Hydra (genus)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Hydra
Hydra species
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Eumetazoa
Phylum: Cnidaria
Subphylum: Medusozoa
Class: Hydrozoa
Subclass: Leptolinae
Order: Anthomedusae
Suborder: Capitata
Family: Hydridae
Genus: Hydra
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

Hydra americana
Hydra attenuata (or Hydra vulgaris)
Hydra canadensis
Hydra carnea
Hydra cauliculata
Hydra circumcincta
Hydra hymanae
Hydra littoralis
Hydra magnipapillata
Hydra minima
Hydra oligactis
Hydra oregona
Hydra pseudoligactis
Hydra rutgerensis
Hydra utahensis
Hydra viridis
Hydra viridissima
Hydra vulgaris

Hydra is a genus of simple fresh-water animal possessing radial symmetry. Hydras are predatory animals belonging to the phylum Cnidaria and the class Hydrozoa.[1][2] They can be found in most unpolluted fresh-water ponds, lakes and streams in the temperate and tropical regions by gently sweeping a collecting net through weedy areas. They are usually a few millimeters long and are best studied with a microscope. Biologists are especially interested in hydras due to their regenerative ability and because they appear to undergo senescence (aging) very slowly, if at all.

Contents

Morphology

Schematic drawing of a discharging nematocyst

Hydra has a tubular body secured by a simple adhesive foot called the basal disc. Gland cells in the basal disc secrete a sticky fluid that allows for its adhesive properties.

At the free end of the body is a mouth opening surrounded by one to twelve thin, mobile tentacles. Each tentacle, or cnida (plural: cnidae), is clothed with highly specialised stinging cells called cnidocytes. Cnidocytes contain specialized structures called nematocysts, which look like miniature light bulbs with a coiled thread inside. At the narrow outer edge of the cnidocyte is a short trigger hair called a cnidocil. Upon contact with prey, the contents of the nematocyst are explosively discharged, firing a dart-like thread containing neurotoxins into whatever triggered the release which can paralyse the prey, especially if many hundreds of nematocysts are fired.

Hydra has two main body layers separated by mesoglea, a gel-like substance. The outer layer is the epidermis, and the inner layer is called the gastrodermis. The cells making up these two body layers are relatively simple. Hydramacin is a bactericide recently discovered in Hydra; it protects the outer layer against infection.

The nervous system of Hydra is a nerve net, which is structurally simple compared to mammalian nervous systems. Hydra does not have a recognizable brain or true muscles. Nerve nets connect sensory photoreceptors and touch-sensitive nerve cells located in the body wall and tentacles.

Respiration occurs by diffusion through the epidermis. Some excretion and transportation also occur in this manner.

Motion and locomotion

If a Hydra is alarmed or attacked, the tentacles can be retracted to small buds, and the body column itself can be retracted to a small gelatinous sphere. Hydras generally react in the same way regardless of the direction of the stimulus, and this may be due to the simplicity of the nerve net.

Hydra showing sessile behavior

Hydras are generally sedentary or sessile, but do occasionally move quite readily, especially when hunting. They do this by bending over and attaching themselves to the substrate with the mouth and tentacles and then release the foot, which provides the usual attachment. The body then bends over and makes a new place of attachment with the foot. By this process of "inch-worming" or "somersaulting", a hydra can move several inches (c. 100 mm) in a day. Hydras may also move by amoeboid motion of their bases or by simply detaching from the substrate and floating away in the current.

Reproduction and life cycle

When food is plentiful, many hydras reproduce asexually by producing buds in the body wall, which grow to be miniature adults and simply break away when they are mature. When conditions are harsh, often before winter or in poor feeding conditions, sexual reproduction occurs in some hydras. Swellings in the body wall develop into either a simple ovary or testes. The testes release free-swimming gametes into the water, and these can fertilise the egg in the ovary of another individual. The fertilized eggs secrete a tough outer coating, and, as the adult dies, these resting eggs fall to the bottom of the lake or pond to await better conditions, whereupon they hatch into miniature adults. Hydras are hermaphrodites and may produce both testes and an ovary at the same time.

Many members of the Hydrozoa go through a body change from a polyp to an adult form called a medusa. However, all hydras remain as polyps throughout their lives.

Feeding

Hydras mainly feed on small aquatic invertebrates such as Daphnia and Cyclops.

When feeding, hydras extend their body to maximum length and then slowly extend their tentacles. Despite their simple construction, the tentacles of hydras are extraordinarily extensible and can be four to five times the length of the body. Once fully extended, the tentacles are slowly maneuvered around waiting for contact with a suitable prey animal. Upon contact, nematocysts on the tentacle fire into the prey, and the tentacle itself coils around the prey. Within 30 seconds, most of the remaining tentacles will have already joined in the attack to subdue the struggling prey. Within two minutes, the tentacles will have surrounded the prey and moved it into the opened mouth aperture. Within ten minutes, the prey will have been enclosed within the body cavity, and digestion will have started. The hydra is able to stretch its body wall considerably in order to digest prey more than twice its size. After two or three days, the indigestible remains of the prey will be discharged by contractions through the mouth aperture.

The feeding behavior of the hydra demonstrates the sophistication of what appears to be a simple nervous system.

All species of Hydra exist in a mutual relationship with various types of unicellular algae. The Hydra affords the algae protection from predators, and, in return, photosynthetic products from the algae are beneficial as a food source to the Hydra.

Morphallaxis

Nineteenth-century biologists reported that the Hydra was such a simple animal that it was possible to force one through gauze to separate it into individual cells; if the cells were then left to themselves, they would regroup to form a hydra again.

The hydra undergoes morphallaxis (tissue regeneration) when injured or severed.

Senescence

It has often been assumed that hydras are one of the few animals that do not undergo senescence (aging), and so are biologically immortal. Evidence for this was provided by Martinez (1998).[3]

Genomics

A draft of the Genome of Hydra magnipapillata was reported in 2010.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Gilberson, Lance, Zoology Lab Manual, 4th edition. Primis Custom Publishing. 1999
  2. ^ Solomon, E., Berg, l., Martin, D., Biology 6th edition. Brooks/Cole Publishing. 2002
  3. ^ Martinez, D.E. (May 1998). "Mortality patterns suggest lack of senescence in hydra.". Experimental Gerontology 33 (3): 217–225. doi:10.1016/S0531-5565(97)00113-7. PMID 9615920. http://www.biochem.uci.edu/steele/PDFs/Hydra_senescence_paper.pdf. 
  4. ^ Chapman1, Jarrod A.; Kirkness, EF; Simakov, O; Hampson, SE; Mitros, T; Weinmaier, T; Rattei, T; Balasubramanian, PG et al. (March 2010). "The dynamic genome of Hydra". Nature advance online publication 14 March 2010 (7288): 592–6. doi:10.1038/nature08830. PMID 20228792. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature08830.html. 
Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages