Marine invertebrates

The 49th plate from Ernst Haeckel's Kunstformen der Natur, 1904, showing various sea anemones classified as Actiniae, in the Cnidaria phylum

Marine invertebrates are multicellular animals that inhabit a marine environment and are invertebrates, lacking a vertebral column. In order to protect themselves, they may have evolved a shell or a hard exoskeleton, but this is not always the case.

As on land and in the air, invertebrates make up a great majority of all macroscopic life in the sea. Invertebrate sea life includes the following groups, some of which are phyla:

Ernst Haeckel's 96th plate, showing various invertebrates classified as Chaetopoda in the Annelida phylum

Minerals from sea water

There are a number of marine invertebrates that use minerals that are present in the sea in such minute quantities that they were undetectable until the advent of spectroscopy. Vanadium is concentrated by some tunicates for use in their blood cells to a level ten million times that of the surrounding seawater.[1] Other tunicates similarly concentrate niobium and tantalum.[1] Lobsters use copper in their respiratory pigment hemocyanin, despite the proportion of this metal in seawater being minute.[2] Although these elements are present in vast quantities in the ocean, their extraction by man is not economic.[3]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marine invertebrates.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ruppert, Edward E.; Fox, Richard, S.; Barnes, Robert D. (2004). Invertebrate Zoology, 7th edition. Cengage Learning. p. 947. ISBN 81-315-0104-3.
  2. Ruppert, Edward E.; Fox, Richard, S.; Barnes, Robert D. (2004). Invertebrate Zoology, 7th edition. Cengage Learning. p. 638. ISBN 81-315-0104-3.
  3. Carson, Rachel (1997). The Sea Around Us. Oxford Paperbacks. pp. 190–191. ISBN 0195069978.