protostomes
Coelomates are either deutermostomes or protostomes. A protostomes have spiral cleavage lie mollusks, annelids, and arthropods. A deutermostomes has radial cleavage such as echinoderms, and chordates.
Protostomes. Development begins with spiral, determinate cleavage. Coelom formation then begins in the gastrula stage, the coelom forming from splits in the mesoderm. The mouth then develops from the first opening, the blastopore, and the anus develops secondarily.
Animals with deuterostome development exhibit radial cleavage, where the cells divide parallel or perpendicular to the polar axis of the embryo. In deuterostomes, such as echinoderms and chordates, the anus forms before the mouth during embryonic development.
Protostomes Deuterostomes 1.Mouth develops first then anus 1. Anus develops first then mouth 2.Blastopore develops into mouth 2.Blastopore develops into anus 3.Coelom absent and a schizocoel 3. Coelom develops as enterocoel by fusion develops by a split of mesoderm of gut pouches. 4.Cleavage is spiral and determinate 4. Cleavage is radial and indeterminate. 5.Larva is trochophore. 5. Larva is bipinnaria or tornaria 6.E.g. Molluscs, annelida & 6.E.g. Echinodermata & Chordata arthropodes
This is straight from dictionary.com, so no credit for me: "any member of the lower invertebrate phyla in which the mouth appears before the anus during development, cleavage is spiral and determinate, and the coelom forms as a splitting of the mesoderm." That help? :)
Protostomes .
They are protostomes.
Deuterostomes. All chordates such as birds and mammals are deuterosomes.
deuterostomes
Although most of the animal phyla are included in the deuterostomes and protostomes, cnidaria, porifera, placozoa and ctenophora are not included in the group of animals know as Bilateria (which contains the deuterostomes and protostomes). Cnidarians and ctenophores are in a group called Radiata, and Porifera and Placozoa are in the group known as Parazoa.
Deuterstomes
no they aren't. T.hey are not protostomes either deuterostomes
The distinction between protostomes and deuterostomes is based on differences in their embryonic development. Protostomes develop their mouth first from the blastopore, while deuterostomes develop their anus first from the blastopore. This difference in early development leads to distinct patterns of development in the two groups.
No, beetles do not have deuterostomes. Beetles are classified as arthropods, which belong to the group of animals known as protostomes. In contrast, deuterostomes include groups like chordates and echinoderms, which develop differently during embryonic stages compared to protostomes like beetles.
Neither are protostomes. Chordates, Hemichordates, and Echinoderms are all deuterostomes (in that the blastopore forms the anus first). In protostomes, the blastopore forms the mouth first.
No, chaetognaths are not considered deuterostomes. They belong to the phylum Chaetognatha (arrow worms), which are classified as protostomes. They are characterized by certain developmental and anatomical features that distinguish them from deuterostomes.
Protostomes and deuterostomes are two major groups of animals with key differences in their embryonic development and evolutionary significance. In protostomes, the mouth develops first from the blastopore, while in deuterostomes, the anus forms first. This difference in embryonic development reflects their evolutionary history and genetic pathways. Protostomes include insects, mollusks, and annelids, while deuterostomes include vertebrates and echinoderms. These differences in development and evolutionary relationships have shaped the diversity and complexity of animal life on Earth.