INVERTEBRATES Annelida.pdf

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About This Presentation

Millar Harley Zoology INVERTEBRATES Annelida.pdf


Slide Content

INVERTEBRATES (Zool-02506)
3(2-1)
Presented by: Nabeel Tahir
M.Phil. Zoology
Class: ADP 5 Semester

Annelida
The Metameric Body Form

General Characteristics
CharacteristicsofthephylumAnnelidainclude:
•Bodymetameric,bilaterallysymmetrical,andwormlike
•Protostomecharacteristicsincludespiralcleavage,trochophorelarvae
(whenlarvaearepresent),andschizocoelouscoelomformation
•Paired,epidermalsetae
•Closedcirculatorysystem
•Dorsalsuprapharyngealgangliaandventralnervecord(s)withganglia
•Metanephridia(usually)orprotonephridia

Relationships to Other Animals
•Analidare Protostomes.
•This diverse phylum originated at least as early as Precambrian times, more
than six hundred million years ago.
•Unfortunately, little evidence documents the evolutionary pathways that
resulted in the first annelids.
•A number of hypotheses account for annelid origins on the basis of coelom
1.If a schizocoelousorigin of the coelom is correct, as many zoologists
believe, then the annelids evolved fromancient flatworm stock.
2.if an enterocoelouscoelomorigin is correct, then annelids evolved from
ancient diploblastic animals, and thetriploblastic, acoelomate body may
have been derived from a triploblastic, coelomate ancestor.

Metamerism and Tagmatization
•Metamerism–segmentalarrangementofbodyparts.
•Eachsegmenthas:excretory,nervous,andcirculatorystructures.
•AdvantagesofMetamerism:
1.HydrostaticcompartmentsallowsvarietyoflocomotorandsupportivefunctionsIike
swimming,crawling,anburrowing.
2.itlessenstheimpactofinjury.Ifoneorafewsegmentsareinjured,adjacent
segments,setofffrominjuredsegmentsbysepta,maybeabletomaintainnearly
normalfunctions,whichincreasesthelikelihoodthattheworm,oratleastapartofit,
willsurvivethetrauma.
3.Tagmatization(Gr.tagma,arrangement).Thespecializationofbodyregionsina
metamericanimal.itpermitsthemodificationofcertainregionsofthebodyfor
specializedfunctions,suchasfeeding,locomotion,andreproduction.
Althoughitisbestdevelopedinthearthropods,someannelidsalsodisplaytagmatization.

Metamerism

phylum Annelida
•Class Polychaeta
Marine worms
•Class Oligochaeta
Soil building worms
•Class Hirudinea
Predatory leeches

Class Polychaeta (Gr. polys, many+chaite,
hair)
•mostly marine.
•usually between 5 and 10 cm long.
•more than 5,300 species.
•largest annelid class.
•live on the ocean floor, under rocks and shells, and within the crevices of coral reefs.
•Some are burrowers and move through their substrate by peristaltic contractions of the
body wall.
•Examples:
Clam worm or sand worm (Nereis)
Tangleworms(Cirratulusgrandis)
Blood Worms (Glycera)
Sedentary Polychaetes

External Structure and Locomotion
•Parapodia (Gr. para, beside + podion, little foot): lateral extensions supported by chitin
and numerous setae project from the parapodia
•Setae (L. saeta, bristle): are bristles secreted from invaginations of the distal ends of
parapodia. They aid locomotion by digging into the substrate and also hold a worm in its
burrow or tube.
•Prostomium (Gr. pro, before + stoma, mouth): is a lobe that projects dorsally and
anteriorly to the mouth and contains numerous sensory structures, including eyes,
antennae, palps.
•Nuchal organs: ciliated pits or grooves which are chemoreceptors for food detection .
•Peristomium (Gr. peri, around): The first body segment, that surrounds the mouth and
bears sensory tentacles or cirri.
•Cuticle: The epidermis of polychaetesconsists of a single layer of columnar cells that
secrete a protective, nonliving cuticle.
•Somepolychaeteshave epidermal glands that secrete luminescent compounds.

External Structure of Polychaeta

Locomotion
In Water:
•When longitudinal muscles on one side of a segment contract, the
parapodial muscles on that side also contract, stiffening the parapodium
and protruding the setae for the power stroke.
•As a polychaetechanges from a slow crawl to swimming, the period and
amplitude of undulatory waves increase.
In Soil:
•Burrowing polychaetespush their way through sand and mud by
contractions of the body wall or by eating their way through the substrate.
•In the latter, polychaetesdigest organic matter in the substrate and
eliminate absorbed and undigestible materials via the anus.

Feeding and the Digestive System
•The digestive tract of polychaetesis a straight tube.
•Pharynx: when everted forms the proboscis;
•Crop: a storage sac
•Gizzard:grinding
•Intestine:long and straight.
•Organic matter is digested extracellularly, and the inorganic particles are passed through
the intestine and released as “castings.”
•Polychaeta can be:
-Predatory-usually burrow or live in coral crevices; some can have poison glands.
-Herbivores
-Scavangers
-Filter feeders-tube dwelling inhabit substrates rich in dissolved organic matter can absorb
as much as 20 to 40% of their energy requirements across their body wall as sugars and
other organic compounds.

Gas Exchange and Circulation
•Respiratory gases diffuse across body wall and parapodia (increase
surface area)
•Closed circulatory system
•Oxygen is carried by molecules called respiratory pigments -blood
colorless, green or red
•Dorsal aorta: lies just above the digestive tract and propels blood
from rear to front.
•Ventral aorta: lies ventral to the digestive tract and propels blood
from front to rear.
•Capillaries: Running between dorsal and ventral vessels.

Nervous and sensory functions
•Nervous systems are similar in all three classes of annelids.
•A pair of Suprapharyngeal ganglia controls motor and sensory functions like
feeding and forwordmotion.
connect to
•A pair of S ubpharyngeal ganglia help mediate locomotor functions requiring
coordination of distant segments.
by
•Circumpharyngealconnectives that run dorsoventrally along either side of the
pharynx.
•Ventral nerve cord: with paired segmental ganglia in each segments; allows
escape response of segments.
•Segmental ganglia: coordinate swimming and crawling movements in isolated
segments
•2-4 pairesof eyes.

Excretion
•Excrete ammonia.
•Most of the excretory organs in annelids are active in regulating
water and ion balances.
•Nephridia -excretory organs in annelids.
Two types of Nephridia
Protonephridia- tubule with a closed bulb at one end and a
connection to the outside of the body at the other end.
Metanephridia- open ciliated funnel (nephrostome) that projects
through an anterior septum into the coelom of an adjacent segment

Reproduction and Regeneration
•All polychaetescan regenerate lost segments
•May have natural break points if grabbed by
predators (process called autotomy)
•Some reproduce by fission or budding
•Most are dioecious
•External fertilization and trochophore larva.
•Have no permanent gonads
•Gonads appear as temporary swelling of
peritoneum at certain seasons
•Gametes are shed either:
through genital ducts
Or through nephridiopore
Or through rupture in body wall

•Some polychaeteslive most of the year
as sexually immature individuals =
atokes
•After living 1 or 2 years as benthic
organisms they become sexually
mature and swollen with gametes=
epitokes
•Head shrinks, body enlarges, gonads
develop and produce egg or sperm.
•Sometimes only part of the body makes
the transformation, breaks off and the
rest of the worm lives to repeat next
season.

E.g. palolo worm
•Malesandfemalesgatherbythemillionsinonespotatnightdeterminedbyphases
ofthemoon.
•Femalereleasespheromone.Pheromoneexcitesmaletocircleaboutfemale.
•Swarmsofepitokesappearatstartofmoon'slastquarterinoctornov.
•Seaisliterallythickwithepitokes.
•Justbeforesunrises,epitokesbursttoreleasegametes.
•Anteriorportionofwormreturnstoburrows.
Synchronousmating
•Ensuremosteggsarefertilized,
•Predatorsaturation.
•Predatorshaveafieldday;buttoomanypreysosomearealwayslefttoreproduce.
•Atokessafelyintheirburrowstorepeatnextyear.
•ASamoanholidaytofeastonepitokes.

Class Oligochaeta
•3,000 species of earthworms
•Freshwater and terrestrial species
found throughout the world (some
are marine).
•Aquatic species: live in shallow
water, where they burrow in mud
and debris.
•Terrestrial species: live in soils with
high organic content and rarely
leave their burrows.
•eg.Aquatic "Earthworms“,Red
worm (tubifex), giant Palouse
earthworm

External structure
•Few, small setae
•Lack parapodia: get in the way because of burrowing
•The prostomium: consists of a small lobe or cone in front of the
mouth and lacks sensory appendages
•Clitellum: Girdlelike structure secretes mucus during copulation and
cocoon formation
•Cuticle: nonliving, covers the body.

Locomotion
•Havebothcircularandlongitudinal
muscles.
•Movebyantagonisticcontractionsof
thesemuscles.
•Bulgingandelongatingbody
segmentsinwavescausetheworm
tomoveforward.
•Smallsetaehelpanchortheworm.
•Smallconicalprostomiumactslikea
wedgewhileburrowing,andsoilis
swallowed (important for
decomposition).

Feeding and Digestive System
•Scavengers-fallenand decaying vegetation
•Mouth-> muscular pharynx-> esophagus
•Esophagusexpanded form of stomach,
•Crop( thin-walled storage structure),
•Gizzard(muscular grinding structure).
•Calciferous glands-evaginations of esophagus wall that rids the body
of excess calcium absorbed by food; regulates pH.
•Intestine-principle site of digestion and absorption
•Anus

Gas exchange:
•Diffusion across body wall.
Circulation:
•Closed circulatory system .
•Blood with respiratory pigments.
•Dorsal aorta and ventral aorta are contractile, main propulsive structures.
•Segmental vessels and capillaries serve intestine and body wall.
•Somesegmental vesselscontractile and propel blood between dorsal and ventral blood
vessels. E.g:Earthworm “hearts”.
Nervous functions:
•Similar to polychaetes
•Fusion of double ventral nerve cords
Sensory functions:
•Lack well-developed eyes
•Dermal light sense
•Negative phototaxis
•Well developed chemoreceptorsand mechanicalreceptors.

Excretion:
•Metanephridia.
•Excretion.
•Waterandionregulation.
Chloragogentissue:surroundsthedorsalbloodvesselandliesoverthedorsalsurfaceoftheintestine.
•Liverlikefunctions.
•Aminoacidmetabolism.
•Glycogenandfatsynthesisfromexcesscarbohydrates.
Reproductionanddevelopment:
•Monoecious.
•Mutualspermexchangebetweencopulatingindividuals(canlast2-3hours).
•Seminalvesiclesstorespermpriortocopulation.
•Seminalreceptaclesreceivespermduringcopulation.
•Thecocoonofmucousandchitinousmaterialsisformedbyclitellum.
•Eggs,spermsandfood(albumen)depositedcocoonwherefertilizationoccursandthecocoonis
depositedinmoistsoil.
•Spiralcleavageanddirectdevelopment(nolarva).
•Freshwateroligochaetescanreproduceasexuallywhichisusuallyfollowedbytheregenerationof
missingsegments.

Class Hirudinea
•500 species of leeches
•Mostly freshwater but some are marine and terrestrial.
•Prey on small invertebrates or feed on body fluids of vertebrates

External structure
•Lack parapodiaand head appendages.
•Setaeare absent. Only on anterior segments in a few species,
•Leeches are dorsoventrally flattened and taperanteriorly.
•Anterior and posterior segments are usually modified into suckers
•They have 34 segments, but the segments are difficult to distinguish
externally because they have become secondarily divided.
•Several secondary divisions, called annuli, are in each true segment.

Locomotion
•Have lost metameric partitioning ,
resulting in single body cavity
•Coelomic sinuses replace blood
vessels in most leeches
•Move in looping motion or swim with
undulations
•Complex musculature (four types of
muscles)
•Oblique muscles is between the
circular and longitudinal muscle
layers
•Dorsoventral muscles are responsible
for the typical leech flattening.

Feeding and the digestive system
•Feed on body fluids, blood of vertebrates or entire bodies of invertebrates.
•Ectoparasites.
•The mouth of a leech opens in the middle of the anterior sucker.
•The mouth is armed with three chitinous jaws or anterior digestive tract
modified into a protrusible proboscis.
•Duringfeeding, a leech attaches to its prey by the anterior sucker and
either extends its proboscis into the prey or uses its jaws to slice through
host tissues.
•Salivary glands secrete an anticoagulantcalled hirudinthat prevents blood
from clotting.
•Pharynx pumps blood and other body fluids into the leech.

Feeding
•pharynx esophagus large
stomach with lateral cecea
(increasing their body mass 2 to
10 times) short intestine 
anus

Gas exchange:
•Gas exchange by diffusion through body wall.
Circulation:
•Similar to oligochaetes.
•Coelomic sinuses replace vessels.
•Coelomic fluid takes over function of blood.
•Respiratory pigments lacking in most.
Nervous and sensory functions:
•Similar to other annelids.
•Ventral nerve cords unfused.
•Pigment cup photoreceptors.
•Negatively phototactic.
•Temperature sense in mammalian predatory leeches.

Excretion:
•10 to 17 pairs of metanephridia.
•One pair of metanephridia per segment.
•Chloragogen tissue throughout body cavity.
Reproduction and Development:
•Monoecious.
•Sexual reproduction only.
•Clitellum present during spring breeding.
•Copulation as in oligochaetes.