Phylum Porifera
Phylum Cnidaria
Phylum Platyhelminthes
Body Plans
Embryology
100

Specialized cells that define the phylum and use flagella to pump water and capture food particles

Choanocytes

100

The specialized stinging cells that define this phylum

Cnidocytes

100

Since they have no coelom or other body cavity, flatworms are described by this term

Acoelomate

100

The animal body plan characteristics.

  • Symmetry 

  • Segmentation

  • Body cavities

  • modularity/coloniality

  • Constrained and unconstrained body plans

  • Size and shape

100

What are the steps of evolutionary development?

Gamete formation, fertilization, cleavage, gastrulation, organogenesis, growth

200

The major structural protein in sponges that ranges from jelly-like to as hard as a fingernail and helps form the sponge skeleton

Collagen (spongin)

200

The two primary body plans of Cnidarians

Polyps and medusae

200

Specialized excretory cells used to filter interstitial fluid

Flame cells

200

The repetition of structures along the longitudinal axis of an adult body, which results from a series of mesodermic somites formed during development.

Segmentation

200

In protostomes, what does the blastopore form?

Mouth

300

The large exit hole in which water is expelled from the sponge

Osculum

300

The jelly-like and non-cellular layer that acts as structural support

Mesoglea

300

The part of the body that has hooks and suckers for attachment to the host

Scolex

300

The evolutionary trend toward the concentration of sensory organs and a mouth at the anterior end of the body.

Cephalization

300

Why would the earliest stages of development be the most common among all phyla?

  • Share a common ancestor

  • Delicate stage, life is fragile and small

400

Microscopic elements with sponges that help with structure and can be made of glass or limestone

Spicules

400

In hydrozoans, individual units of a colony are referred to as

Zooids

400

Mesodermal cells that fill the space between the gut and the ectoderm

Parenchyma

400

Internal structures that allow for greater separation of function and localization of organs,

Body cavities

400

What is the archenteron?

The internal cavity that is formed through invagination, in which the opening is a blastopore



500

The most efficient sponge body plan, characterized by a high internal surface area with many canals and chambers

Leuconoid body

500

The asexual process in Class Scyphozoa where a polyp forms a series of tiny saucer-like buds called ephyrae

Strobilation

500

The class that contains free-living species of flatworms

Class Turbellaria

500

Organisms that grow by adding genetically identical modules. (& what Phyla is this present in?)

Modular organisms (Porifera)

500

In organogenesis, what do the 3 germ layers form specifically?

  • Ectoderm: Outer layers (skin, nervous system)

  • Endoderm: Gut

  • Mesoderm: Support and movement

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