bio 102 (general biology ii) courseware mr. b.m. macaulay’s aspect

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BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

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Page 1: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

BIO 102 (General Biology II)Courseware

Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Page 2: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

RECAP (1)

Kingdom: AnimaliaSub-Kingdom: InvertebrataPhyla: 1. Porifera2. Coelentrata3. Platyhelminthes4. Nematoda5. Annelida6. Arthropoda7. Mollusca8. Echinodermata

Page 3: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

RECAP (2)

Kingdom: AnimaliaSub-Kingdom: VertebrataPhyla: * Protochordata (Usually an intermediate

between Invertebrata and Vertebrata)1. Pisces2. Amphibians3. Reptiles4. Mammals5. Aves

Page 4: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Description and Characteristics of the Phyla:

• Platyhelminthes

• Nematoda

• Annelida

Page 5: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Phylum PlatyhelminthesThe Flatworms

Page 6: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

PLATYHELMINTHES

General Description: From the Greek origin, ‘platy’ means flat and

‘helminthes’ means worms, hence, flat worms. Generally, classes of flatworms either live freely in rivers, lakes, seas (for example, Planaria) or as parasitic organisms in the body of animals (for example, flukes and tapeworm).

Page 7: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Characteristics of Platyhelminthes (1)

• They are generally dorso-ventrally flattened. • They are bilaterally symmetrical. • Having three body layers, i.e. triploblastic, with

organs and organelles. • Body contains no internal cavity, i.e. Aceolomate.

The space between the body wall and gut are filled with parenchyma composed of loose cell masses.

• Possesses a blind gut (i.e. it has a mouth but no anus)but well branched to transport food all over the body.

Page 8: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

THE EVOLUTION OF BODY CAVITIES

Page 9: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Characteristics of Platyhelminthes (2)

• Nervous system is ladder-like. It is in the form of a brain and two main longitudinal nerve cords connected at intervals by transverse commissures.

• The reproductive system is well organized. Most of them are hermaphrodites. (Hermaphroditism is a phenomenon where both male and female sex organs are situated within the same body).

• They feed mostly on animals and other smaller life forms.

Page 10: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Characteristics of Platyhelminthes (3)

• Flatworms generally possess nephridial tubules called protonephridia, usually distributed throughout the body – Such structures consist of an external opening and a tubule that branches internally, terminating in a number of blind, bulb-shaped structures called flame bulbs, which bear tufts of cilia. They function as excretory and osmoregulatory organs.

Page 11: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

The Structure of Protonephridium

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Characteristics of Platyhelminthes (4)

• The Body is devoid of true metameric segmentation.

• Circulatory and respiratory systems are absent.• Many flat worms undergo regeneration of certain

parts of their body.

Page 13: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

PLAYHELMINTHES (2)

There are three broad classes in the phylum, platyhelminthes. They are:

• Class: Turbellaria

• Class: Trematoda

• Class: Cestoda

Page 14: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

TURBELLARIA (1)

• They are mostly free-living and primarily carnivorous.

• They are characterized by a soft epidermis that is ciliated on the ventral surface. The movement of the cilia propels the smaller forms.

• They possess a pair of fused cerebral ganglia which forms a rudimentary brain, with two interconnected parallel nerve cord running length of body.

• Ocelli (simple eyes) are present in some.

Page 15: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

TURBELLARIA (2)• Turbellarians are generally divided into five groups

based on the different forms of their digestive cavity. They are:

• Acoels: have no digestive cavity.• Allocoels: Sack-like or branched digestive cavity.• Rhabdocoels: Straight and unbranched digestive

cavity.• Triclads: Possess three-branched gut. The

commonest example of turbellaria, Planaria, is a triclad.

• Polyclads: gut sub-divided into numerous branches.

Page 16: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Planaria (Dugesia tigrina)

Page 17: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

TREMATODA (1)

• These are parasitic flatworms and are often referred to as Flukes. For example, Blood fluke, Liver fluke, etc.

• They have oral suckers, sometimes supplemented by hooks, with which they attach to their vertebrate hosts.

• Trematodes have retained the same body form and digestive cavity as the turbellarians. However, practically the entire interior is occupied by the reproductive system; the organism is capable of producing huge numbers of offspring.

Page 18: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

TREMATODA (2)• Trematodes can be divided into two broad groups

based on the number of host – Monogenea (trematodes parasitising a single host) and Digenea (trematodes parasitising two or more hosts).

• Monogenetic flukes spend their entire life cycle as parasites on a single host, often on the gills and skin of fish; they include no human parasites. They hold on to the fish by the use of hooks and attachment organs at the posterior end. E.g. Gyrodactylus sp. (Gill fluke).

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TREMATODA (3)

• Digenetic flukes on the other hand, have complex life cycles involving two or more hosts. The larval worms parasitise one or more small animals (typically snails and sometimes fishes) and the adult worms further parasitises vertebrate hosts. E.g. Schistosoma haematobium (Blood fluke) and Fasciola hepatica (Liver fluke).

• In the case of S. haematobium, the larva initially parasitises a snail (Bulinus sp.) and when the adult emerges, it enters a vertebrate host (E.g. Man) to complete its life cycle causing the disease, Schistosomiasis.

Page 20: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Schistosoma haematobium (Blood fluke)

Page 21: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Fasciola hepatica (Liver fluke)

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Gyrodactylus sp. (Gill fluke)

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CESTODA (1)• Cestodes are parasitic flatforms also known as

tapeworms as a result of their tape-like body sturcture.

• The body of Cestodes has lost the typical turbellarian form.

• A typical cestode body (known as strobila) consists of series of linearly arranged reproductive segments called proglottids which may be immature, mature or gravid.

• They are mostly hermaphrodites.• There is no mouth or digestive system; food is

absorbed through the body cuticle.

Page 24: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CESTODA (2)• Adults live in the digestive tract of vertebrates,

and larval forms encyst in the flesh of various vertebrates and invertebrates.

• The tapeworm’s head called scolex, bears a crown-like rostellum and four circle of hooks/suckers which are attachment organs.

• The body of an adult tapeworm is virtually a reproductive factory; gravid proglottids (i.e. Filled with fertilised eggs) are released with the faeces of the definitive host to resume development in the body of intermediate host.

Page 25: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

The anterior section of the Tapeworm (Taenia sp.)

Page 26: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Tapeworm (Taenia sp.)

Page 27: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

AssignmentS/N Taenia saginata Taenia solium

1. Nature of the scolex

2. Type of intermediate host

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Phylum NematodaThe Roundworms

Page 29: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

NEMATODA (1)

General Description: Nematodes derived their name from the Greek

word, ‘Nema’, meaning, "thread" and ‘tode’ meaning, "like“, i.e. thread-like worms. This is the second largest phylum in the animal kingdom next to the Arthropods. Members are approximately 80,000 species, of which 15,000 are parasitic. Examples include the common roundworm of man (Ascaris lumbricoides), hookworm, Pinworm, Guinea worm, whipworm, etc.

Page 30: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CHARACTERISTICS OF NEMATODA (1)• They are vermiform (worm-like), usually cylindrical

in shape• Triploblastic and non-segmented, with bilateral

symmetry. • Size varies from microscopic to pencil-sized.• They are covered with thick cuticle, having no

external cilia.• Body cavity is pseudocoelom, and the fluid-filled

space functions as hydrostatic skeleton.• They have a complete digestive system (i.e. true gut)

but circulatory and respiratory organs are still lacking.

Page 31: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CHARACTERISTICS OF NEMATODA (2)• Excretory system consists of one or more large

gland cells opening to an excretory pore or canal system

• Circular nerve ring with dorsal and ventral nerve cords; sense organs include phasmid and ciliated pits.

• Sexes usually separate (dioecious) • Male is smaller than the female and has a

characteristic curved or bent tail.• The phylum contains both free-living and parasitic

members.

Page 32: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Nematode (Ascaris Sp.) – Male and female species

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NEMATODA (2)

The phylum Nematoda is divided into two classes:

• Enoplea

• Chromadorea

Page 34: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Characteristics of class Enoplea1. Amphids pocket like, not spiral, usually post-

labial.2. Cuticle smooth or finely striated.3. Phasmids present or absent.

NB: Amphids are slits or opens above or below the lip.

Phasmids are slits or openings at the posterior region.

Page 35: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Characteristics of class Chromadorea

1. Pore-like or slit-like amphid apertures vary from labial pores or slits to post-labial elaborate coils and spirals.

2. Cuticle usually annulated, sometimes ornamented with projections and setae.

3. Phasmids present or absent, generally posterior.

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Ascaris lumbricoides (Ascariasis)

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Ascaris life cycle

Page 38: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Ancylostoma duodenale (Hookworm)

Page 39: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Dracunculus medinensis (Guinea worm)

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Dracunculiasis

Page 41: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Trichuris trichiura (Whipworm)

Page 42: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Enterobius vermicularis (Pin worm)

Page 43: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Wuchereria bancrofti (Microfilarial worm)

Page 44: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Elephantiasis

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Onchocerca volvulus (Microfilarial worm)

Page 46: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Assignment I have supplied you with enough examples of

parasitic nematodes; however, to complete your knowledge of nematodes, you will have to supply me with five (5) common examples of free-living (non-parasitic) nematodes before the next class.

Page 47: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Phylum AnnelidaSegmented worms

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ANNELIDA (1)

General Description• The Annelida (segmented worms) are a medium

sized phylum of more than 9,000 species of worms. Most species prefer aquatic environments, but there are also a number of well know terrestrial species. Only a few species of annelids are commonly known to human beings, these include the Earthworms, Ragworms, Medicinal leeches, etc.

Page 49: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CHARACTERISTICS OF ANNELIDA (1)

• Bilaterally symmetrical and vermiform, i.e. worm-like.

• They are triploblastic with 3 body layers.

• Body cavity is a true coelom, i.e. Eucoelomates.

• They are metamerically segmented, i.e. divided by internal septa.

• Body possesses a true gut with mouth and anus.

• Body possesses 3 separate sections, a prostomium, a trunk and a pygidium.

Page 50: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CHARACTERISTICS OF ANNELIDA (2)

• Has a true closed circulatory system. • Has no true respiratory organs.• Excretion is carried out by the nephridium in

many annelids. • Reproduction normally sexual or hermaphroditic. • Feed a wide range of material. • Live in most environments. • Has a nervous system with an anterior nerve

ring, ganglia and a ventral nerve chord.

Page 51: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

THE STRUCTURE OF NEPHRIDIUM

Page 52: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

ANNELIDA (2)

The phylum Annelida is currently under review and there are lingering debates on it. However, the phylum is traditionally divided into 3 broad classes:

• Class Polychaeta• Class Oligochaeta• Class Hirudinea

Page 53: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CLASS POLYCHAETA

• ‘Poly’ – Many; ‘Chaeta’ – Hair-like structure. • They are predominantly marine animals and are

divided ecologically into the Errantia and the Sedentaria depending on whether or not they live sedentary lives in holes or live more active lives.

• The Errantia have well developed heads and complex parapodia (paddles) that they can use for swimming.

• Polychaetae are hermaphrodites; A reproductive segment is often formed which dies immediately after the release of gametes.

• Examples: ragworm, lugworm and bloodworm.

Page 54: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Ragworm

Page 55: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

CLASS OLIGOCHAETA• ‘Oligo’ – Few; Chaete – Hair-like structure.• Oligochaetae live in marine, freshwater and terrestrial

habitats.• Generally, they have a more rounded cross-section and a

less distinct head. • They are usually hermaphrodites but seldomly undergoes

sexual reproduction.• They possess a clitellum as adults, an organ which looks like

a bandage of skin wrapped around the animal. This clitellum, has an important function in sexual reproduction.

• Examples: Earthworm, Aelosomata worms (e.g. Aelosoma hemprichi), Branchiobdella worms (Branchiobdella astaci).

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Earthworm

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Peristaltic earthworms.ogv

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CLASS HIRUDINEA

• Hirundinea occur in Fresh water, marine and terrestrial environments.

• They are commonly known as leeches.• Leaches are well known for their blood sucking

habits and their head to tail looping mode of locomotion.

• They have two suckers – In most cases, one is located at the anterior (head) end of the body composed of segments 1-4 and the other at the posterior (tail) end composed of segments 25-33.

• Medicinal leeches (Hirudo medicinalis) has been useful in treating blood circulatory illnesses.

Page 59: BIO 102 (General Biology II) Courseware Mr. B.M. Macaulay’s Aspect

Leeches