Animal Diversity Lecture 8 Winter 2014

Similar documents
Animal Diversity wrap-up Lecture 9 Winter 2014

AP Biology. Animal Characteristics. Kingdom: Animals. Body Cavity. Animal Evolution. Invertebrate: Porifera. Invertebrate: Cnidaria.

Topic 3: Animals Ch.17 Characteristics of Animals p.338. Distinguishing Characteristics pp

Name Class Date. After you read this section, you should be able to answer these questions:

DEUTEROSTOMES. This presentation contains copyrighted material under the educational fair use exemption to the U.S. copyright law.

Phylogeny of Animalia (overview)

The Evolution of Chordates

Animal Diversity 3. jointed appendages ventral nervous system hemocoel. - marine

2018 Copyright Jolie Canoli and Friends. For personal and educational use only. Find more resources at joliecanoli.com

Page # Diversity of Arthropoda Crustacea Morphology. Diversity of Arthropoda. Diversity of Arthropoda. Diversity of Arthropoda. Arthropods, from last

Some Facts about... Amphibians

Nematoda. Round worms Feeding and Parasitism

VERTEBRATE READING. Fishes

UNIT: INVERTEBRATE ANIMALS 1º ESO BIOLOGY AND GEOLOGY

DIVERSITY IV Animalia II: Ecdysozoan Protostomes and Deuterostomes

Animal Diversity III: Mollusca and Deuterostomes

Vertebrate and Invertebrate Animals

All living things are classified into groups based on the traits they share. Taxonomy is the study of classification. The largest groups into which

The Animal Kingdom. Animal Diversity. Key Concept Animals are a diverse group of organisms that have adaptations to live in water and on land.

Animal phyla. Prior Knowledge Questions:

Fishes, Amphibians, Reptiles

CHAPTER 26. Animal Evolution The Vertebrates

Animals Classification

Figure 1. Numerical Distribution of Named Animal Taxa.

What is the body structure of a sponge? Do they have specialized cells? Describe the process of reproduction in sponges.

Phylum Chordata. Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles

Vertebrate Structure and Function

Review Inverts 4/17/15. What Invertebrates have we learned about so far? Porifera. Cnidaria. Ctenophora. Molluscs

Vertebrates. Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone and an endoskeleton.

Kingdom Animalia. All animals are multicellular organisms with real tissues and heterotrophic nutrition

Essential Question: What are the characteristics of invertebrate animals? What are the characteristics of vertebrate animals?

Chordates -> Vertebrates. From basal Deuterostomes

1. Examine the specimens of sponges on the lab table. Which of these are true sponges? Explain your answers.

Chapter 33B: An Introduction to Vertebrates II The Bilateria. 1. Lophotrochozoa 2. Ecdysozoa 3. Deuterostomia

T. 6. THE VERTEBRATES

8/25/ Opening Questions: Are you an animal? What traits do you share with a jellyfish? Chapter 10 Biodiversity 3: Animals

Kingdom Animalia. ii. iii.

Unit 12 Review Page 1

Chapter 17 The Evolution of Animals Biology and Society: The Discovery of the Hobbit People

Classification of Animals. adapted from

Ch 34: Vertebrate Objective Questions & Diagrams

Chapter 7. Marine Animals Without a Backbone

Invertebrate Characteristic Lab

Diversity of Animals

Biology 340 Comparative Embryology Lecture 2 Dr. Stuart Sumida. Phylogenetic Perspective and the Evolution of Development.

Fish 2/26/13. Chordates 2. Sharks and Rays (about 470 species) Sharks etc Bony fish. Tetrapods. Osteichthans Lobe fins and lungfish

Let s Learn About: Vertebrates & Invertebrates. Informational passages, graphic organizers, study guide, flashcards, and MORE!

Pasig Catholic College. Grade School Department 103 S.Y Be with Jesus, be with the Poor. Science 5 SECOND QUARTER Activity Sheet # 1

Today s Class. Go over viewfinder lab A closer look at the Animal Kingdom Taxonomy Worksheet

UNIT 9. THE ANIMAL KINGDOM: INVERTEBRATES

Chapter Echinoderms & Invertebrate Chordates

Phylum Echinodermata -sea stars, sand dollars, sea

Animals can be traced to a common ancestor a flagellated protist like a choanoflagellate (700 MYA)

Section 4 Professor Donald McFarlane

Pacing Guide for 7-12 Curriculum

Phylum Arthropoda. Chapter 13 Part 2 of 3

5 pt. 10 pt. 15 pt. 20 pt. 25 pt

4. List 3 characteristics of all arthropods. a. b. c. 5. Name 3 main arthropod groups.

Back to the life forms!

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

KINGDOM ANIMALIA Phylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata Class Reptilia

Animals. Chapters Exam November 22, 2011

DO NOW: Invertebrate POP Quiz. Sit Quietly and clear off your desk/table of everything EXCEPT and blank piece of white lined paper and a pen/pencil.

Name Date When you put food away in the kitchen, you sort the food into groups. You put foods that are alike in certain ways into the same

Vertebrates. skull ribs vertebral column

Chapter 7 Study Guide. True/False: If the statement is true, write True. If it is false explain why it is false.

Topic Page: Invertebrates

Introduction. Learning About Amphibians

Biology Lesson 12: From Fishes to Birds

Biology. Slide 1of 50. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall

A. Body Temperature Control Form and Function in Mammals

Vertebrata (& Rotifera) Rotifera. Structures 11/06/12. Chondrichthyes Osteichthyes Amphibia Reptilia Aves Mammalia

Echinoderms. Copyright 2011 LessonSnips

Unit 19.3: Amphibians

35 phyla of animals These phyla can be classified into two groups (vertebrates or invertebrates) based on external

Phylum Echinodermata

There are 35 phyla of animals These phyla can be classified into two groups (vertebrates or invertebrates) based on external and internal physical

Subphylum Vertebrata

Classification. Grouping & Identifying Living Things

#1 Porifera (Sponges)

BIOLOGY. The Origin and Evolution of Vertebrates CAMPBELL. Reece Urry Cain Wasserman Minorsky Jackson

Phylum Echinodermata. Biology 11

Lab 9: Inventing Life Forms

Resources. Visual Concepts. Chapter Presentation. Copyright by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved.

Unit 18: Biology Part 1

Grasshopper Dissection

Vertebrates. Chapter. Chapter Outline. MIntroduction

Question Set 1: Animal EVOLUTIONARY BIODIVERSITY

30-3 Amphibians Slide 1 of 47

What Is a Vertebrate?

CLASSIFICATION OF ANIMALS. Learning Objectives : To explain how animals are classified into groups. Key Words:

Sponges and cnidarians were the first animals to evolve from a multicellular ancestor.

Effective August 2007 All indicators in Standard / 11

REPTILES. Scientific Classification of Reptiles To creep. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Reptilia

Chapter 26: The Vertebrates

Meet the Invertebrates Puppet Show!

CLASSIFICATION OF ANIMALS

Echinoderms are marine animals with spiny endoskeletons, water-vascular systems, and tube feet; they have radial symmetry as adults.

Read the following texts 1. Living Things. Both animals and plants are living things because they are born, grow up, reproduce and die.

Transcription:

Animal Phylogeny 1 Animal Diversity Lecture 8 Winter 2014 Fig. 32.10 Phylum Porifera (sponges) 2 Phylum Cnidaria (corals, jellies, hydras, sea anemones) 3a ~5,500 species Primarily marine Suspension feeders No true tissues No plane of symmetry Sessile (attached) ~ 10,000 species Primarily marine Feed by using tentacles with stinging cells (cnidocytes) to capture prey s Radial symmetry Gastrovascular cavity Diploblast See Fig. 33.5 Fig. 33.4 Fig. 33.6 Phylum Cnidaria (corals, jellies, hydras, sea anemones) Fig. 33.8 3b Phylum Platyhelminthes (flatworms) ~ 20,000 species Marine, freshwater & moist terrestrial Free-living & parasitic Feeds by sucking food into mouth with muscular tube Fig. 33.12 Gastrovascular cavity Acoelomate Fig. 33.10 4 1

Phylum Mollusca (molluscs) ~93,000 species e.g., slugs, snails, squid, octopus, oysters Most marine, some freshwater and terrestrial Use radula (scraping tongue) to feed Soft body with hard Some have reduced or lost Fig. 33.15 5 Phylum Annelida (segmented worms) ~ 16,500 species Earthworms, polychaetes, leeches Marine, freshwater & damp terrestrial Segmented body plan Earthworms eat by swallowing soil Polychaetes & leeches eat small invertebrates (few suck blood) 6 Phylum Nematoda (Roundworms) (Clade Ecdysozoa) ~25,000 species Also called nematodes Soil and aquatic habitats Pseudocoelom Tough cuticle coating body Fig. 33.26 Decomposers Also parasites Pinworm, hookworm Agricultural pests 7 Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods) (Clade Ecdysozoa) > 1 million species Widespread Huge population numbers Often reduced in adults Segmented body plan Tagmatization Jointed appendages Exoskeleton chitin (polysaccharide) 8 Class Arachnida (spiders, mites, ticks, scorpions) & Class Merostomata (horseshoe crabs) 9 (Subphylum Cheliceriformes) Body having one or two main parts (cephalothorax, abdomen) 4 pairs of walking legs Lacks mandibles Has pincers or fangs (chelicerae) No antennae Simple eyes (most) Fig. 33.30 Fig. 33.31 Class Insecta (insects) (Subphylum Hexapoda ) Species rich & abundant! Over ½ of named species on earth Flight Metamorphosis Diverse habitats (rarely marine) Body divided into head, thorax, abdomen 1 pair of antennae Uniramous appendages Mouthparts adapted for many uses 3 pair of walking legs ~ 2 pair of wings Compound eyes 10 2

Class Chilopoda (centipedes) & Class Diplopoda (millipedes) (Subphylum Myriapoda) 1 pair of antennae Mandibles Uniramous appendages Terrestrial Class Chilopoda (centipedes) One set of legs per body segment Poison claws on first body segment Carnivorous Class Diplopoda (milipedes) Two sets of legs per body segment Herbivorous Fig. 33.34 - Centipede Fig. 33.33 - Millipede 11 Class Malacostraca (crabs, lobsters, shrimps) & 12 Class Maxillopoda (barnacles, copopods) (Subphylum Crustacea) Marine & freshwater Body of two or three parts ~Highly specialized appendages Biramous appendages Mandibles Two pair of antennae Three or more pairs of legs Pair of compound eyes Fig. 33.38 Phylum Echinodermata (Echinoderms) ~7,000 species Sea stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, sand dollars Apparent radial symmetry (as adults) (larval form) Deuterostome No body segmentation Endoskeleton Water vascular system Network of water filled canals, for gas exchange, waste disposal, and movement 13 Marine Sessile or slow moving Named for spiny surfaces Most closely related phylum to the chordates Phylum Chordata (Chordates) ~ 52,000 species present in embryo (sometime in adult) can be greatly reduced or not present in adults Dorsal, hollow nerve cord Notochord Flexible rod located between nerve cord and digestive tract Pharyngeal pouches (slits) Gill structures Post-anal tail Tail is to rear of anus Fig. 34.3 Other traits Body segmentation Deuterostome 14 Phylum Chordata (Chordates) Three subphylum Cephalochordata Lancelets Urochordata tunicates Vertebrata Vetebrata Trait Vertebrae Fig. 34.2 15 Subphylum Cephalochordata (Lancelets) Marine environment Dorsal, hollow nerve cord Notochord Extends to front of head Pharyngeal slits Post-anal tail 16 Fig. 34.4 3

Subphylum Urochordata (tunicates) Marine Filter feeder Chordate characteristics present in larval stage, most lost as adult 17 Subphylum Vertebrata Class Cephalaspidomorphi (Petromyzontida) Lampreys ~25 species Marine & Freshwater No jaws Parasitic (most) Skeleton of cartilage Made of protein matrix (not collagen) External gill slits Fig. 34.10 18 Fig. 34.5 Class Chondrichthyes Sharks, skates & rays ~750 species Skeleton of cartilage Derived condition Mostly collegen matrix Some with calcium Jaws External gill slits No swim bladder Fig. 34.15 19 Class Actinopterygii Superclass Osteichthyes Ray-finned fish ~27,000 species Ossified (bony) skeleton skeletons reinforced with calcium phosphate Operculum Protective flap over gill slits Swim bladder Buoyancy evolved from early lungs Fins supported by bony rays 20 Fig. 34.17 Class Sarcopterygii Superclass Osteichthyes Lobe-finned fish Coelacanth, lungfish Ossified (bony) skeleton Lungs or lung derivatives Operculum Swim bladder Pectoral & pelvic fins have rod-shaped bones surrounded by thick layer of muscle walk underwater Fig. 34.18: Coelacanth Lungfish 21 Class Amphibia ~6150 species Frogs, salamanders Moist environments Egg has no, needs to be kept from drying out Skin acts in gas exchange, needs to be moist Many undergo metamorphosis (four limbs) Adults have lungs See Fig. 34.22 23 4

Class Reptilia ~17,900 species of snakes, lizards, turtles, crocodiles, alligators, and birds Ectotherms (except birds!) Keratin also in feathers, fingernails 24 See figure 34.27 See figure 34.30 Class Reptilia (Superorder Lepidosauria) Lizards, Snakes and Tuataras ~7,900 species of snakes, lizards, turtles Ecototherms Do not generate their own heat, use heat from their environment See Fig. 34.27 25 Class Reptilia (Superorder Archosauria) Birds, Crocodiles, and Alligators ~10,000 species birds 23 species alligators and crocodiles Birds descended from lineage of dinosaurs that had feathers Crocodiles and Alligators are closest living relatives to birds : Wings - Feathers of keratin Bird Adaptations for flight Hollow bones No teeth Large sternum and strong pectoral muscles Reduced organs or missing organs Endotherms Birds only! High metabolic rate use heat produced to maintain constant body temperatures! 26 See figure 34.30 Class Reptilia (Order Testudines) Turtles 307 known species of species of turtles Vertebral column fused to Terrestrial or aquatic (both marine and fresh water) Ecototherms Do not generate their own heat, use heat from their environment 27 Class Mammalia ~5,300 species Rapid diversification ~ 65 myo (end of age of the reptiles ) Amniotic egg (most w/o ) Hair Mammary glands Endotherms Three main group Monotremes (egg laying mammals) Only 2 species (duck-billed platypus, echidna) Marsupials ( pouched mammals) Offspring complete their development in pouches Primarily Australia & South America Eutherians (placental mammals) Offspring remain in womb 28 5