- Phylum Platyhelminthes
- Phylogeny/Evolutionary relationships
- Diversity overview: Classes
- Bauplan Basics
- Feeding
- Gas Exchange
- Osmoregulation/Excretion
- Nervous System
- Movement/Attachment
- Phylogeny/Evolutionary relationships (briefly)
- Hypothesis 1: Cnidarian-like ancestor
- Arose from planula larva
- Hypothesis 2: Annelid-like ancestor
- Loss of coelom (by “filling in”)
- Hypothesis 3: Benthic ctenophore ancestor
- Diversity: Classes
- Class Turbellaria
- Mostly free-living
- Carnivores and scavengers
- Head
a)Sensory structures
- Found in diverse aquatic & moist habitats
- Class Monogenea
- Flukes
- Ectoparasitic
a)Single host
b)Mostly fish
- Prohaptor (anterior)
a)Sucker or adhesive disc
- Opisthohaptor
a)Hooked attachment
- Class Trematoda
- Flukes
- Endoparasitic
a)1-3 hosts
b)One always a snail
- Oral sucker
- Acetabulum (ventral sucker)
- Examples
a)Liver flukes, i. e. Clonorchis
b)Schistosoma
- Class Cestoda
- Tapeworms
- Endoparasitic
a)Usually >1 host
- Scolex
a)Anterior attachment
- Strobila
a)Composed of proglottids
b)Reproductive
- No digestive tract
- Bauplan Basics
- Triploblastic
- True mesoderm muscles and mesenchyme
- Bilateral symmetry & cephalization
- What’s so great about a head?
- Compare movement & prey capture to radial phyla
- Share some protostome features
- Spiral cleavage
- Determinate cell fate
- Mesoderm from 4D cell
- No coelom! (=Acoelomates)
- Feeding: Class Turbellaria focus
- Type 1: Simple, non-eversible pharynx
- Feeding
a)Ciliary action
- Digestion
a)Sac-like gastro-vascular cavity
b)No gastrovascular cavity
How does digestion occur without a g.v. cavity?
- Type 2: Eversible pharynx
- Feeding (variations)
a)Lasso prey
b)Slimy secretions
c)Penis with stylet
d)Symbiotic algae
- Digestion (variations)
a)Extracorporeal or prey ingested whole
b)Extracellular: often highly branched g.v. cavity
c)Intracellular (finish)
d)Waste exits via mouth; some with small anus
- Feeding: Flukes (Class Monogenea, Class Trematoda)
- Feeding
- Pharynx expansion or
- Absorption via tegument
a)What is tegument?
- Digestion
- Some extracorporeal
- Simple g.v. cavity (1-2 branches; blind ends)
- Feeding (Class Cestoda)
- No mouth or digestive system
- Why not needed? (HINT: Location!)
- How do they obtain nutrients?
a)Highly specialized tegument with microtriches
- Gas exchange
- Via body surface
- Why effective?
- Some distribution of gases via gastrovascular cavity
- Especially when highly branched
- Endoparasitic forms
- Anaerobic respiration (in many)
- Why effective for these animals?
- Osmoregulation/excretion
- Protonephridia anatomy
- Flame bulb (flame = cilia)
- Collecting tubules (ciliated)
- Nephridiopore
- Bladder (flukes only)
- How does it work?
- Best developed for which habitat?
- Excretion
- Ammonia loss primarily via…?
- Nervous system
- Organization
- True neurons
- Unidirectional conduction
- Ladder-like layout
- Cerebral ganglia
a)No other ganglia
- Distinct sensory vs. motor pathways
- Variable role of nerve nets
- Acoels: predominates; Polyclads: in addition to CNS
- Multiple nerve cords in some
- Sensory structures
- Tactile receptors
a)Thigmotaxis
- Chemoreceptors
a)Ex: Planaria auricles
b)Adaptive value of cilia?
- Rheoreceptors
a)What are these?
- Statocysts
a)In which types?
- Note direct connections with cerebral ganglia
- Ocelli
a)Pigment cup (function?)
b)Retinular cells (functions?)
- Movement/attachment
- Mesoderm-derived muscles
- Longitudinal, circular, diagonal, dorso-ventral
a)Movement: peristalsis, etc…
- Cilia-mucus
- Also have duo-gland system: attach/detach
- Parasitic groups: specialized attachment structures
- Class Monogenea
a)Prohaptor (anterior)
Sucker or adhesive disc
b)Opisthohaptor
Main attachment
Hooks or jaws
- Class Trematoda
a)Oral sucker
b)Acetabulum (ventral sucker)
- Class Cestoda
a)Scolex
Hooks and suckers!
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