1) Well defined phylum of ~10,000, mostly marine, predatory species divided into three main classes (Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa, Anthozoa)
2) Two body forms predominate: polyp (benthic) and medusae (pelagic), alternation of phases is widespread (not haplo-diploid as in plants)
3) The basic body plan of all cnidarians is similar:
a) radial symmetry: 4- or 6-fold with 3 distinct layers to body wall
b) the gut has one opening (mouth only, no anus); the first mouth!
c) tentacles (hollow or solid) surround the end bearing the mouth; they usually capture prey and transport food to the mouth
d) the gastric cavity has associated canals (=gastrovascular cavity)
4) Cnidarians exhibit a true, three-layered, tissue level of organization (groups of differentiated cells working together for a shared function)
a) epidermis (outer) and gastrodermis (inner) are true epithelial tissues
b) the middle layer (mesoglea) mostly non-cellular (simple basal lamina or massive & gelatinous); not true tissue, so Cnidaria are diploblastic and their tremendous diversity of form is achieved with 2 tissue layers
5) This diverse phylum is united by a unique and complex cell type:
a) cnidocyte cell (derived from gastrodermal interstitial cells!) is a cell that bears two important organelles:
nematocyst- capsule with inverted coiled tube & operculum (some)
cnidocil- sensory cilium= "hair trigger"
6) Nematocysts: >30 forms (grappling, penetrating, sticky); 1 or many forms may occur in one individual; they aid in feeding (mainly), and also in defense and aggression; used only once then cell degenerates
7) A few other cell types exist; most are in epidermis and gastrodermis:
a) epithilio-muscular cell (cells have basal myofibrils; dual function: skin and muscle; myofibrils are longitudinal in epidermis, circular in gastrodermis); Scyphozoa & Anthozoa may also have true, striated-type myocytes (muscle cells) that move to mesoglea
b) interstitial cell (totipotent cells; produce gametes and cnidocytes)
c) receptor cell (often have sensory cilium); no myofibrils
d) nerve cell (form loosely organized net); no myofibrils
e) gland cell (mainly in gastrodermis); no myofibrils
f) amoeboid cell (mobile cells in mesoglea; from epidermis of Scyphozoa)