These are embryonic tissues develop into the epidermis, muscle, intestine and gastrovascular cavity.
What are ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm?
This organism when ingested from contamination of water causes diarrhea, fatigue, nausea, etc and is prevented by drinking purified water and swimming with you mouth closed. (Include clade in your question)
What are Medusazoa and Anthozoa?
This phyla lacks tissue, are mostly marine, feed through filtration, and live sedentary lifestyles.
What is phylum porifera (sponges)?
This Kingdom is Eukaryotic and Multicellular
What is Animalia?
The two types of body forms of cnidarians.
What are polyps and medusa?
This organism appears in blood and is also known for causing African sleeping sickness caused by infected fly bites. (Include clade in question)
What is Trypanosoma sp in Kinetoplstid clade?
This organism uses cilia for locomotion and uses a water vacuole to maintain its osmotic pressure in freshwater environments. (Include clade)
What is the ciliates clade: Paramecium sp?
The organisms in this phyla are radially symmetrical with true tissue (diploblastic).
What are cnidarians?
These 3 types of body cavities of animals.
What are eucoelomate, acoelomates, and peseudocoelomate?
This is process by which unicellular organisms engulf other cells.
What is endosymbiosis?
This organism causes malaria in humans is causes infection through mosquito bites. (Include clade)
What is Apicomplexan clade: Plasmodium sp.?
The three subclades of Medusazoa clade.
What are Hydrozoa (solitary and colonial), Scyphozoa (jellies), cubozoa (box jellies).
These 4 clades are characterized by their protective shell, mantle, visceral mass, and the foot used for locomotion. (Include phylum)
What are bivalves, chitons, cephalopod, and gastropods of Phylum mollusca?
This organism has true tissue, soft bodied, parasitic, bilateral system, and usually monecious. (Include phylum)
What are flatworms of Phylum Platyhelminthes?
This clade consists of sea anemones and corals. (Include phylum)
What is Clade Anthozoa of Phylum Cnidaria?
These parasitic organisms attach to their host's internal organs with suckers and feed on host's body fluids and take it's nutrients. (Include phylum)
What is Trematode clade of Platyhelminthes phylum?
The 5 protist clades studied in lab.
What are the clades: Diplomonad, Kinetoplastid clade, Apicomplexan, Ciliates, Tubulinids?
These are the 3 clades flatworms. (Include phylum)
What are the clades Free-living species (Turbellaria), trematode (flukes), and tapeworms (cestoda) of phylum platyhelminthes?
This structure functions in temporary storage for food. (Include phylum(s))
What is a crop in Clade Sedentaria (Earthworms) of Phylum annelida? (Also accept Pancrustracea (insects) of Phylum Arthropoda)
What is in the function of the mantle in molluscs?
These organisms lack a mouth or gastrovascular cavity and absorb nutrients directly through the epidermis. With a protective coat of cuticle around its body, it has an array of hooks to attach into the intestinal wall. (Include phylum)
What are Tapeworms clade of Platyhelminthes phylum?
These are the 2 clades of segmented worms. (Include phylum)
These organisms have a complete digestive tract, pseudocoelom, are are a mixture of free-living and parasitic roundworms.
What characterizes Phylum Nematoda?
Concentration of nervous tissue and sensory structures at the anterior end of the body.
What is cephalization?