures
  appear and contractile structures show up, which function as muscle
  fibers.  The bases of the cilia and
  flagellae are connected.  Different
  grades of reproduction occur from binary fission, complete sexual
  differentiation and an alternation of sexual generations.  Protista have reached the point of
  multicellular organization. 
  Flagellates are shown to be the most developed and it is believed that
  they resemble the original stock group that gave rise to both plants and
  animals.  At one time all Protista
  were believed to have evolved from the flagellates.             The Class Rhizopoda (Sarcodina)
  is characterized by pseudopodia, which are organelles that are not true
  organs.  They serve in locomotion and
  food getting.  The cytoplasm of the
  cell is not provided with many visible structures that possess specific
  functions.  Amoeba
  proteus
  is a common fresh water
  rhizopod that occurs in calm, semi-stagnant water.  It is microscopic in size and its form is indefinite.                Ingestion &
  Digestion of Food.-- The cytoplasm of
  A.
  proteus consists of two
  parts:  (1) a plasmagel that
  includes a clear layer and an outer portion of endoplasm, and (2) a plasmasol,
  which is a fluid or the inner endoplasm. 
  The organism is holozoic, taking in
  solid food consisting of algae (diatoms) and other protozoa into its
  body.  The food is captured by the pseudopodia,
  and a food cup is formed that engulfs the food bringing it inside in a food
  vacuole.  Another means of feeding
  occurs where the food slips past the cell membrane and thereby enters the
  cell.  There is no vacuole formed in
  this type.  Digestive enzymes diffuse
  into the vacuole and dissolve the food. 
  Indigestible portions are left in the vacuole.  Protein and carbohydrate enzymes are
  present in abundance, but there are few fat enzymes.  Egestion is accomplished by the vacuole
  migrating to the edge of the amoeba and eventually becoming located on the
  outside of the organism.             Amoeboid Movement.-- The
  plasmagel and plasmasol are interchangeable, the former holding the latter
  under some pressure.  When the
  plasmagel weakens or converts to plasmasol anywhere on the animal, the
  pressure forces the plasmasol out into a pseudopodium.  The plasmasol sets into a gel all along
  the edges of the pseudopodium in the form of a tube.  The posterior end of the cell then
  crumples up while converting plasmagel to plasmasol so as to form the new
  extension.             Circulation is accomplished by
  movements of the animal itself, and respiration and
  excretion
  are simple diffusions
  through the cell membrane.  The Contractile
  Vacuole
  is usually located at
  the posterior end of the amoeba.  This
  is a water regulating mechanism that pumps out water that moves into the cell
  by osmosis.  There is an incidental
  expulsion of water products.  With an
  increase in the salt concentration of the medium the contractile vacuole
  slows down and finally stops.  A
  reduction of salt concentration results in a reactivation of the vacuole.             Support & Protection.--
  There is little support needed in a suspended animal like Amoeba,
  and there are no protective mechanisms. 
  However, when unfavorable environmental conditions occur Amoeba
  forms a cyst that can resist drying, temperature extremes, etc.             Sensitivity & Conduction.--
  Amoeba
  behaves as if it had a nervous system, which it does not.  A stimulus applied at one point on the
  animal body may cause any other portion to react.  The animal perceives and responds to environmental
  changes.  There is a positive response
  to food and weak light, and a negative response to all other stimuli.  It generally responds in some way to
  light, temperature, touch and chemical reactions.  There are no visible sensory or motor apparatus in the
  cytoplasm, but Amoeba is regarded as being generally sensitive.             Reproduction is
  entirely asexual being effected by binary fission (cell division).  Size determines when A. proteus will
  reproduce, which is usually 150 microns. 
  Sexual processes doe occur within the class but not in this
  genus.     ------------------------------------             In
  the Phylum
  Sarcomastigophora
  Class Mastigophora (Flagellata) movement
  is primarily by means of a flagellum. 
  Amoeboid stages may occur in some phase of the life cycle,
  however.  But adults always move by
  the flagellum.  When parasitic they do
  not form spores.  Nutrition is
  holozoic, saprophytic or parasitic. 
  The Subclass Phytomastigina include green flagellates while
  Zoomastigina are the colorless flagellates.              The Phytomastigina includes the genus Euglena.                These animals occur primarily in
  fresh water and an abundance of them may produce a green scum.  Their size varies from 25-500 microns and
  the body wall is more rigid than that of the amoebae.  There is a rigid, grooved wall or pellicle
  present, however the ecto- and endoplasm are not well defined.  Nutrition is holophytic
  where the animal manufactures it own food by
  photosynthesis.  But in darkness it will
  live on dissolved nutrient material and thus is saprophytic.  Food is stored in paramylum
  bodies, and pyrenoid
  bodies
  occur in the center of
  the chloroplasts, which serve to regulate them.  In darkness chlorophyll disappears from the cell.  Circulation, excretion and respiration are
  the same as in Amoeba
  proteus.             Contractile vacuoles are located
  around the reservoir whose function is to serves as exit to the
  vacuoles.  Locomotion is by movements
  of the flagellum.  The flagellum has a
  central core and is spirally wound with cytoplasm.  The flagellum separates into two extension in the reservoir and
  terminates in basal bodies.               As for sensitivity, there is an
  eyespot, which is positive to weak or moderate light but negative to strong
  light or arkness.  Conduction is like Amoeba.  The basal bodies serve as a coordinating
  mechanism because their removal discoordinates the flagellum.  Reproduction is asexual with longitudinal
  binary fission.  All parts are
  regenerative and there is no sexual reproduction in Euglena
  although others of the class do show it. 
  Cyst formation occurs to withstand adverse environmental conditions.             Some species in the Phytomastigina order Dinoflagellata
  have an armor plate (cellulose armor)
  that is occasionally shed and replaced. 
  The order is a large group of importance in marine habitats as
  plankton.  Dinoflagellates produce the
  "Red
  Tide" in oceans that
  results in widespread fish kills.             The flagella have been termed
  "Frog Flagella" that are
  diagrammed as follows:               In the Subclass Zoomastigina nutrition is holozoic,
  saprophytic and parasitic.  The
  animals are colorless.  The flagella
  are very numerous and their arrangement is anterior with one flagellum
  extended anteriorly and the other trailing. 
  They may be fastened to the side of the organism by an undulating
  membrane.               Several genera of the Zoomastigina
  are of great importance to humans and animals because of their parasitic
  habits.  Trypanosoma causes
  "African Sleeping Sickness",
  Trichomonas
  is a parasite of humans
  and animals, Leishmania
  causes a skin disease
  known as "Oriental Sore,"
  and Giardia
  is a severe human
  intestinal parasite.  Also of
  importance is that species may also produce oils instead of paramylum, which
  results in foul-smelling and foul-tasting water.     On the other hand, termites possess
  a Zoomastigina symbiont that is of mutual benefit.             Phytomastigina have a well-developed
  and pronounced colonial arrangement, which is true also of the Zoomastigina
  but not as pronounced.  The
  Phytomastigina genus Pandorina has
  16-32 cells while Volvox has hundreds of
  cells in a gelatinous matrix.  Any
  division of labor limits the boundary between colonial organisms and
  multicellular organisms.  Volvox
  may be sometimes regarded as multicellular, but reproductive cells in Volvox
  function only to reproduce the organism. 
  Species in the order Protomonadina possess
  a funnel-shaped collar similar to cells that are found in the Porifera.               Sexual reproduction in the Phytomastigina is especially
  prevalent.  Isogametes of identical
  appearance and behavior are formed or heterogametes may be the case as in Volvox.   ------------------------------------             All members of the Phylum:  Apicomplexa (Sporozoa) are parasitic, and all produce spores at
  some stage.  There are no locomotory
  organelles in the mature stage, although the immature forms may possess
  them.  Life cycles vary from simple to
  complex.             
  The incitant of malaria, Plasmodium
  vivax,
  has one of the most complicated life cycles. 
  There are alternates of sexual with asexual reproduction.  Malaria is considered to be one of the
  most important diseases of humans and it also affects animals
  extensively.  Its life cycle is as
  follows:              
  Other important diseases found in the Apicomplexa are Texas Cattle Fever, Nosema (affecting honeybees and silkworms) and Coccidiosis (in chickens).   ------------------------------------ Please see
  following plates for Example Structures of the Protista:   Plate 65 = Kingdom: Protista -- Development
  characteristics Plate 1 = Different body shapes in Rotifera. Plate
  2 = Protista: Sarcomastigophora: Rhizopoda: Amoebina: Amoeba proteus Plate
  3 = Protista: Sarcomastigophora: Rhizopoda: Foraminifera &
  Radiolaria Plate
  4 = Protista: Mastigophora: Eglenoidea: Euglena viridis Plate
  5 = Protista: Mastigophora: Phytomastigina: Volvocina: Volvox
  globator Plate 6 = Protista: Sarcomastigophora:
  Mastigophora & Apicomplexa (Pandorina sp.,                        Trichonympha sp., Trypanosoma
  rhodesieusi & Plasmodium vivax   ------------------------------------ The Kingdom:  CHROMALYEOLATA (Infusoria)             Included here are the ciliates and
  water
  molds.  Members possess cilia as locomotory
  organelles.  There are two kinds of
  nuclei present in some members (1) micronuclei and (2) macronuclei).  Reproduction is by conjugation.  This section will discuss the Superphylum:  Alveolata Phylum:  Ciliophora.               In the Class Ciliata there
  are two subclasses:  Protociliata and
  Euciliata.  The Protociliata
  (e.g., Opalina) is a very small group
  all members of which are parasites or commensals.  There are neither macro- nor micronuclei but rather the nuclei
  are scattered and all of the same size. 
  There is no conjugation and the group may be transferred to the
  Mastigophora.  The Euciliata are the
  true ciliates where macro- and micronuclei and conjugation are present.               Cilia are common in many of the
  Ciliata and an undulating membrane occurs in Paramecium's gullet.  Membranelle exist that generally surround
  the food-gathering portion of the body. 
  These are paddle-like and my also function in locomotion.  Vorticella is a representative
  genus.  Cirri or
  leg-like tuft cilia are present in Euplotes which are fused cilia that look
  and act like legs.  These have been
  called "crawling cilia."              Nutrition is mostly holozoic and
  many are saprozooic, living off the dissolved organic matter that is taken in
  through the body wall.  Some species
  are also parasitic.             Contractile structures or myonemes are
  present, which serve as muscle cells. 
  Such are found in the stalk of Vorticella.               Some species of ciliates occur in
  the digestive tract of animals and actually assist in cellulose
  digestion.  Balantidium
  coli is present in humans.   ------------------------------------             Paramecium
  is a representative
  genus in the Euciliata that occurs wherever
  bacteria are present.  They are
  slipper-shaped with a lateral grove called the "Oral
  Groove."  These organisms are uniformly clothed with
  cilia and the body surface has a pellicle. 
  One large macronucleus and
  a small micronucleus
  are present.  There are two contractile vacuoles at
  opposite ends each of which operates alternately with the other.  A plasmagel and plasmasol are easily
  distinguishable and the average length is 200 microns.               Feeding.--
  Bacteria are the principal food of Paramecium.  Feeding involves cilia that beat a current
  of food into the oral groove and finally into the gullet.  A modified group of cilia occur in the
  gullet to form the undulating membrane.                 At the base of the gullet there is
  a food vacuole, which detaches like a bubble when it is full and then moves
  throughout the body in a well-defined path. 
  The path of movement is first posterior, then anterior, and finally
  posterior with termination in the anus.               There is a constant circulation of
  plasmasol, which causes the food vacuoles to be carried around a cyclosis.  The food vacuole is acid at first and
  later becomes alkaline.             Circulation.--
  This is accomplished by cyclosis,
  and simple diffusion takes care of excretion and gas exchange.             Locomotion.--
  The waving of cilia accomplishes locomotion. 
  These resemble short, blunt flagella but they differ by their shorter
  length and numbers.  Each cilium terminates
  proximally in a basal body that is interconnected with all basal bodies in
  the organism.             Support
  is given by the pellicle.             Protection
  is furnished by trichocysts, which
  simply serve as anchors while the cilia re waving food into the gullet.  There is no cyst formation in Paramecium, the animal being
  hearty and can withstand extremes in oxygen and carbon-dioxide
  concentrations.             Sensitivity.--
  Paramecium
  is indifferent to light except for one species that has a green alga
  symbiont.  Actually all the cilia may
  be sensory and able to discriminate between edible and nonedible substances.             Coordination.--
  There is coordination between the many cilia and may be brought about by the
  interconnections of their basal bodies. 
  The presence of an "amotorium"
  or kind of central brain is obscure.             Reproduction.--
  Paramecium
  reproduces by binary fission.                 Conjugation is like that found in
  Ciliata and Suctoria.  It occurs only
  in individuals with a macro- and micronucleus.  Two conjugating individuals become sticky and pair.  The micronucleus is involved in genetic
  transfer.               Step I
  = The micronucleus divides.           Step II
  = A second division occurs (--4 haploid micronuclei in each conjugant)           Step III
  = Three micronuclei degenerate; the one remaining divides again.           Step
  IV = There is a mutual
  exchange of micronuclei (one goes to mate and one remains                              behind)           Step V
  = There is a fusion of two haploid micronuclei
  to form one diploid micronucleus.           Step
  VI =
  The cells separate from one another and are termed "exconjugants."  The                             
  macronucleus  disintegrates.                                   Post
  Conjugation in Paramecium             Step I =
  2N micronucleus divides to produce eight 2N micronuclei.           Step
  II = Four micronuclei
  enlarge to form macronuclei, while four micronuclei remain                              unchanged.           Step
  III =
  The cell divides to produce four cells, each of which possesses one
  micronucleus                                and one macronucleus.                                               Step IV = The macronuclei then grow enormously by forming the
  polyploid condition.  They apparently
  regulate all the vegetative processes in the cytoplasm.  In asexual reproduction the micronucleus
  always divides by mitosis while the macronucleus divides by splitting almost
  in half.   ------------------------------------            
  The Class:  Phyllopharyngea, Subclass: Suctoria has
  cilia in immature stages and adults possess tentacles.  They paralyze their prey and the suctorial
  tentacles
  suck the prey dry.               Macro- and micronuclei and
  conjugation are present.  Adults are
  sessile and the group occurs in both fresh and salt water.  Many are free living, some are commensals
  and a few are parasites.  They have
  little economic significance.   ------------------------------------   Please see
  following plates for Example Structures of the Chromalveolata:   Plate
  7 = Chromalveolata: Ciliophora: Ciliata: Paramecium
  multimicronucleatum Plate 8 = Chromalveolata: Ciliophora:
  Ciliata: Nyclotherus sp., Opalina sp., Didinium nasutum
  &                    Paramecium sp. Plate
  9 = Chromalveolata: Ciliophora: Ciliata & Phyllopharyngea (Euplotes
  patella & Ephelota sp.) Plate 66 = Kingdom: Chromalyeolata, Phylum:
  Ciliata -- Paramecium structure     ==============     |