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SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1

SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

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Page 1: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

SMALLER ECDYSOZOANSChapter 12

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Page 2: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

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Page 3: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Diversity

• Many protostomes possess a cuticle– Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis

• Cuticle restricts growth and must be molted via ecdysis

• Members of Ecdysozoa molt cuticle as they grow• Regulation of molting achieved by the hormone

ecdysone

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Page 4: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

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Page 5: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematoda: Roundworms• 12,000 species have been named– As many as half a million may exist

• Found in virtually all habitats in all biomes– Topsoil may contain billions per acre

• Nematode parasites exist in nearly all animal and plant species

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Page 6: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematoda: RoundwormsForm and FunctionOuter body covering is a thick, noncellular cuticle, secreted by

the underlying epidermis- hypodermis Cuticle serves to contain the hydrostatic pressure exerted by

fluid in the pseudocoelom• Collagen is the primary protein in layers of the cuticle• Muscles– Longitudinal muscles lie beneath the cuticle

• No circular muscles– Run in four bands, marked off by epidermal cords that

project inward to pseudocoelom– Unlike other animals, the muscle extends to the nerve

cords

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Page 7: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

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Page 8: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematoda: Roundworms• Hydrostatic skeleton-muscle contractions press on

fluid• No circular muscles to compliment longitudinal

muscle in movement (antagonist) so the cuticle assists.

• Fluid is force to opposite side when longitudinal muscles constrict forcing the cuticle to expand

• Compression and stretching of the cuticle returns the body to resting position when muscles relax

• Produces the thrashing movement of nematodes

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Page 9: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematoda: Roundworms• Digestion– Gut tube consists of mouth, pharynx, non-muscular

intestine, short rectum and anus– Muscular pharynx sucks food in – Intestinal wall is one cell thick-no muscles

• Food moves back as new food enters and the body moves– Defecation occurs from opening the anus and allowing

pseudocoelomic pressure to expel waste• Some parasitic adults have an anaerobic metabolism;

aerobic metabolism are absent• Free-living nematodes and free-living stages of

parasitic nematodes have both anaerobic and aerobic metabolism

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Page 10: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematoda: Roundworms• Ring of nerve tissue and ganglia around the pharynx give rise

to small nerves to the anterior end and to two nerve cords, one dorsal and one ventral

• Sensory organs at head and tail• Most are dioecious with males smaller than females• Male has copulatory spicules• Fertilization is internal • Nematode sperm has no flagella, in female reproductive tract

sperm is ameboid and moves by pseudopods• Eggs are stored in uterus until deposited• Cuticle is shed between each of four juvenile stages

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Page 11: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_03

Page 12: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites

Representative Nematode Parasites • Some are parasites of humans– Most are tropical

• Ascaris lumbricoides – Occurs in up to 25% of people in some areas of the

southeastern U.S.– More than 1.27 billion affected worldwide– A. suum is found in pig intestines– A female Ascaris may lay 200,000 eggs a day, which pass

out in host’s feces

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Page 13: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_04a

Page 14: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites– Survive for long periods in soil– When humans eat undercooked vegetables contaminated

with shelled juveniles, or when children put soiled fingers or toys in their mouths, consumed juveniles hatch, and burrow through intestinal wall

– Carried through the heart to the lungs, they enter into alveoli causing pneumonia and are carried up to tracheae

– Coughed up and swallowed, they mature in the intestine– They feed on intestinal contents and may block the

intestines

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Page 15: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_04b

Page 16: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites• Hookworms – Anterior end of these small worms has a hook-like curve– Necator americanus, most common hookworm.– Sexes are separate– Large plates in mouth cut into intestinal mucosa and suck

host’s blood– Pump through more blood than they digest

• Heavy infections cause anemia– Eggs pass out in feces and juveniles hatch in soil – If human skin comes in contact with soil, infective juveniles

burrow through skin to blood– Travel in blood to the lungs, are coughed up to be

swallowed, and mature in the intestine

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Page 17: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_05

Page 18: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites

• Trichina Worm– Trichinella spiralis causes a potentially lethal trichinosis– Adult worms burrow into intestinal mucosa of the host’s

small intestines and females directly produce juvenile worms

– Juveniles penetrate blood vessels and circulate throughout the body to all tissues and spaces

– Penetrate skeletal muscle cells, redirecting gene expression of the musculature• Cells lose striations and becomes a nurse cells to the parasite

– When poorly cooked meat (pork or bear) containing encysted juveniles is swallowed, worms are liberated and mature in the intestine

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Page 19: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites

– Infect humans, pigs, rats, cats and dogs• Pigs can become infected eating uncooked scraps of infected meat

or rats– Four other sibling species with variable distribution,

freezing resistance, etc.– Heavy infections cause death– 25 cases of trichinosis are reported per year in the US

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Page 20: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_06

Page 21: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites• Pinworms – Most common worm parasite in the U.S. – Adults live in large intestine and cecum– Females, about 12 mm in length, migrate to anal region at

night and lay eggs, causing itching– Scratching the anal region contaminates hands and

bedclothes– Eggs develop rapidly and become infective within six hours

at body temperature– When swallowed, hatch in duodenum and mature in large

intestine– Members of this order have haploid males from unfertilized

eggs– Females are diploid and come from fertilized eggs

(haplodiploidy)

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Page 22: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

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Page 23: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites• Filarial Worms – Eight species of filarial nematodes infect humans• Some cause serious diseases

– Wucheria bancrofti and Brugia malayi live in lymphatic system• Cause inflammation and obstruction of the lymphatics

vessels• Females release live young, tiny microfilariae, into blood

and lymph• Mosquitoes ingest microfilariae when they feed• Worms develop to infective stage and move into the

mosquito bite wound when it bites a human• Elephantiasis is caused by repeated exposure

– Swelling and growth of connective tissue causes enormous swelling of body parts-scrotum, legs, arms

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Page 24: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites

– River blindness or onchocerciasis is carried by black flies and infects 37 million people in tropics

– Dog heartworm, Dirofilaria immitis, is carried by mosquitoes and is the most common U.S. filarial worm

– Heartworm pills

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Page 25: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_08

Page 26: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_09

Page 27: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites

– Dracunculus medinensis, the guinea worm- Larvae live within planktonic copepods (water fleas)- Upon ingestion of contaminated water, water fleas are

digested by human host, but larvae survive and penetrate the stomach/intestinal wall

- Worms live and mate within body cavity- Gravid females migrate through tissues to the lower

extremities and produce an open ulcer- Causing burning pain, the human host immerses leg into

water and female releases thousands of eggs into water- Eggs are eaten by copepods and the cycle continues

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Page 28: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Representative Nematode Parasites• Only known treatment is to carefully remove

ulcerated females carefully with a stick; treated this way for thousands of years

Page 29: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts
Page 30: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematomorpha

Diversity• “Horsehair worms” resemble coarse hairs• Adult structures resemble those seen in nematodes:

cuticle, epidermal cords, only longitudinal muscles, and a similar nervous system pattern– Currently placed as the sister taxon to nematodes

• About 320 species are known– Occur worldwide

• Adults are free-living in moist habitats• Juveniles are parasites of arthropods

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Page 31: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Nematomorpha– Larvae encyst within host and do not emerge from an

aethropod host unless water is nearby– Juveniles of freshwater forms use terrestrial insects as

hosts– Marine nematomorphs infect certain crabs

• Digestive system is vestigial– Larvae absorb food from arthropod hostsAdults can absorb organic molecules through vestigial gut

and body wall

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Page 32: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_10

Page 33: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylum Tardigrada

• Known as “water bears”• Very small, less than 1 mm long• About 900 live in a water film around mosses and lichens• Some live in freshwater and some are marine• Most are terrestrial that occupy a film of water surrounding mosses

and lichens• Trunk bears eight short unjointed legs, each with claws• A pair of stylets and sucking pharynx protrude to pierce nematodes

or plant cells• Body covered by non-chitinous cuticle that is molted four or more

times during lifetime• Most of the body cavity a hemocoel• No circulatory or respiratory systems

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Page 34: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

• Cryptobiosis– Terrestrial tardigrades can suspend metabolism to

survive harsh conditions– Tardigrades can dehydrate from 85% water to

only 3% water• In this state they can resist extreme temperatures,

ionizing radiation, oxygen deficiency, etc. for years

– When water is available, they become metabolically active again

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Page 35: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

• Reproduction – Sexes are separate– In parthenogenetic freshwater and moss-dwelling species,

males are unknown

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Page 36: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Figure 12_15

Page 37: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylogeny and Adaptive Diversification

Phylogeny• Evolutionary relationships among ecdysozoans are

not well-understood• Members of this clade do not share a common

cleavage pattern– Nematodes and nematomorphs• Cleavage is unique, not spiral or radial

– Cleavage in tardigrades • Has yet to be studied

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Page 38: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylogeny and Adaptive Diversification

• Recent phylogenies place Nematoda and Nematomorpha as sister taxa since they share a collagenous cuticle

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Page 39: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylogeny and Adaptive Diversification

• Tardigrades have some similarities to rotifers, particularly in their reproduction and cryptobiotic tendencies

• Tardigrades and arthropods also share arthropod-type setae and muscles inserted on the cuticle

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Page 40: SMALLER ECDYSOZOANS Chapter 12 12-1. 12-2 Diversity Many protostomes possess a cuticle – Non-living outer layer secreted by epidermis Cuticle restricts

Phylogeny and Adaptive Diversification

Adaptive Diversification• Nematodes show the most impressive adaptation• Found in almost every habitat available to animals• Body structure is plastic enough to allow adaptation• Life cycle ranges from simple to complex• Have been known to survive in suboptimal

conditions

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