Invertebrates
do not have backbones and make up 95% of the animals living on earth
(us vertebrates are actually way way way in the minority).
We
have covered molluscs, crustaceans, and echinoderms in larger units,
but there are lots of other invertebrate phyla including three types of
worms, sponges, and cnidarians.
Cnidarians include
coral, jellies, and sea anemones and will be covered in Unit 10. They
have radial symmetry and stinging tentacles surrounding their mouth.
Sponges in phyla Porifera have
asymmetry because of their irregular shapes. Water flows in through
many small pores and out large centralized openings called osculum. This
is how sponges get their food and how they get rid of waste. Sponges
have two types of structural support - spicules that are spiny or pointy
and made of calcium carbonate and springy spongin. Sponges we use
around the house used to be made of sponges harvested from the ocean
that were pounded to remove the spicules. Now, plastic sponges are
commonly used.
There are three types of worms - Flatworms (Platyhelminthes), R0undworms (Nematodes), and Segmented Worms (Annelids).
Flatworms (Platy-hel- minthes) are
flat and ribbon like, have bilateral symmetry and include things like
tapeworms, planarians, flukes, and brightly colored marine flatworms.
Marine flatworms have similar adaptations to nudibranchs (molluscs), but
are flat and have no tufts. They are simple animals and are often
parasites.
Roundworms (Nematodes) are
ubiquitous and found commonly worldwide in every biome... but they are
poorly understood because they are very very small. Less than 5cm. They
have radial symmetry and often are parasites. Roundworms have scary
looking mouths with teeth for attaching - often used in scary movies.
Segmented Worms (Annelids) include
earth-worms, leeches, bristle-worms, and christmas tree worms. They are
more advanced than the other worms with segments and body organs. They
have radial symmetry and tunnel through their food.
For those of you studying invertebrates, you can use these matching cards to help!
VSEPR - Valence Shell Ectron Pair Repulsion Theory
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6 years ago
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