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Trichoplax - Phylum Placozoa
General reference. [eng]
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Introduction to Placozoa
Very little is known about them because they have
never been observed in their natural habitat. No one
knows what substrate they live on or what they eat in
nature. It is even unknown whether or not they
reproduce sexually like most animals. They were
discovered in the late 1880's living on the glass walls
of an aquarium in a European laboratory. Since then,
most of what has been learned about their biology has
come from studying cultures of them kept alive in
various laboratories around the world. Not
surprisingly, given their small size and squishy nature,
fossil placozoans have yet to be discovered. [eng]
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Placozoa
Only a single species, Trichoplax adhaerens, is known in this phylum. Like the other
Parazoa, it lacks tissues, organs and organ systems, head and tail, and left and right.
Soft bodied and inconspicuous, it is the simplest of animals. Trichoplax looks like a
very large amoeba; it is barely visible to the naked eye. One can see under higher
magnification that the "amoeba" is really an animal composed of a few thousand cells.
Because most of the surface cells bear undulipodia (cilia), the entire surface of the
animal is ciliated. Picture. [eng]
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A weird wee beastie: Trichoplax adhaerens
Trichoplax is an interesting organism to study, because it is one of those "missing links" that provides some hints about the evolution of some of the metazoa. It has only three cell layers
and purportedly only four different kinds of cells. However, it raises interesting questions, some of which are still not completely answered. How it feeds is still something of a perplexity. It
seems that it absorbs its nutrition through the ventral surface and probably feeds on algae. [eng]
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PARAZOA
Phylum characteristics, taxonomy. [eng]
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