Lecture 17 Geo 3180 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the hard parts of Phlym Echinodermata composed of?

A

Mg-calcite plates

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2
Q

What is the circulatory system of Echinoderms based on?

A

water vascular system. Instead of blood, so no heart or blood vessels are present

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3
Q

How do echinoderms eat/move?

A

Tube feet

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4
Q

Theca:

A

Skeleton of an individual echinoderm; may be in the form of either a flattened or globular “test” or a cup shaped or nut shaped “calyx”

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5
Q

Plates:

A

Hard elements that make up the theca; composed of Mg-calcite; may be in the form of sharp “spines”, flat “ossicles” or spicule - like “sclerites”

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6
Q

Symmetry of Echinoderms:

A

Usually pentameral; sometimes a secondary bilateral system is imposed on it

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7
Q

Water Vascular System:

A

System of water circulation througout the animal’s body.

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8
Q

Madreporite:

A

Sieve-like plate that serves as the intake to the water vascular system.

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9
Q

Tube feet:

A

Contratile, tubular structures at the distal end of the water vascular system.

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10
Q

Ampullae:

A

Sac-like structures that pump water into and out of the tube feet.

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11
Q

Ambulacra:

A

Areas of the theca (“food grooves”) that contain the tube feet and ampullae.

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12
Q

Subphylum Asterozoa:

A

Star-shaped animals with five or more radiating arms; a centrally located mouth or ventral (oral) side and a slightly off-center anus or dorsal (aboral) side.

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13
Q

Asteroids:

A

“Starfish” have well-developed, open ambulacral grooves lined with tube feet on the ventral (oral) side of the arms, but have no distinct central disc.

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14
Q

Ophiuroids:

A

“Brittle Stars” have an obvious round or pentagonal “central disk”, from which the arms radiate, but the ambulacral grooves are concealed beneath the plates.

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15
Q

Subphylum Echinozoa:

A

Spiny animals without arms

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16
Q

Echinoids:

A

(“Urchins” and their kin) have a rigid test of fused ossicles (calcite plates) and a centrall located ventral (oral) mouth.

17
Q

Regular Echinoids:

A

(“Sea Urchins”) have long spines, good radial (pentameral) symmetry, and a centrally located anus on the dorsal (aboral) side.

18
Q

Irregular Echinoids:

A

(flat “Sand Dollars” and globular “Heart Urchins”) have short spines, a seceondary bilateral symmetry, and an off-center anus on the dorsal (aboral) side or at the margin of the test.

19
Q

Subphylum Homalozoa:

A

“Carpoids” = Unusualy extinct echinoderms that were characterized by a flattened (sometimes heart-shaped) body (either rigid or flexible) with one or more long, arm-like appendages; four different, uncommon classes.

20
Q

Pelma is composed of_

A

Column + Cirri + Holdfast

21
Q

Column:

A

Stalk or stem, composed of numerous, linked, disc-shpaed plates

22
Q

Cirri:

A

Tiny, long, arm-like projections extending off the column.

23
Q

Holdfast:

A

Club-like or root-like anchor at the base of the column.

24
Q

“Crown” of Crinozoans is composed of_

A

Calyx + Arms + Pinnules

25
Q

“Crown” of Blastozoans is composed of_

A

Calyx + Brachioles

26
Q

Calyx:

A

Theca of the echinoderm, containing the mouth and anus; attached at the column.

27
Q

Arms:

A

Long, flexible arms of a crinoid that extend from the calyx.

28
Q

Pinnules:

A

Short, rod-like structures lining the arms of some crinoids.

29
Q

Brachioles:

A

Long or short, rod-like structures lining the ambulcral grooves of blastoids.

30
Q

Eocrinoids:

A

had long brachioles rising from 2 to 5 ambulacral grooves on an asymmetrical, globular theca (calyx); pores for the water vascular system occur in sutures between the thecal plates.

31
Q

Cystoids:

A

comprise two different classes of stalked echinoderms (class rhombifera and class diploporita). They had variable numbers of short brachioles rising from ambulacral grooves on an asymmetrial, globular theca (calyx); pores for the water vascular system occur in the thecal plates themselves as weither “pore rhombs” or “diplopores”

32
Q

Blastoids:

A

had numerous short or long brachioles rising from 5 well-developed ambulacral grooves on a pentamerally symmetrical, nut-shaped calyx; thecal plates included regularly arranged delotid, radial and basal plates.

33
Q

Subclass Inadunata:

A

usually (but not always) have pinnules on arms; stalk ususally (but not always) has cirri attached to it.

34
Q

Subclass Camerata:

A

always have pinnules on arms; stalk usually (but not always) has cirri attached to it.

35
Q

Subclass Flexibilia:

A

never have pinnules; stalk never has cirri

36
Q

Subclass Articulata:

A

always have pinnules on arms, always have cirri, but may or may not have a stalk

37
Q

Which of the four subclasses of crinoidea have pinnules?

A

Usually Inadunata, Always Camerata, Always Articulata, Never Flexibilia

38
Q

What of the four subclasses of crinoidea have cirri?

A

Usually Inadunata, Usually Camerata, Always Articulata, Never Flexibilia