CNIDARIA Flashcards

1
Q

General Characteristics of Cnidaria

A

-Radial symmetry
-True tissues
-Diploblastic
-Capable of movement via epitheliomuscular cells
-Alternation of generation between polyp and medusa.
-Gastrovascular cavity
-Possess cnidocytes
-Most are predators
-Mostly marine, few freshwater

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2
Q

What are the 2 subphyla we focused on?

A

Anthozoa
Medusozoa

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3
Q

What types of animals are in Subphylum Anthozoa?

A

anemones, sea pens, gorgonians, corals

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4
Q

What types of animals are in Subphylum Medusozoa?

A

jellyfish, hydrozoans

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5
Q

Subclasses of Anthozoa?

A

Subclass Octocorallia (sea whips, sea fans, sea pens, soft corals)
Subclass Hexacorallia (anemones, stony corals)

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6
Q

Classes of Medusozoa?

A

Class Scyphozoa (jellyfish)
Class Hydrozoa (hydroids and fire corals
siphonophores (e.g., man-of-war)
by the wind sailors)
Class Cubozoa (sea wasps and box jellies)
Class Staurozoa (stauromedusae)

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7
Q

Diplobastic or Triploblastic?

A

Diploblastic

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8
Q

Radial or Bilateral Symm?

A

Radial

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9
Q

Characteristics of a polyp’s body layers?

A

Outer epidermis has epitheliomuscular cells, sensory cells, and cnidocytes.
Inner layer has gastrodermis (nutritive-muscular cells), which lines a coelenteron called a gastrovascular cavity.
Middle layer of mesoglea or mesenchyme.

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10
Q

Hypostome/manubrium/oral disc

A

elevated structure where the mouth rests

Mouth of anthozoans is on a flat oral disc
Mouth of hydrozoans on a manubrium or hypostome.

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11
Q

Are they solitary, colonial, or can they be both?

A

Both

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12
Q

What is the coelenteron?

A

Their gastrovascular cavity. Serves for circulation and digestion/distribution of food

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13
Q

What are Acontia

A

long threads derived from mesenteries that hang free in the gastrovascular cavity. Function in defense and feeding
(in some sea anemones)

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14
Q

What are the three zooids (polyps) present in a colonial hydrozoan?

A

gastrozooid (feeding polyps)
dactylozooid (defensive polyps)
gonozooid (reproductive polyps)

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15
Q

What is the special structure of the bell margin in hydromedusae?

A

A velum

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16
Q

What type of support do polyps have? Are these considered soft or hard support?

A

Soft support: Hydrostatic skeleton
Fibers in mesenchyme
Perisarc in hydrozoans

Hard support: Axial skeletons made of protein-mucopolysaccharide in anthozoans, such as gorgonians and sea pens
-Sclerocytes in mesenchyme of most octocorals secrete sclerites.
-Calcareous skeletons

17
Q

What type of support do medusa have? Are these considered soft or hard support?

A

Medusae only have soft support- Thin to thick mesoglea

18
Q

What is a thecate hydroid?

A

Hydroids whose perisarc extends around each hydranth and gonozooid

19
Q

What is an athecate hydroid?

A

hydroids whose perisarc does not extend around each of the zooids

20
Q

How do polyps move?

A

Muscles modified gastrodermis and ectodermis.
Longitudinal and circular muscles.
Hydrostatic skeleton.

Methods:
Creeping on pedal disc
Cartwheels
Swimming

21
Q

How do medusae move?

A

Coronal muscles contract and water pushed out of subumbrella

Method: Swimming (jet propulsion)

22
Q

What are the 3 types of cnidocytes?
How are they triggered?

A

Three types:
Nematocysts (toxic)
Spirocysts (adhesive)
Ptychocysts (form a tube for the animal to reside in)

Triggered by a mechanoreceptor

23
Q

How do they feed themselves?
How does digestion happen?

A

Prey subdued by cnidocytes and carried to gastrovascular cavity by tentacles.
Digestion begins extracellularly and continues with intracellular digestion.

24
Q

How do cnidarians reproduce asexually?

A

Budding
Fission
Pedal disc fracture

25
Q

How do cnidarians reproduce sexually?

A

Alternation of generations (except anthozoans who lack a medusa stage)

Gametes released into the water. Fertilization usually external