Hydrozoans: Difference between revisions

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== Description ==
== Description ==
#Hydrozoans are individual predatory Cnidarians.  Though contrary to popular belief Hydrozoans fall within the kingdom Animalia.
#Hydrozoans are individual predatory Cnidarians.  Contrary to popular belief Hydrozoans fall within the kingdom Animalia.
#Polyp and Medusa life stages
#Almost all Hydrozoans are colonial creatures with a two stage life cycle, polyp and medusa.
#*The polyp is stationary and buds free floating reproductive Medusa.<ref name=”animaldiversity”> http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Hydrozoa/</ref>
#*The polyp stage is stationary, and attaches to rock or other immobile substrate.
#*While polyps can live individually, they are almost always aggregated into colonies. 
#*Some individuals like the ''Hydra'' never leave the polyp stage
#**Hydras are the most widely known and researched Hydrozoans, despite being very atypical of the group as a whole, as they are individual and live in fresh water.
#*Polyps uds free floating reproductive Medusa.<ref name=”animaldiversity”> http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Hydrozoa/</ref>
#Huge diversity of body types and life cycles
#Huge diversity of body types and life cycles
#Often develop colonies, which can take many different forms.<ref name="berkelyhydrozoa"> http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cnidaria/hydrozoa.html</ref>
#Often develop colonies, which can take many different forms.<ref name="berkelyhydrozoa"> http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cnidaria/hydrozoa.html</ref>

Revision as of 15:02, 22 April 2014

Hydrozoans

Description

  1. Hydrozoans are individual predatory Cnidarians. Contrary to popular belief Hydrozoans fall within the kingdom Animalia.
  2. Almost all Hydrozoans are colonial creatures with a two stage life cycle, polyp and medusa.
    • The polyp stage is stationary, and attaches to rock or other immobile substrate.
    • While polyps can live individually, they are almost always aggregated into colonies.
    • Some individuals like the Hydra never leave the polyp stage
      • Hydras are the most widely known and researched Hydrozoans, despite being very atypical of the group as a whole, as they are individual and live in fresh water.
    • Polyps uds free floating reproductive Medusa.[1]
  3. Huge diversity of body types and life cycles
  4. Often develop colonies, which can take many different forms.[2]
    • Coral-like (fire corals)
      • Unlike true corals which consist of many cells of an individual animal, Hydrozoan corals consist of individual members called Zooids that together function as a colonial animal.[3]
    • Free floating (jellyfish-like)
      • Resemble jellyfish, actually a colony consisting of multiple groups of mature Medusa

Distribution

  1. Found in every ocean around the world
  2. Almost entirely in salt water

Symbiotic Relationships

  1. Zooxanthellae[4]

Reef Building

  1. Much like the Anthozoans, Hydrozoans often create a calcium enriched skeleton during their polyp stage
    • Although they are so similar, it is believed that this calcification is a result of convergent evolution as opposed to an ancestral trait[3]
  2. As a group, Hydrozoans provide minimally to overall reef growth, but a few groups have played larger roles
    • Milleporids
      • During the Tertiary period milleporids such as Fire-Coral were responsible for massive changes in reef architecture
      • These animals create a calcium carbonate (CaCO3) skeleton in which the microscopic polyps can live. This calcium carbonate skeleton is the visible part of the animal, and what gives the easy misconception that these Hyrozoans are true corals.[5]

[6]

References

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