CLASSIFICATION OF NON-CHORDATES UPTO CLASSES
WITH SALIENT FEATURES
1. Phylum Porifera: From the Latin porus for pore and Ferre to bear, hence an animal with with pores. ~5000 species.
Characteristic
features:-
a)
Multicellular; no true tissue; asymmetric; sessile
b)
spongin- protein fibers for structure;
spicules for skeleton
c)
filter feeders using collar cells (choanocytes) & amoebocytes
d)
Water enters pores and exits osculum
e)
asexual reproduction - fragmentation
f)
sexual reproduction - hermaphroditic
g)
External fertilization – shed gametes in water
Classification
Phylum Porifera can be divided
into four classes:
a) Class
Calcarea:
They are characterized by the presence of spicules made of calcium carbonate.
e.g. Sycon, Leucosolenia.
b) Class
Hexactinellida:
They are characterized by the presence of spicules six-rayed spicules are made
silica. Eg. Euplectella .
c) Class
Demospongiae:
They are characterized by the presence of siliceous spicules , in some species by spongin fibres, and others have a mixture of spongin
and spicules. Eg: Hippospongia communis and Spongia
officinalis,
d) Class
Sclerospongiae:
They are characterized by the presence of spicules constructed from calcium
carbonate, silica and spongin. e.g. Sclerospongia
sp.
2.
PHYLUM COELENTERATA(Cnidaria):~ 9000 species
Characteristics features:
a)
Radial
symmetry; true tissues; sessile and/or motile
b)
Cnidocytes
- stinging barbs to capture prey
c)
Tentacles
to bring prey into gastrovascular cavity
d)
Nervous system in the form of a nerve net
e)
Two
body forms
–Polyp – sessile with mouth
dorsal
–Medusa – motile with mouth
ventral
f)
Asexual
reproduction - budding
g)
Sexual
reproduction - external fertilization
Classification
a) Class Hydrozoa: They may be solitary or
colonial form. Cnidocytes present in the epidermis; they possess many polyps. eg.
Hydra, Obelia.
b) Class Scyphozoa : They are solitary
cnidarians. Medusa prominent in the life history; polyp are small; cnidocytes
present in the gastrodermis as well as epidermis; Eg. Aurelia.
c) Class Cubozoa : They are also solitary
cnidarians. Medusa prominent in the life history; polyp are small; Eg Chironex, carybdea
d) Class Anthozoa Colonial or solitary
polyps; medusa absent; cnidocytes present in the gastrodermis; Eg. Metridium, Sea anemones
3.
Phylum Platyhelminthes ~25,000 known species.
Characteristic features
a)
Bilateral symmetry
b)
Nervous system: ganglia and nerve chords
c)
Excretory system: flame cells
d)
Digestive system: two-way
digestive tract with common mouth/anus; gastrovascular cavity
e)
Respiratory system:
diffusion through epidermis
f)
Circulatory system: none
(diffusion)
g)
Reproductive system:
I.
Sexual – internal fertilization; hermaphroditic; lay eggs
II.
Asexual – fragmentation
Classification
- Class Turbellaria: Usually free-living forms with soft flattened bodies. Eg: Dugesia, Planocera.
- Class Trematoda :Body Leaflike or cylindrical in shape; endoparasites OR ectoparasites complex life cycle with more than one host. Eg: Fasciola, Schistosoma.
- Class Monogenea :B ody usually leaflike to cylindrical in shape, all parasitic, mostly on skin or gills of fish. Eg: Dactylogyrus, Polystoma,
- Class Cestoda: (Tape worms)Body plan tapelike; Head or scolex with suckers or hooks; body usually divided into segments of proglottids; parasitic in digestive tract of all classes of vertebrates. Eg: Diphyllobothrium, Taenia.
4. Phylum Nematoda – The Roundworms, ~12,000 species
Characteristic features
a)
The
body of a roundworm is long, smooth and unsegmented.
b)
Roundworms have a complete digestive
system with mouth and anus.
c)
Bilateral
symmetry.
d)
Excretory
system of either one or more gland
cells, a canal system without
gland cells, or both gland cells and canals together.
e)
Reproduction – sexual; complex
life-cycle with multiple hosts
Classification
a)
Class
Secernentea (Phasmidea):
Paired glandular or sensory structures called phasmids are present in the tail
region; Eg.Ascaris, Enterobius.
b)
Class
Adenophorea (Aphasmidia) Phasmids
absent; Eg Trichinella, Trichuris.
5. PHYLUM
ANNELIDA, ~ 15,000 species
Characteristics
features
a)
Body
metamerically segmented; bilateral
symmetry
b)
Closed
circulatory system
c)
Digestive
system complete
d)
Respiratory
gas exchange through skin, gills, or parapodia
e)
Excretory
system typically a pair of nephridia for each metamere
f)
Nervous
system with a brain, double ventral nerve cord and a pair of ganglia with
lateral nerves in each metamere;
g)
Hermaphroditic
or separate sexes;
Classification
a.
Class
Polychaeta:
Mostly marine; distinct head bearing eyes and tentacles; mostly segments
with parapodia. Eg: Nereis, Glycera
b.
Class
Oligochaeta: Body
with conspicuous segmentation; no parapodia; head absent; Eg: Lumbricus ,Stylaria
c.
Class
Hirudinea: Body with fixed number of segments
(usually 34) with many annuli; no parapodia; setae absent.. Eg: Hirudo,
Placobdella.
6.
PHYLUM MOLLUSCA. ~50,000 living and 35,000 fossil species.
Characteristics features:
a)
Bilaterally
symmetrical
b)
part body plan:
-Visceral mass –
contains organs
-mantle – secretes
shell
-foot –
locomotion
c)
Circulatory system open but mostly closed in cephalopods
d)
Nervous
system of paired cerebral, pleural, pedal, and visceral ganglia, with nerve
cords and sub epidermal plexus.
e)
Reproduce sexually; many hermaphroditic; form trochophore larvae
Classification
a)
Class
Caudofoveata : Wormlike;
shell, head, and excretory organs absent;. Eg: Chaetoderma, Limifossor.
b)
Class
Solenogastres :
Wormlike; shell, head, and excretory organs absent; foot represented by ventral
pedal groove. Eg: Neomenia.
c)
Class
Monoplacophora: Body
bilaterally symmetrical with a broad flat foot; a single shell; large
coelomic cavities; Eg. Neopilina
d)
Class
Polyplacophora : Elongated
body , dorsoventrally flattened body with reduced head; foot broad and flat. Eg : Mopalia, Chaetopleura.
e)
Class
Scaphopoda: Body enclosed in a one-piece tubular shell open at
both ends; conical foot; Eg Dentalium
f)
Class
Gastropoda :Body
asymmetrical; usually in a coiled shell foot large and flat;Eg. Physa, Helix
g)
Class
Bivalvia : Body
enclosed in a two-lobed mantle; no radula; Eg: Mytilus ,Venus.
h)
Class
Cephalopoda : Shell
often reduced or absent; head well developed with eyes and a radula; head with
arms or tentacles; Eg: Octopus, Nautilus.
7. PHYLUM ARTHROPODA
Characteristics of the phylum Arthropoda:
a) largest and most
diverse phylum; includes insects, crustaceans, spider
b) segmented bodies –
head, thorax, & abdomen or cephalothorax & abdomen; segmentation
apparent on abdomen.
c) Jointed appendages (3, 4 or 5 pairs of walking legs
plus assorted other specialized appendages)
d) Respiration: spiracles into trachea; gills; book lungs
e) Excretion through
Malpighian tubules
f) Incomplete or
complete metamorphosis
g) exoskeleton of
chitin
h) ventral nerve cord
& brain
i) open circulatory
system
j)
Sexes usually separate, parthenogenesis in a few forms;
Classification:
I.
Subphylum Trilobita
: All extinct forms. Trilobed shape of the body.
II.
Subphylum Chelicerata:
Chelicerate are characterized by having six pairs of appendages.
a. Class
Merostomata
: All aquatic. Body with cephalothorax and abdomen; sharp telson; Eg. horseshoe
crabs.
b. Class
Pycnogonia:.
Body chiefly cephalothorax; usually four pairs of long legs and one pair of
subsidiary legs for egg bearing. Example: Pycnogonum.
c. Class
Arachnida
Four pairs of legs; segmented or unsegmented abdomen. Eg: Spiders, mites, ticks.
III.Subphylum
Crustacea:
a. Class
Branchiopoda
: Flattened, leaflike swimming appendages with respiratory function. Examples:
Triops, Lynceus, Daphnia.
b) Class
Maxillopod:
They have five cephalic, six thoracic, and usually four abdominal somites and
they possess unique maxillopodan eye. Eg: Cypris, Cyclops.
c) Class
Malacostraca:
Usually with eight thoracic and six abdominal somites.Eg. shrimps, crayfishes,
lobsters, crabs.
IV.Subphylum
Uniramia:
insects and myriapods.
a)
Class Chilopoda : Dorsoventrally
flattened body; variable number of somites, each with one pair of legs. Eg: centipedes
,Cermatia,
b)
Class Pauropoda : Cylindrical body
consisting of double segments and bearing nine or ten pairs of legs; no eyes.
Example: Pauropus.
c)
Class Symphyla: Body consisting of 15 to 23 segments with 10
to 12 pairs of legs. Example: Scutigerella.
d)
Class Insecta: Body with distinct
head, thorax, and abdomen; pair of antennae; mouthparts modified for different
food habits; Eg. Mosquitoes
8)
PHYLUM ECHINODERMATA ~7000 species
Characteristics feature:
a)
Adults mostly with pentaradial symmetry .
b)
No
head or brain.
c)
Locomotion by tube feet or by movement of spines, or by
movement of arms
d)
Respiration
by dermal branchiae, tube feet, respiratory tree (holothuroids), and bursae
(ophiuroids)
e)
Excretory
organs absent
f)
Sexes
separate (except a few hermaphroditic).
Classification
a)
Class
Crinoidea: Five arms ;
tentacle-like tube feet for food gathering. Eg: Antedon, Nemaster.
b)
Class
Concentricycloidea: Disc-shaped
body, with marginal spines but no arms. Eg: Xyloplax
c)
Class
Asteroidea : Star
shaped, with arms not sharply demarcated from the central disc; tube feet often
with suckers; Eg: Asterias, Pisaster.
d)
Class
Ophiuroidea : Star
shaped, with arms sharply demarcated from central disc; tube feet without
suckers .Eg: Ophiura, Astrophyton
e)
Class
Echinoidea : More or less globular or disc-shaped,
with no arms; Eg: Arbacia, Strongylocentrotus .
f)
Class
Holothuroidea : Cucumber-shaped,
with no arms. Eg: Parastichopus, Cucumaria.
Hello guys... this is a very brief summary of Non chordate classification. But if you want to know the classification of each phyla in much details please visit other posts of my blog... you will get it.... thankyou
Hello guys... this is a very brief summary of Non chordate classification. But if you want to know the classification of each phyla in much details please visit other posts of my blog... you will get it.... thankyou