Phylum Porifera (Sponges)
Key Characteristics:
•Simplest members of Kingdom Animalia
•Multicellular, no tissues or organs
•Mostly asymmetrical
•Acoelomates
•Sexual or asexual,
•Adults are sessile, zygotes are protozoan-like.
•Live in aquatic environments
Etymology: From the Latin porus for pore and Ferre to bear,
hence an animal with pores.
Phylum Porifera
(Sponges)
Porifera Structures
•Spicule – Skeletal component. Provides structure & support for the
cells.
•Osculum – Large pore where water escapes from sponge.
•Spongocoel (Atrium) – Open space inside sponge.
•Choanocyte – (collar cell) goblet shaped cells w/ flagellum that
line the inside of sponges and capture food.
•Amoebocyte – amoeba-like cells that travel along the spicules and
absorb food.
•Pinacyte – outer epidermis of sponge.
•Porocyte & Myocyte – muscle-like cell surrounding pores that
expand & contract to control water flow into the sponge.
•Mesohyal (Mesophyl) – Center layer of sponge, between outer and
inner layers.
Porifera Structures
Porifera Structures
Asconoid
Simplest body
form
(flagellated
spongocoel)
Syconoid
Intermediate
complexity
(flagellated
canals)
Leuconoid
Most complex
(flagellated
chambers)
1. Class Calcarea
Calcareous spicules or more commonly, non-spicular calcareous porous
chambers
2. Class Hexactinellida
Often called glass sponges. Siliceous (glass) spicules that are commonly fused to
form a net or box-like pattern
3. Class Demospongea
Skeletons of spongin, spongin and siliceous spicules, or a skeleton of fused
opaline silica
Fossil Sponges:
•Class Stromatoporoida
Some paleontologists consider this group a member of demospongea, some
do not consider them as true sponges, but belonging to their own
phylum.
•Phylum Archaeocyatha
Predominantly an Early Cambrian phylum with no living representatives
Phylum Cnidaria (Jellyfish, Corals, Anemonies, Hydras)
Key Characteristics:
•Nematocysts – stinging cells
•Sac-like Diploblastic Body – formed from
two germ layers, endo & ectoderm.
•tissue level of organization
•radial symmetry
•All have sessile phase
Etymology: from Latin “cnida”, Greek “knide” for "nettle,"
from stem of knizein "to scratch scrape”, hence a
phylum of stinging invertebrates.
Life Cycle of Select Cnidarians
Figure 7.
Life cycle of Obelia showing an alternation between
the polyp (asexual reproduction) and medusa (sexual
reproduction). This life cycle is typical for many
species in Class Hydrozoa.
Class Schyphozoa emphasizes the medusa stage while
Class Anthozoa has only polyps.
Modified diagram courtesy of BIODIDAC
(University of Ottawa),
http://biodidac.bio.uottawa.ca/