BIOL 1030 – TOPIC 12a LECTURE NOTES
Topic 12a: Deuterostomes I: Echinodermata and Hemichordata (Ch. 33)
- Deuterostomia (clade)
- defined primary by molecular evidence
- some defining developmental traits (see previous notes), but those can get fuzzy
- clade includes the following phyla that we will cover:
- Phylum Echinodermata (clade)
- Phylum Hemichordata (clade)
- Phylum Chordata (clade)
- Phylum Echinodermata - urchins, sea stars, sea cucumbers
- marine; ~7000 living species; in fossil record back to over 650 MYA
- name means “spiny skin”, reference to their endoskeleton
- calcium rich plates below skin
- living tissue when formed; usually fused into hard shell in adults
- pores in endoskeleton for water vascular system (madreporite, tube feet)
- water-vascular system - hydraulic system for moving, feeding
- water enters though madreporite, opening typically opposite mouth
- water from madreporite moves though stone canal
- water then enters the ring canal that encircles the esophagus
- radial canals extend from ring canal into the 5 body parts, establishing basic symmetry
- radial canals branch out into tube feet
- contraction of muscular sac (ampulla) at base of tube foot causes fluid to be forced into tube foot, extending it – used for movement
- pentaradially symmetrical - derived trait, larvae are bilaterally symmetrical
- coelom – relatively large; used for circulation and respiration
- asexual reproduction - many will regenerate if a broken part contains part of the central nerve ring, sometimes they will break on purpose
- sexual reproduction - form free-swimming larvae that are bilaterally symmetrical
- six classes, all apparently monophyletic
- Class Crinoidea - sea lilies and feather stars
- mouth and anus on same side
- 5-200+ arms, filter feeders
- primitive, sessile
- sea lilies – have calcareous stalk 15-30 cm long (20 m in some fossils)
- “living fossils”
- once much more commonone of the dominant forms of life in the marine fossil record of the Paleozoic era (both in numbers and size)
- feather stars - no stalk
- Class Asteroidea - sea stars or starfish
- 1 cm - 1 m across
- to 10,000 m deep
- groove runs along each arm bordered by rows of tube feet
- tube feet are like little suction cups and create an impressive force
- feed mainly on bivalves
- attach to either side of shell with tube feet
- wait until bivalve fatigues
- extrudes stomach into opening and digest prey
- Class Ophiuroidea - brittle stars
- look like sea stars, but more flexible, move via serpentine motion of arms, groove closed below arms
- tube feet used to capture small prey and as sensory structures
- Class Echinoidea - sea urchins and sand dollars
- no arms
- usually move via spines operated by tube feet
- vegetarians
- Class Holothuroidea - sea cucumbers
- elongate
- often with leathery skin
- mouth surrounded by 8-30 modified tube feet called tentacles
- other normal tube feet move animal
- will extrude their foul-smelling stomachs when frightened
- Class Concentricycloidea – sea daisies
- recently discovered
- no arms
- tube feet on edge of disc, instead of along radial lines
- Phylum Hemichordata (acorn worms)
- ~90 living species; all marine
- centimeter to meter size range; burrowing; proboscis, collar, and trunk
- name means “half chordates”; transitional group to phylum Chordata
- ciliated larvae resemble sea star larvae
- form a clade with Echinodermata (group called Ambulacraria)
- share with chordates:
- dorsal nerve cord as well as ventral nerve cord
- part of dorsal nerve cord hollow in some
- throat with pharyngeal gill slits
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