Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts

Friday, February 6, 2015

Physical Characteristics of Sea Anemone

Sea anemone is the popular name for some 1,000 species of polyp or coelenterate of the order Actiniaria in the class Anthozoa. These brightly colored, flowerlike animals are found in all seas, but they are generally more numerous and larger in temperate and warm waters. Most of them live singly, but some form colonies.

 

Unlike the closely related stone corals, sea anemones never form an internal limy skeleton but may form a superficial one in the ectoderm. Generally they live attached to rock pilings or the like, but a few burrow in sand or mud. Some fix themselves as commensals to shells inhabited by hermit crabs. A few are truly parasitic in jellyfishes.

Despite their popular name, only a few of these animals resemble anemone blossoms. The majority look like dahlias or chrysanthemums. The typical sea anemone has a stout, more or less cylindrical, body that is topped by a broad, flat disk. The disk contains a slitlike mouth surrounded by whorls of simple hollow tentacles, which resemble flower petals. From the mouth a short, tubular gullet, or esophagus, reaches into the cavity of the body. It is connected to the body walls by radiating septa, or mesenteries, that divide the body cavity into a corresponding number of sacs.

The esophagus communicates with the sacs through a central space into which the septa do not reach. A pair of ciliated grooves, or siphonoglyphs, extend along opposite sides of the esophagus and into the corresponding corners of the mouth. These always remain open and are the seat of inflowing and outflowing currents of water. The grooves provide both a means of respiration and an outlet for the removal of waste matter from the body.

The body walls, as well as the tentacles, which are outgrowths from them, are very contractile and largely composed of muscles arranged in a circular and a longitudinal layer. The circular layer is for extension; the longitudinal layer, for retraction. These muscles have special relations to the mesenteries. The mesenteries are vertical radiating septa reaching from the mouth disk or peristome to the base, and from the body wall to the esophagus, but ending freely below the esophagus. They are not strictly radial in arrangement but are grouped in pairs, almost always, like the tentacles, in some multiple of six. The mesenteries corresponding to the siphonoglyphs differ in structure from all of the others and are termed directive; the others form different classes according to the order and degree of development. The intermesenteric sacs may further communicate by one or two pores in each mesentery.

Along the edges of the septa the testes and ovaries are developed from the cells lining the gastric cavity. Digestive cells are also found in the same region, as well as an area filled with stinging thread cells, or nematocysts.

Sea anemones may be distinguished by the arrangement of their septa and tentacles and, less importantly, by their color and form. Most species, particularly the tropical varieties, are beautifully colored. The average size of a sea anemone is 21/2 to 3 inches (64–76 mm) in diameter and 4 inches (100 mm) in height.

Animal Facts: Common Tree Shrew (Tupaia glis)

The common tree shrew is a very emotional animal. When a male and female meet, it is either love or hate at first sight. This creature's strong feelings become most obvious when two are put into a cage together. About one pair in five seems to fall instantly in love. They nuzzle each other day and night. But most of the time, the forced meeting results in a violent fight. Each shrew then retreats as far away from the other as it can. In a cage, however, the couple is forced to look at one another. After a time, they literally die from the stress.


In nature, tree shrews that don't get along can flee. They are very territorial. The male marks the boundaries of his property with scents rubbed from a gland behind his neck. Scents that animals use to communicate in this way are called "pheromones."

A happy tree shrew couple usually mate on the very first day they meet. About 45 days later, the mother gives birth, usually to two babies. Each one weighs less than half an ounce. Normally she covers the babies with a special scent, or pheromone. This scent tells her mate to leave them alone. If she does not, he will undoubtedly eat them.

Tree shrews are more closely related to primates than they are to the mole-like shrews of North America and Europe. Like monkeys, tree shrews have large, well-developed brains and ape-like ears. 

Length of the Body: 5 to 71/2 inches
Length of the Tail: 51/2 to 7 inches
Weight: 2 to 61/2 ounces
Diet: fruits, insects, lizards, and small mammals
Number of Young: 1 to 4
Home: Southeast Asia