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the phylum platyhelminthes are sometimes
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simply referred to as the flatworms
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this phylum consists of four different
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classes three of which are entirely
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parasitic so class turbularia
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this is the only free living group there
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are a handful
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of commensal and parasitic species of
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other invertebrates that do
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fall in this class but the bulk of
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organisms in class
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turbularia are not parasitic they are
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free living all of the other classes are
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exclusively parasitic and they're
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actually to believe to have evolved from
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one turbularian ancestor
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so we have class trauma tota
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class sestota and class monogenea
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so there is a common homology that all
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of the parasitic
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platyhelminthe classes share with one
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another
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and that is they have a living
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non-ciliated
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sensational tegument now the term
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synthesial
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basically means that there is there are
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no plasma membranes
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separating individual cells from one
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another so basically
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cells all fuse together to form one
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large
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massive tissue layer basically
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that is not cellular so it's
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multi-nucleated
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and it's all fused into one this
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the tegument covers the body so it is
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the outermost
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layer of cells covering the body
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it might secrete fibrous layers
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external to it as a matter of fact it
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does in certain organisms
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but regardless the cellular tegument or
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the outermost layer of cells
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no longer exists as a layer of
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individual cells but
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cells that have fused together to form a
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syncytium
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and this homology is found in all of
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them
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and this is one of the primary bits of
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morphological evidence
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for all of these and parasitic
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lineages having evolved from one
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parasitic
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or pre-parasitic ancestor
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it also suggests that parasitism arose
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only
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once to lead to all of these groups
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so we have the planaria which is a free
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living type of flatworm
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and somewhere along the evolutionary
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trajectory
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some turbularian evolved parasitism
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and from that ancestral flatworm that
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was once free living that evolved
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parasitism
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we have the trauma tota uh the the
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monogenes
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and the sestota all evolving
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so the platyhelminthes uh and and i'm
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just going to use the basic
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turbularian body form there are many
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uh adjustments to this that we'll talk
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about when we get into each of the
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different classes
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but the basic body form or the
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traditional body form of a platy helmet
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is that the mouth is located
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somewhere at the anterior end
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or at the middle of the body but
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always on the ventral surface so these
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are worms that are dorsal ventrally
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flattened
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the mouth leads to a blind digestive
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tract
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which means that this is not a one-way
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street so food doesn't come in travel
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down the digestive system
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and then leave through a different
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opening that would be a one-way street
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the digestive system in the plasti
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helmets is actually a
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two-way street so the digestive system
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is blind which means
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it's like hitting a dead end so food
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enters into the mouth travels through
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the digestive system
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and then waste material is actually
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released back
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out through the mouth also there is no
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anus
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metabolically produced waste is released
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across the body wall but
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even though this is the normal release
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mechanism for nitrogenous wastes
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many platyhelminthes particularly the
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free living plathe helminthes
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do have a very simple excretory system
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that excretory system can contains
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uh what we call proto-nephritia and
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the proto-nephridia are basically
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collections of
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these little cells they're called flame
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cells uh
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the fancy word is solenocyte and inside
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of the flame cell so what we're looking
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at on the left-hand side here
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is a planaria body and the entire
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system of proto-nephritia is sketched in
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this drawing
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so we can see there are a number of
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small little excretory canals
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there's excretory pore that's
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highlighted here
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but these excretory canals all flow into
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a larger excretory canal that'll
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eventually channel to the excretory pore
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but where is it actually getting the
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metabolic waste from well it's being
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collected at the tips
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so right here right here
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[Music]
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right there right there at these tips
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we're gonna blow that up
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come over to the right this is what
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we're looking at here this is a
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flame cell and you can see the flame
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cell
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has these closely spaced little rods
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that form basically a filtration system
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on the surface so the flame cells are
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filtering
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out essentially the the bodily fluids
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and removing nitrogenous waste and then
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it's traveling down the excretory canals
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eventually to the duct where it leaves
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the body at the excretory
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pore so it's a very simple excretory
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system
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uh it's not isolated in one area of the
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body you basically have these flame
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cells spread throughout the body where
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they're collecting
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uh nitrogenous waste and waste material
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from the cells
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almost all flatworms are simultaneous
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hermaphrodites
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most of them cannot self-fertilize a few
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can
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but most cannot self-fertilize which
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means although they may be simultaneous
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hermaphrodites they still need to find a
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mate
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in order to go through a reproductive a
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sexual reproductive event
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many parasitic species have complex life
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cycles utilizing different forms
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in different hosts with several
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different larval stages then
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they also possess incredible powers of
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regeneration
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so injuries to the body cuts in the body
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can heal something that you know we may
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think of in a human as being deadly like
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splitting your head in half
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is not deadly to many of the
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flatworms if the head splits in half
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each half grows another half and you now
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have two headed
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planaria or flatworm
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flatworms are bilaterally symmetrical so
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they do displace cephalization which is
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an isolation of
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nerve sensory organs at the anterior end
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at one end that we refer to as the
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anterior end
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um they are all acelamate so they don't
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have a body cavity
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and they are all triple blastic they all
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have an endoderm and ectoderm
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and a mesoderm filling the
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acylimate area or that internal
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area of the body remember there is no
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body cavity
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but there is a parenchyma parenchyma
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tissue is
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essentially the soft
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internal tissue of the body
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so here we're looking at the cross
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section of a free living
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flatworm uh you'll notice the epidermis
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one cell layer thick here uh
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this is you can see these are cellular
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so this is not showing the tegument
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which would actually be sitting just
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outside
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of this just beneath
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here you have a circular muscle layer in
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addition to that circular muscle layer
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which goes around
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the whole body of the flatworm you also
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have these
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vertical they look like columns these
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are the dorso ventral muscles
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so contracting would flatten the worm
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out more relaxing would allow the worms
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body to expand a little bit like it is
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here
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but regardless of whether those muscles
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are completely relaxed or contracted the
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worm is going to appear
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dorsal ventrally flattened the gut uh
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is highlighted in the center here so
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this is the lumen of the gut and then
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you have
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endodermally derived gastrodermis lining
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the gut tissue and then all in between
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here
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it looks like little teeny tiny dots
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this is
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representing the parenchymal tissue
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free living species usually have
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well-developed sensory systems
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including eye spots as well as
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relatively large
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nerve cell bodies and neuroglia
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in that anterior head
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region parasites generally have less
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elaborate systems
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that are often completely lacking
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in any type of of sensory uh
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isolation at the anterior end and in
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some cases very few
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traditional sensory organs like eye
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spots that can sense light and dark and
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shadows
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but more or less they're sensing their
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external environment over the length of
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their body
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through chemoreceptors on their cells
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so why would that be well
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we're talking about parasites and what
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is a common trend that we see in
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parasite evolution
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when one organism is living in or on
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another organism
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they do tend to lose some of their
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characteristics that they don't require
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it's a typical life history trade-off
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organisms
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do not invest energy where they don't
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have to
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so if an organism is living entirely in
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the gut of a host
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what would be the purpose of developing
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sensory organs that allow them to sense
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light and dark there is no purpose
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uh so what we see is the reduction of
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the nervous system
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in the parasitic species compared to the
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free living species
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that really need to sense changes in
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their environment and whose environments
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are much
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less consistent than an internal
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parasite
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so class turbularia again this includes
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pretty much all free living flatworms
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again handful
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of parasites there's about 4 500 species
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most are free living most are very tiny
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and inconspicuous
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many live in marine systems and fresh
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water systems there are actually a few
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terrestrial species that live in very
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moist soils
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they move utilizing their muscles both
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their circular and their circular
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muscles that go around the body and
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those dorsal ventral muscles that span
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from the dorsal body wall to the ventral
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body wall some also have cilia
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on their ventral side again this is a
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trait that we would see
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primarily in free living turbularian not
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parasitic the cilia and the mucus that's
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secreted along with the cilia helps in
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attachment and movement also
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position of the mouth is normally around
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mid-body
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cephalization is present with clear
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ganglia neuroglia nerve cords and eye
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spots
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and the excretory system as well
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developed proto-nephritia with flame
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cells
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throughout the body