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Glossary
- 4d cell
- —Mesentoblast; a blastomere cell that results from zygotes that have spiral cleavage divisions, and contains an unidentified cytoplasmic factor that causes the cell and its progeny to form mesoderm.
- Abdomen
- —The posterior of the main body divisions.
- Abyssal
- —Of, or relating to the deepest regions of the ocean.
- Acanthor
- —First larval stage of acanthocephalans.
- Aciculum
- —Small needlelike structure resembling a rod that supports the divisions of the parapodium.
- Acoelomate
- —An organism, particularly an invertebrate, lacking a coelom that is characterized by bilateral symmetry.
- Actinotrocha
- —Tentacle-like ciliated larva of phoronids.
- Aestivation
- —A period of dormancy that is entered into when conditions are not favorable, particularly during very warm or very dry seasons.
- Aflagellate
- —An organism that lacks a flagella.
- Agamete
- —Nucleus within the plasmodium that divides mitotically and gives rise to a sexual adult.
- Ametabolous
- —Development in which little or no external metamorphic changes are noticeable in the larval to adult transition.
- Anal
- —Relating to or being close to the anus.
- Anamorphic
- —Development in which only part of the adult segments are present in recently hatched young.
- Ancestrula
- —Zooid that develops from an egg.
- Anecic
- —An earthworm known for burying leaf litter in the soil and pulling it into underground burrows for consumption.
- Antibiosis
- —A provocative association between organisms that is detrimental, inhibitive, and preventative to one or more of them but produces a metabolic product in another.
- Aphotic zone
- —Region of the ocean where no sun light reaches and exists in complete darkness.
- Apical field
- —An area inside the circumapical band of rotifers that is devoid of cilia.
- Arboreal
- —An organism that lives in, on, or among trees.
- Ascidiologists
- —Scientists who study the Ascidiacea.
- Auricularia
- —Primary larval stage in holothuroid development.
- Benthic
- —An organism that lives on the bottom of the ocean floor.
- Bipinnaria
- —Free-swimming larval stage of asteroids.
- Biramous
- —Having two branches, such as the two appendages in crustaceans.
- Bivoltine
- —The production of two broods or generations in a season or year.
- Blastomere
- —Zygote cleavage divisions that result in a cell.
- Blastopore
- —The first opening of the early digestive tract.
- Blastula
- —Spere of blastomeres.
- Brachiolaria
- —Second stage of asteroid larva.
- Brood
- —When the care of eggs takes place outside or inside of the mother's body for at least the early part of development.
- Buccal cavity
- —A cavity that is present within the mouth.
- Bud
- —The development of new progeny cells or new outgrowth.
- Caudal
- —Referring or pertaining to the posterior end of the body.
- Cephalic
- —Referring or pertaining to the anterior end of the body.
- Cephalothorax
- —The body region that consists of the head and thoracic segments.
- Chelicera
- —Pair of appendages present in the anterior body of arachnids.
- Chorion
- —The shell or covering of an egg.
- Cilia
- —Outgrowth present on the cell surface that is short and produces a lashing movement capable of creating locomotion.
- Cloaca
- —Chamber into which the intestinal and urogenital tracts discharge.
- Coelom
- —The epithelium-lined space between the body wall and the digestive tract.
- Colony
- —Body composed of zooids that share resources.
- Commensalism
- —Symbiotic relationship between two or more species in which no group is injured, and at least one group benefits.
- Commercial fishery
- —The industry of catching a certain species for sale.
- Communal
- —Cooperation between females of one species in production and building, but not in caring for the brood.
- Conspecific
- —Belonging to the same species.
- Coracidium
- —Ciliated free-swimming stage of cestode.
- Cosmopolitan
- —Occurring throughout most of the world.
- Cuticle
- —The noncellular outer layers of the body.
- Cydippid
- —Free-swimming ctenophore larva.
- Cyphonarutes
- —Planktonic larva of some nonbrooding gymnolaemate bryozoans.
- Definitive host
- —See Primary host.
- Demersal
- —Aquatic animals that live near, are deposited on, or sink to the bottom of the sea.
- Dentate
- —Having teeth, or structures that function, or as derived from, as teeth.
- Denticles
- —Teeth, or structures that function as teeth.
- Deposit feeders
- —Animals that feed upon matter that has settled on the substrate.
- Detritus
- —Fragments of plant, animal, or waste remnants.
- Deuterostome
- —Division of the animal kingdom that includes animals that are bilaterally symmetrical, have indeterminate cleavage and a mouth that does not arise from the blastopore.
- Diapause
- —A period of time in which development is suspended or arrested and the body is dormant.
- Dioecious
- —Organisms that have male reproductive organs in one individual and female in another.
- Doliolaria
- —Barrel-shaped larval stage.
- Ecdysis
- —Molting or shedding of the exoskeleton.
- Ectoparasite
- —A parasite that lives on the outside of a host.
- Endemic
- —Belonging to or from a particular geographical region.
- Endocuticle
- —The innermost layer of the cuticle.
- Endogeic
- —An earthworm that primarily feeds on soil and plant roots.
- Endoparasite
- —A parasite that lives inside the body of its host.
- Endosymbiont
- —Symbiotic relationship in which a symbiont dwells within the body of its symbiotic partner.
- Enterocoely
- —Development of the coelom (body cavity) from the embryonic gut (archenteron) occurring in dueterostomes.
- Epicuticle
- —The surface layers of the cuticle.
- Epigeic
- —An earthworm that lives primarily in leaf litter above soil and feeds on surrounding plant debris.
- Epiphragm
- —Temporary mucus door over the aperture (opening) that hardens to seal the snail inside.
- Epizoic
- —An animal or plant that lives on another animal or plant.
- Estuary
- —A semi-enclosed body of water that is diluted by freshwater input and has an open connection to the sea. Typically, there is a mixing of sea and fresh water, and the influx of nutrients from both sources results in high productivity.
- Eurybathic
- —An animal that occurs in a wide range of depths.
- Euryhaline
- —An animal that occurs in a wide variety of salinities.
- Eurythermic
- —An animal that occurs in a wide range of temperatures.
- Eversible
- —Capable of being turned inside out.
- Exocuticle
- —Hard and darkened layer of the cuticle lying between the endocuticle and epicuticle.
- Exoskeleton
- —The external plates of the body wall.
- Fibrillae
- —Small filaments, hairs, or fibers.
- Fishery
- —The industry of catching fish, crustaceans, mollusks or other aquatic animals for commercial, recreational, subsistence or aesthetic purposes.
- Furca
- —An appendage that is forked.
- Fusiform
- —Having a shape that tapers toward each end.
- Ganglion
- —A nerve tissue mass containing cell bodies of neurons external to the brain or spinal cord.
- Girdle
- —Outer mantle of the polyplacophoran that is thick and stiff, extending out from the shell plate.
- Glycocalyx
- —Protein and carbohydrate surface coat in cells.
- Gonochoric
- —An animal with separate sexes.
- Gonopore
- —Reproductive aperture or pore present in the genital area.
- Gynandromorph
- —An individual that exhibits both male and female characteristics.
- Hematophagous
- —A group that feeds or subsides on blood.
- Hemitransparent
- —Half or partially transparent.
- Hermaphrodite
- —An organism that has both male and female sexual organs.
- Heterothermic springs
- —Springs that may freeze in the winter.
- Higgins larva
- —Loriciferan larval stage.
- Holoplankton
- —An animal that lives in plankton all of its life.
- Homothermic springs
- —Those with a constant temperature throughout the year.
- Host
- —The organism in or on which a parasite lives.
- Hyaline
- —Transparent, clear, and colorless.
- Hydromedusa
- —Medusa of the hydrozoans.
- Hyperparasite
- —A parasitic organism whose host is another parasite.
- Infauna
- —An animal that lives among sediment.
- Inquiline
- —Animal that lives in the nests or abode of another species.
- Integument
- —A layer of skin, membrane, or cuticle that envelops an organism or one of its parts.
- Intermediate host
- —Host for the larval stage of a parasitic organism.
- Intromittent
- —Used in copulation; often used to describe the external reproductive organs of males.
- Kinesis
- —A movement that lacks directional orientation and depends upon the intensity of stimulation.
- Lamina
- —Thin, parallel plates of soft vascular sensitive tissue.
- Larva
- —An immature development stage.
- Larviparous
- —Eggs brooded within the female that are later released as larvae.
- Lecithotrophic
- —Larvae that do not feed, but rather derive nutrition from yolk.
- Lorica
- —Specialized girdle-like structure made of a set of hardened parts that protect the body, named for the segmented corselet of armor worn by Roman soldiers.
- Lumen
- —Cavity of a tubular organ.
- Mandible
- —The jaw.
- Manubria
- —Tube that bears the mouth and hangs down from the subumbrella or medusae.
- Maxilla
- —One of two components of the mouth immediately behind the mandibles.
- Medusae
- —Well-developed cnidarian that is gelatinous and free-swimming.
- Meiosis
- —Cellular process that results in the number of chromosomes in gamete-producing cells (usually sex cells) being reduced to one half.
- Mesoderm
- —Tissue derived from the three primary embryonic germ layers, and the source of many bodily tissues and structures.
- Metachronous
- —using coordinated waves, as in bands of cilia beating metachronously.
- Metamorphosis
- —A change in physical form or substance.
- Miracidium
- —Free-swimming first larva of trematodes that is ciliated.
- Mitosis
- —A process that takes place in the nucleus of a dividing cell that results in the formation of two new nuclei having the same number of chromosomes as the parent nucleus.
- Moult
- —The shedding of the exoskeleton.
- Mutualism
- —Symbiotic relationship in which both members of the relationship benefit.
- Myoepithelial
- —Cells of the epithelium.
- Nauplius larva
- —Name given to crustacean larvae.
- Nematocyst
- —Stingers or stinging cnida of cnidarians.
- Neritic
- —An organism that inhabits the region of shallow water adjoining the seacoast.
- Nocturnal
- —An organism that is active mostly at night.
- Obligate ectoparasites
- —External parasites that cannot complete their cycle when removed from their host.
- Oocyte
- —The egg before it has reached maturation.
- Ootheca
- —The cover or case that surrounds a mass of eggs.
- Oral lamella
- —Oral membrane or layer.
- Ovigerous
- —A female that carries developing eggs until they hatch.
- Oviparous
- —An organism that lays eggs.
- Ovipositor
- —The apparatus through which the female lays eggs.
- Ovoviviparous
- —An organism that produces young that hatch out of their egg while still within their mother.
- Parapodium
- —Appendage present on annelids that resembles a paddle.
- Parasite
- —An organism that lives in or on the body of another living organism, feeding off of its host.
- Parenchymula
- —Larval sponge.
- Parthenogenetic
- —Development of an egg without fertilization.
- Pelagic
- —Organisms that live in the open sea, above the ocean floor.
- Pelagosphera
- —Second planktotrophic larva of sipunculans.
- Petancula
- —Stage of metamorphosis for holothuroids.
- Phoresy
- —Nonparasitic relationship between two organisms in which one uses the other as a means of transportation.
- Photokinesis
- —Activity induced by the presence of light.
- Photophore
- —Cell or group of cells that produce light.
- Phytophagous
- —An organism that solely feeds upon plants.
- Pilidium
- —Free-swimming, planktotrophic larva of heteronemerteans.
- Pinnules
- —Small branches.
- Planktotrophic larvae
- —Larvae that feed during their planktonic phase.
- Planulae
- —Larval cnidarians.
- Pleonite
- —Also known as abdominal somite. The single division of a body after the thorax.
- Pleopod
- —An appendage originating from the abdomen.
- Plerocercoid
- —Last larval lifestage of tapeworms.
- Polyembryony
- —The production of several embryos from a single egg.
- Polyp
- —Cnidarian form that is sessile.
- Polyphagous
- —An organism that consumes a variety of foods.
- Positively phototactic
- —Movement toward light.
- Predaceous
- —An organism that preys on other organisms.
- Predator
- —An animal that attacks and feeds on other animals.
- Primary host
- —An organism that acts as the host for an adult stage of a parasite. Also called a definitive host.
- Protandric hermaphrodites
- —Animals that hatch as males and later develop into females.
- Protonephridia
- —Ciliated excretory tube that is specialized for filtration.
- Protonymph
- —The second instar of a mite.
- Protostome
- —Bilateral metazoans characterized by determinate and spiral cleavage, the formation of a mouth and anus directly from the blastopore, and the formation of the coelom by the embryonic mesoderm having split.
- Pseudovipositor
- —Terminal abdominal segment of females from which eggs are layed.
- Radial symmetry
- —The exact arrangement of parts or organs around a central axis.
- Ramate
- —An animal or organism with branches.
- Raptorial
- —An organism that has specially adapted the ability to seize and grasp prey.
- Rhagon
- —Stage of development in demosponge larva.
- Rostrum
- —The beak, snout, spine, proboscis, or anterior median prolongation of the carapace or head of an organism.
- Saprophytic
- —An organism that lives on dead or decaying organic matter.
- Scalids
- —Sets of complex spines that allow the organism to move, capture food, or sense changes in its environment.
- Scyphistoma
- —Scyphozoan polyp.
- Sclerites
- —Thick layer of the exoskeleton.
- Segment
- —A rings or subdivisions of the body.
- Sensu stricto
- —In the "strict sense."
- Seta
- —A bristle.
- Somites
- —The similar or identical segments that divide an animal (especially invertebrates) longitudinally.
- Spermatophore
- —Packet of sperm that is usually transferred from one individual to another during mating.
- Spiral cleavage
- —Cleavage pattern in which spindles or places are oblique to the axis of the egg.
- Spiralians
- —Animal groups that show spiral cleavage patterns.
- Spirocyst
- —Adhesive threads present on Cnidarians that capture prey and attach to immobile objects.
- Stock
- —A biologically distinct and interbreeding population within a species of aquatic animals.
- Stoloniferous
- —An organism that bears or develops a branch from its base to produce new plants from buds, or an extension of the body wall that develops buds giving rise to new zooids.
- Strobilation
- —Asexual reproduction by division into body segments.
- Subsistence fishery
- —A fishery in which the harvested resource is used directly by the fisher.
- Symbiont
- —An organism living in a symbiotic relationship with another organism.
- Symbiosis
- —An intimate association, union, or living arragement between two dissimilar organisms in which at least one of the organisms is dependent upon the other.
- Synanthropic
- —Associated with human habitation.
- Syncytial
- —Multinucleate mass of cytoplasm resulting from the fusion of cells.
- Taxis
- —Reflex movement by an organism in relation to a source of stimulation.
- Tegument
- —Outer, nonciliated layer of the body wall of platyhelminth parasites.
- Test
- —Shell-like encasement or skeleton.
- Triploblastic
- —Embryos with three germ layers.
- Trochophore
- —Larva that has a girdle ring of cilia.
- Troglophilous
- —An organism that lives in caves.
- Unci
- —Hooked anatomical structure.
- Uncinus
- —Miniature hooked anatomical structure.
- Uniramous
- —Having one branch, such as only one appendage in crustaceans. Typically results from loss of the appendage.
- Univoltine
- —A group that produces only one generation per year.
- Velum
- —Shelf present under the umbrella of most hydromedusae, or a ciliated growth with which larva swim.
- Vermiform larva
- —A legless, worm-like larva without a well-developed head.
- Vibrissae
- —A pair of large bristles that is present just above the mouth in some organisms.
- Vitellarium
- —Part of the ovary that produces yolk-filled nurse cells.
- Viviparous
- —An organism that produces live young.
- Zoea
- —Second to last larval stage of many crustaceans.
- Zooid
- —Individual invertebrate that reproduces nonsexually by budding or splitting, especially one that lives in a colony in which each member is joined to others by living material, for example, a coral.
- Zooplankton
- —Free-swimming, microscopic planktonic animals present in lakes and oceans.
Glossary
© 2004 by Gale. Gale is an imprint of The Gale Group, Inc., a division of Thomson Learning Inc.
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