Title: Biodiversity of Animals
1Biodiversity of Animals
2Remember.
3Kingdom Animalia
- General characteristics
- Heterotrophic
- Locomotion
- Multicellular
- Life cycle where adult is diploid
- Undergoes sexual reproduction and produce an
embryo
4Animal Diversity
- Invertebrates
- Lack an endoskeleton of bone or cartilage
- All but one animal phylum are invertebrates
- Vertebrates
- Have an endoskeleton of bone or cartilage
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6Type of Body Plan
- Sac-Plan
- Incomplete digestive system
- Gastrovascular cavity
- Tube-Within-a-Tube Plan
- Complete digestive system
- Inner tube is digestive system, outer tube is
body wall - Two openings
7Digestive Tracts
- Incomplete
- One opening
- same opening used to take in food and get rid of
wastes - GVC
- Complete
- Two openings
- food is ingested at one end
- wastes from digestion passed out of the tract at
the other end
8Level of Organization
- Cellular
- Only composed of cells
- Sponges
- Tissue
- Composed of cells and tissues
- Jellyfish
- Organ
- Composed of cells, tissues, and organs
- Us!
9Type of Body Cavity
- Acoelomate
- Lacks a body cavity
- Tissues packed closely together
- Pseudocoelomate
- Body cavity incompletely lined with mesoderm
- fluid-filled cavity that contains their organs
- Organs are free within the cavity and will move
around easily when you manipulate them - Coelomate
- Cavity that contains organs
- Lined with mesoderm
10Type of Symmetry
- Asymmetrical
- No particular symmetry
- Radial Symmetry
- Circular organization
- can be bisected in any plane to produce mirror
images - Sessile
- Bilateral Symmetry
- Definite right and left halves
- only a cut down the midline will produce mirror
images
11Animal skeletons
- Can be
- Hydrostatic
- External
- Internal
12Reproduction
- Sexual reproduction
- egg of one individual is fertilized by the sperm
of another - Hermaphroditic animals
- possess both male and female sex organs
- Asexual reproduction
- single parent gives rise to an offspring that
will be genetically identical to the parent - Asexual reproduction of a body part!!
- Fertilization /Copulation
- Internal fertilization
- External fertilization
- Development of a fetus
- Internal
- External
13Sponges
14Sponges
- Phylum Porifera
- Saclike body with many pores
- Mainly aquatic animals
- Filter feeders
- Asexual and Sexual Reproduction
- Hermaphroditic
- Usually not self-fertilizing
- Spicules
- For internal support (endoskeleton)
15Cnidarians
16Cnidarians True Tissues
- Phylum Cnidaria
- Tubular or bell-shaped with radial symmetry
- All aquatic, mostly marine
17Cnidarians
- Cnidocytes
- Stinging cells unique to cnidarians
- Two body types
- Polyps and medusan
- Gastrovascular cavity
- Sac-like body plan
18Cnidarians
- Hydra
- Freshwater
- sac-like body plan with a single opening
- Digestion begins in gastrovascular cavity,
completed in cells - Can reproduce sexually and asexually (budding)
19Flatworms
20Flatworms
- Phylum Platyhelminthes
- Planarians
- Found in lakes, ponds, and streams
- Reproduce both asexually and sexually
- Regeneration (asexual)
- Hermaphroditic (sexual)
- Reciprocal transfer simultaneous transfer of
the sperm to the genital orifice of the partner
21Flatworms
- Parasitic Flatworms
- Tapeworms
- Endoparasites
- Range in length from several millimeters to 20
meters - Tough integument to protect from hosts enzymes
- Scolex
22Roundworms
23Roundworms Phylum Nematoda
- Tube within a tube body plan
- Mouth and anus
- Hydrostatic skeleton
- Nonsegmented
- Some roundworms are free-living, others are
parasitic
24Roundworms Pseudocoelomates
- Ascaris
- Move with whip-like motion
- Females are much longer than males and highly
prolific - Eggs enter host in uncooked vegetables, soil, or
feces
25Coelomates
- The rest of the species that we will study are
Coelomates - Bilateral symmetry
- Organ level of organization
- Tube-within-a-tube body plan
26Molluscs
27Molluscs
- Second largest animal phylum
- Unique characteristics of molluscs
- Three distinct parts
- Visceral mass
- Foot
- Mantle
- Radula
- Grasping organ for feeding
28Molluscs
- Gastropods
- Nudibranchs, conchs, and snails
- Foot is flattened ventrally
- Aquatic gastropods have gills
- Terrestrial gastropods
- Mantle has lung-like function
29Molluscs
- Cephalopods
- Squid, octopus, chambered nautilus
- Foot has evolved into tentacles
- Built for speed!!
- Extremely well-developed eyes
- Complex behaviors
- Ink glands
- Secrete ink as defense mechanism
30Molluscs
- Bivalves
- Clams, oysters, scallops
- Two-part shells (valves)
- Filter-feeders
- Water enters through incurrent siphon
31Annelids
32Annelids Segmented Worms
- Phylum Annelida
- Segmentation
- Hydrostatic skeleton
- Tube-within-a-tube body plan
33Annelids Segmented Worms
- Oligochetes (Earthworms)
- Locomotion
- Contraction of longitudinal and circular muscles
- Few setae per segment
- Gas exchange is across the body wall
34Annelids Segmented Worms
- Oligochetes (Earthworms)
- Reproduction
- Hermaphroditic
- Worms lie parallel in opposite directions
- Clitellum produces mucus to keep sperm moist
- After separation, produces a slime tube
- Moves eggs and sperm together for fertilization
- Slime tube then produces a cocoon
35Annelids Segmented Worms
- Leeches
- Most live in freshwater
- Most are ectoparasites - have suckers for feeding
- Have same general body plan as other annelids
- Lack setae
- Each body ring has transverse grooves
36Arthropods
37Arthropods Jointed Appendages
- Phylum Arthropoda
- Over 1 million species have been described
- 30 million may exist (mostly insects)
- Appendages are for
- Walking, swimming, reproduction, eating, sensory
reception - Exoskeleton of chitin (must molt to grow)
- Well-developed nervous system
- Brain and ventral nerve cord
- Sense organs
38Arthropods Jointed Appendages
- Crustaceans
- Barnacles, shrimps, lobsters, and crabs (marine)
- Crayfish (freshwater)
- Sowbugs (terrestrial)
- Known for their hard shells
- Usual anatomy is a pair of compound eyes and five
pairs of appendages - Front two pairs have sensory functions
- Other three pairs are used in feeding
39Arthropods Jointed Appendages
- Insects
- Three body regions
- Head
- Sensory antennae, eyes
- Mouthparts are adapted to each insects way of
life - Thorax
- Three pairs of legs and the wings
- Abdomen
- Contains most internal organs
-
40Comparison of Crayfish and Grasshopper
- Crayfish
- Gills
- Excrete liquid nitrogenous wastes (ammonia)
- No reception of sound
- Utilize uropods when swimming
- Grasshoppers
- Spiracles and trachae
- Grasshoppers excrete solid wastes (uric acid)
- Tympanum for reception of sound
- Have legs for hopping and wings for flying
41Arachnids 6 pairs of appendages
- Scorpions
- Oldest terrestrial arthropods
- Abdomen ends with a venomous stinger
- Ticks and Mites
- Parasites
- Transmit diseases such as Rocky Mountain spotted
fever or Lyme disease - Spiders
- Spiders have a narrow waist that separates
cephalothorax from abdomen - Chelicerae have fangs that deliver poison to prey
- Silk glands for web-spinning
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vkdVvoSP8QtY
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v0LmyyXcE6rw
42Millipedes and Centipedes
- Millipedes
- Eat decaying plant matter
- two pairs of short legs per body segment
- Centipedes
- terrestrial carnivores with poison claws
- Have one pair of short legs per body segment
43Echinoderms
44Echinoderms
- Characteristics of Echinoderms
- Marine animals
- Endoskeleton made of calcium-rich plates
- Spines stick out of their skin
- Adults exhibit radial symmetry
45Echinoderms
- Sea Stars
- Found along shorelines on rocky surfaces
- Five-rayed body with mouth on underside and anus
on upper side - Structures project through skin
- Spines for protection
- Skin gills
- Extensions of skin for gas exchange
46Chordates
47Chordates
- Must exhibit these characteristics
- Notochord
- Dorsal tubular nerve cord
- Pharyngeal pouches
- Postanal tail
48The Chordates
- Invertebrate chordates
- Tunicates and lancelets
- Vertebrate chordates
- Fishes
- Amphibians
- Reptiles
- Birds
- Mammals
49Nonvertebrate Chordates
- Tunicates (sea squirts)
- Squirt water when their siphons are disturbed
- Live in ocean and are filter-feeders
- Larva is bilaterally symmetrical and has four
chordate characteristics - Adults are sessile, thick-walled, sac-like
organisms - The only chordate characteristics in the adults
are pharynx and gill slits
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51Vertebrates
- Characteristics
- Have four chordate characteristics at some point
in life - Distinguishing features
- Strong, jointed endoskeleton
- Vertebral column composed of vertebrae
- Efficient respiration and excretion
52Fishes
- Fishes First Jaws, Then Lungs
- Adapted to life in water
- Sperm and eggs released into water
- Fertilization external
- Zygote develops into swimming larval form
- Fish vs Fishes???
- 2 chambered heart
- Ectothermic
- What are fish?
- Jellyfish?
- Starfish?
- Crayfish?
- Shellfish?
53Fishes
- Three main groups/Classes of fishes
- Jawless fishes
- Cartilaginous fishes
- Bony fishes
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vO2FInaOCqoo
54Amphibians
- Jointed appendages
- Class Amphibia
- two lives
- Tetrapods
- Eyelids keep eyes moist
- Have ears
- Larynx for vocalization
- Small lungs present in adults
- Gas exchange also occurs across moist skin
- Three-chambered heart
- Ectothermic
- Large mouths and consume prey whole
55Amphibians
- Have either internal or external fertilization
- Metamorphic life cycle
- Aquatic larva (gills) - water
- Terrestrial adult (lungs) - land
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57Class Amphibia
- Order Gymnophiona
- Caecilians
- Order Caudata
- Salamanders and Newts
- Order Anura
- Frogs and toads
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vwXqK5QulbJ8
58Reptiles
- Amniotic egg
- Class Reptilia
- Body is covered with scales
- Ectothermic
- Three chambered heart
- Eyelids
59Reptiles
- Amniotes
- Tetrapods that have a terrestrially adapted egg
- Amniotic egg usually buried in substrate
- Contains membranes that protect the embryo
- In reptiles, internal fertilization
60http//www.youtube.com/watch?vq7CQInAXoqYfeature
related
61Class Reptilia 4 Orders
- Order Testudines
- Turtles and tortoises
- Order Crocodilia
- Crocodilians
- Order Rhynchocephalia
- Tuataras
http//dsc.discovery.com/videos/crocodile-feeding-
frenzy-alligator-egg-hunt.html
http//www.metacafe.com/watch/198880/weird_nature/
62Class Reptilia 4 Orders
- Order Squamata
- SO Lacertilia
- Lizards
- 4 limbs and tail
- SO Serpentes
- Snakes
- Limbless
- SO Amphisbaenia
- Amphisbaenians
- Short tails
- Scales in rings
- Limbless
- Subterranean
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vUnzg7C1KJo0
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vrwRdqkEcmbs
63Birds
- Class Aves
- Amniote egg with a hard shell
- Internal fertilization, external incubation
- Forelimbs are modified as wings
- Bones are laced with air cavities
- A beak has replaced jaws
- Large sternum for attachment of flight muscles
- Air sacs to increase the efficiency of breathing
- Endothermic
- Four-chambered heart
- Cloaca
64Mammals
- Class Mammalia
- body hair and milk-producing mammary glands
- Adapted for active life on land
- Limbs that allow rapid movement
- Four-chambered heart
- Endothermic
- High level of care for the young
- Internal development (most)
65Mammals
- Monotremes
- Have a cloaca
- Egg-laying mammals
- Spiny anteater and duck-billed platypus
- Both found in Australia
- Both males and females have modified sweat glands
and secrete milk onto body surface
66Mammals
- Marsupials
- Begin development within females body
- born very immature
- development is completed within a pouch
- Attach to nipples of mammary glands within the
pouch - Virginia opposum is the only marsupial species
north of Mexico - Mainly found in Australia
67Mammals
- Placental Mammals
- Extraembryonic membranes are modified for
internal development
68How primates differ from most mammals
- Most are adapted for living in trees
- Limbs are mobile, hands and feet have digits
- Opposable thumbs (sometimes big toes)
- Eyes in the front of the head
- Large, complex brain
- Generally give birth to one offspring at a time
- Extended period of juvenile dependency