Echinoderms and chordates are fascinating animal groups with unique features. Echinoderms, like sea stars and urchins, have radial symmetry and a water vascular system. Chordates, including us, have a notochord and dorsal nerve cord.
Both groups are deuterostomes with true coeloms. Echinoderms have spiny skin and can regenerate limbs. Chordates have pharyngeal slits and a post-anal tail. These traits help them survive and thrive in their environments.
Echinoderms
Features and adaptations of echinoderms
- Echinoderms are marine invertebrates that include sea stars (starfish), sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers
- Have a unique water vascular system that functions in locomotion, respiration, and feeding
- Consists of a series of fluid-filled canals and tube feet
- Tube feet are small, extensible appendages that protrude through the body wall and are used for movement, adhesion, and sensing the environment
- Exhibit radial symmetry, meaning their body parts are arranged around a central axis
- Most have a five-fold symmetry, with body parts arranged in multiples of five (pentaradial)
- Radial symmetry is an adaptation to their sessile or slow-moving lifestyle, allowing them to respond to stimuli from any direction
- Many have a spiny or armored skin, which provides protection from predators (sea urchins)
- Some, like sea stars, have the ability to regenerate lost body parts, such as arms
- Have a unique calcium carbonate endoskeleton composed of ossicles, which provides support and protection
- Possess a simple digestive system, with a mouth on the underside and an anus on the upper surface (sea urchins, sand dollars)
- Develop through indirect development, often involving a metamorphosis stage from a free-swimming larva to the adult form
Chordates
Comparison of major chordate groups
- Chordates are a diverse phylum that includes vertebrates and several invertebrate groups
- All chordates share four key features at some point in their development: a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail
- The three main groups of chordates are:
- Cephalochordates (lancelets)
- Small, fish-like marine invertebrates
- Retain chordate characteristics throughout their lives
- Urochordates (tunicates)
- Marine invertebrates that include sea squirts and salps
- Possess chordate features during their larval stage but lose them as adults
- Vertebrates
- Animals with backbones, including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals
- Retain chordate features throughout their lives, with the notochord developing into the vertebral column
- Cephalochordates (lancelets)
- Evolutionary relationships:
- Cephalochordates are considered the most basal group, sharing many characteristics with the common ancestor of all chordates
- Urochordates and vertebrates are more closely related to each other than to cephalochordates
- Vertebrates are the most diverse and evolutionarily derived group of chordates
Functions of defining chordate features
- Notochord:
- A flexible, rod-like structure that runs along the dorsal side of the body
- Provides support and helps with locomotion
- In vertebrates, the notochord is present during embryonic development and is later replaced by the vertebral column
- Dorsal hollow nerve cord:
- A hollow tube that runs along the dorsal side of the body, above the notochord
- Develops into the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) in vertebrates
- Allows for rapid communication between the brain and body, enabling complex behaviors and responses to stimuli
- Pharyngeal slits:
- A series of openings in the pharynx (throat) that connect to the outside environment
- In aquatic chordates (fish), pharyngeal slits are involved in filter feeding and gas exchange
- In terrestrial vertebrates, pharyngeal slits are present during embryonic development and give rise to various structures, such as the eustachian tubes and tonsils
- Post-anal tail:
- An extension of the body posterior to the anus
- Aids in locomotion, particularly in aquatic species (fish)
- In some vertebrates (humans, apes), the tail is reduced or absent in adults
Shared characteristics of echinoderms and chordates
- Both groups are deuterostomes, characterized by their embryonic development pattern
- Possess a true coelom, a fluid-filled body cavity that houses internal organs
- Adult forms typically display bilateral symmetry, although echinoderms develop radial symmetry secondarily