Trichoplax
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{{Taxobox | color = pink | name = Trichoplax adhaerens | image = | image_width = 250px | regnum = Animalia | phylum = Placozoa | phylum_authority = Grell, 1971 | classis = Trichoplacoidea | ordo = Trichoplacida | familia = Trichoplacidae | genus = Trichoplax | species = T. adhaerens | binomial = Trichoplax adhaerens | binomial_authority = F.E. von Schultze, 1883 }} Trichoplax adhaerens is a simple balloon-like marine animal with a body cavity filled with pressurized fluid. It is given its own phylum, called Placozoa; the only other species, Treptoplax reptans, was described in 1896 and has not been seen since, leading to doubts about its existence.
Indiviual Trichoplax are soft-bodied, about 0.5 mm across, and somewhat resemble a large amoeba. The name T. adhaerens was given because it tends to stick to its substrate, including glass pipettes and microscope slides. Its evolutionary relationships are still being investigated, but it may be allied with the cnidarians and ctenophores.
Trichoplax lacks organs and most tissues, including the nervous system, although evidence suggests that they evolved from species with nerves. It is comprised of a few thousand cells of four types in three distinct layers: monociliated dorsal and ventral epithelia cells, ventral gland cells and the syncytial fiber cells. The outermost layer (the monociliated cells) have a single cilium, which allow the adult to move. The epithelia of Trichoplax lack a basal membrane and the cells are connected by belt desmosomes. Lipid inclusions, called 'shiny spheres', are regularly distributed over the dorsal epithelia.
It feeds by absorption and has been observed to form temporary bulges to trap food. It climbs atop its food and uses the ventral surface as a temporary extraorganismal gastric cavity. Digestion is both extracellular and by phagocytosis.
When not feeding Trichoplax is actively motile with movement effected by ventral ciliation and by the fiber cell layer and lacks any polarity in its movement.
The haploid number of chromosomes is six. It has the smallest amount of DNA yet measured for any animal with only 50 megabases (80 nanograms per cell). A trichoplax genome project is currently underway.<ref>trichoplax genome project</ref>
Putative eggs have been observed, but they degrade at the 32-64 cell stage. Neither embryonic development nor sperm have been observed, however Trichoplax genomes show evidence of sexual reproduction.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Asexual reproduction by binary fission is the primary mode of reproduction observed in the lab.
Trichoplax were discovered on the walls of a marine aquarium in the 1880s, and have rarely been observed in their natural habitat.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The full extent of their natural range is unknown, but they are easily collected in tropical and subtropical latitues around the world.
References
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External links
- The Trichoplax Genome Project at the Yale Peabody Museum
- A Weird Wee Beastie: Trichoplax adhaerens
- Information page from the University of California at Berkeley
- Mitochondrial DNA and 16S rRNA analysis and phylogeny of Trichoplax adhaerens: full text online article Template:Entrez Pubmed.
cs:Vločkovci de:Placozoa es:Placozoa eo:Plakozoo fr:Placozoa it:Placozoa lt:Plokščiagyvis nl:Placozoa ja:センモウヒラムシ pl:Płaskowce pt:Placozoa ru:Пластинчатые fi:Laakkoeläimet uk:Тип Пластинчасті zh:丝盘虫