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Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouT ube

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Page 1: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies

Phylum CnidariaThe Stingers

Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Page 2: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Characteristics

• Radially symmetrical: repeating units around a central point

Page 3: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Characteristics continued• Mesoglea: layer of

jelly separating two tissue layers of cup or umbrella-shaped body

• Gastrovascular cavity: space in middle of the body for digestion and reproduction, often surrounded by tentacles

Page 4: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Characteristics contd

• Tentacles usually lined with several different types of nematoblasts, which produce structures called nematocysts

• May be mucus coated to entrap prey

• Some have deadly poisons to stun or kill prey

Page 5: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Nematocyst firing

Page 6: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Two Body Forms

Polyp: organisms that are attached with oral surface pointed upward(e.g. corals and sea anemones)

Medusa: free-floating, with oral (mouth and tentacles) surface typically pointed downward (e.g. jellies)

Page 7: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Class: Anthozoa (Corals and Anemones)

• Largest class in the phylum Cnidaria

• Includes more than 6,000 species

• All are polyps

• Some are colonial (corals, soft corals), others are individual (anemones, a few corals) Red Gorgonian,

colonial coral, NOAA

Close up of a coral colony

Page 8: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Coral life cycle

Page 9: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Hard corals and dinoflagellates

• The color of hard corals comes from the dinoflagellates in the genus Symbiodinium, also called zooxanthellae

• These organisms live inside coral, provide food and help eliminate waste through photosynthesis

Zooxanthellae living inside coral

Page 10: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube
Page 11: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Coral bleaching• Zooxanthellae live best in well-lit,

clear water• Thrive in low-nutrient, less

productive waters (with little plankton to block the sunlight)

• Runoff of pollution can cause plankton to grow and zooxanthellae to die

• Without zooxanthellae, corals lose their colors = coral bleaching

• Global Warming & Bleaching the Reef - YouTube

Page 12: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Class: Hydrozoa (Fire Corals and Siphonophores)

Immortal Jelly

• Alternate between polyp and medusa forms during their life cycle

Page 13: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Ex. Fire corals

• Fire corals—create a mild burn upon contact• Waxy, tan appearance and grow in small tree-like

colonies or as an encrusting colony on an existing reef

• 'The Fire Coral' Pt. 1 - YouTube

Page 14: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Siphonophores• One species measured to be a total

length of 40 m (131 ft)• Many represent a bridge between

colonial animals and complex organisms– Exist as colonies– Within colonies are special polyps

adapted to feeding, reproduction, movement, and other functions

• Major predators with some consuming significant quantities of krill

• Example: Portuguese man-of-war

Page 15: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Portugese Manowar - YouTube

Page 16: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube
Page 17: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

True Jellies

Class: Scyphozoa Class: Cuboza

Page 18: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Class: Scyphozoa (true jellies)

• Range in size from smaller than a coin to more than a meter across with tentacles more than 3 m long

• Most are large planktonic organisms that swim but also drift with the current

• Weak swimmers, move by contracting their rounded body, or bell

• Feed on almost anything they catch

Page 19: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Reproduction

• Scyphozoa life cycle alternates between sessile and freefloating

• Juveniles are polyps, adults are medusas

Page 20: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Scyphozoa continued

• Efficient predators• Prey for Leatherback turtle and several

species of large fish—predators move seasonally with jellies

• Plastic bags, balloons, and small trash often are mistaken by turtles as jellies and can harm them by clogging their digestive systems

Page 21: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube
Page 22: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Class Cubozoa

• Box Jellyfish are pale blue and transparent and bell or cube shaped with four distinct sides, therefore the name box jellyfish.

Page 23: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube
Page 24: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube
Page 25: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

• up to 20 cm along each side of the cube or bell

• up to as many as 15 tentacles on each corner which can be 3 metres in length with up to 5,000 nematocysts (stinging cells).

• Box Jellyfish feed on  small fish and crustaceans. 

Cubozoa continued

Page 26: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Cubozoa continued• The box jellyfish has four sets of eyes,

each set at one corner of the animal

Page 27: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Cubozoa continued

• can be found in Australia, the Philippines, Indonesian Coast, Hawaii, Vietnam, the Carribean and other tropical areas

Page 28: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Anemone symbiosis• Found in the tropical Indo-west Pacific or tropical

Pacific, Indian Ocean, and Red Sea• Anemonefish (e.g. clownfish) receive protection

by living amongst the stinging tentacles

• Fish passes back and forth through the tentacles to pick up anemone cells, the anemone recognizes its own cells on the fish so doesn’t sting it

Page 29: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

The anemone has not be shown to benefit from this association, therefore the relationship is one of Commensalism

Page 30: Corals, Anemones, Sea Fans, and Jellies Phylum Cnidaria The Stingers Box Jellyfish - Irukandji - YouTube

Biology of Cnidarians

• Typically carnivores

• Extracellular/intracellular digestion

• Nerve net

• statocysts