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Chordates

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Chordates Characteristics common to ALL chordates Dorsal nerve cord Pharyngeal slits Notochord Tail Dorsal nerve cord Pharyngeal Slits The wall of the pharynx is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chordates


1
Chordates
2
Characteristics common to ALL chordates
  • Dorsal nerve cord
  • Pharyngeal slits
  • Notochord
  • Tail

3
Dorsal nerve cord
4
Pharyngeal Slits
  • The wall of the pharynx is perforated by up to
    200 vertical slits, which are separated by
    stiffening rods.

5
Jawless to Jaw
6
Used to collect food in an aquatic environment
7
Notochord
  • a flexible, rod-shaped body found in embryos of
    all chordates

8
  • In lower vertebrates, it persists throughout life
    as the main axial support of the body, while in
    higher vertebrates it is replaced by the
    vertebral column.

9
Tail
10
Some animals lose tail during development
11
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12
Nonvertebrate chordates and Vertebrates
  • Nonvertebrate chordates have a notochord
    (analogous to spinal chord) but lack a bony
    covering- the vertebrae
  • Vertebrates have a spinal chord protected by bones

13
Principle Chordate Features
14
The Nonvertebrate Chordates
  • Tunicates (sea squirts)
  • exhibit neither a major body cavity nor visible
    segmentation
  • tadpole larva clearly exhibits all basic
    characteristics of a chordate
  • adults exist as sessile filter-feeders

15
Tunicates
16
The Nonvertebrate Chordates
  • Lancelets
  • scaleless, fishlike marine chordates
  • notochord runs entire length of dorsal nerve cord
  • feed on microscopic plankton using
    cilia-generated current

17
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18
Characteristics of Vertebrates
  • Vertebral column
  • Endoskeleton
  • Distinct, well-differentiated head with cranium
  • Closed circulatory system with chambered heart
  • RBCs with hemoglobin

19
Overview of the Evolution of Vertebrates
  • Main CLASSES
  • Fishes cartilaginous and bony
  • Amphibia - amphibians
  • Reptilia - reptiles
  • Aves - birds
  • Mammalia - mammals

20
Fishes
  • Over half of all vertebrates are fishes.
  • Characteristics (generally)
  • jaws and paired appendages (except lampreys and
    hagfish)
  • scales
  • fins
  • gills
  • single-loop blood circulation
  • Heart with 2 chambers (1 atrium, 1 ventricle)
  • Lateral line system

21
History of the Fishes
  • Rise of active swimmers
  • Sharks and bony fishes replaced primitive fishes
    due to a superior swimming design.
  • caudal (tail) fin
  • dorsal (stabilizing) fins
  • pectoral (shoulder - elevator) fins
  • pelvic (hip- elevator) fins

22
Hagfish
23
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24
Lamprey
25
History of the Fishes
  • Sharks become top predators
  • Jaws with multiple rows of teeth
  • Paired pectoral and pelvic fins
  • Buoyancy from storing oil
  • extremely advanced reproduction
  • shark eggs fertilized internally
  • Most give birth to live young

26
Hammerhead Shark
27
Elephant Fish
28
Whale Shark
29
Tooth from Megalodon (left), and Great White
30
History of the Fishes
  • Bony fishes dominate the water
  • Skeleton composed of bone
  • Swim bladder for bouyancy
  • Gills protected by operculum
  • highly mobile fins, thin scales, and completely
    symmetrical tails
  • Most have external fertilization and external
    development

31
Angler Fish
32
Deep Sea Angler Fish
33
Flounder
34
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35
Electric Eel
36
Sea horse and Sea dragon
37
Another Sea dragon
38
Mola mola or Ocean sunfish
39
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40
Coelacanth
41
Coelacanth fossils
42
Living Coelacanth
43
Shark Dissection
Following is a series of video clips of
dissection of various shark species. This will
give you some idea of what you will encounter
with our shark lab
44
Lobe-Finned Fish and Primitive Amphibians
45
Amphibians
  • Live on both land and in water (double life)
  • Characteristics
  • legs
  • cutaneous respiration, lungs, gills
  • Heart with 3 chambers (double loop circulation)
  • Pulmonary
  • Systemic
  • External fertilization and development in nearly
    all

46
History of the Amphibians
  • Adaptations for the invasion of land
  • legs to support bodys weight
  • lung to extract oxygen from the air
  • redesigned heart to drive new respiratory system
  • reproduction in water to prevent egg desiccation
  • system to prevent body desiccation

47
History of the Amphibians
  • Amphibians today
  • Anura - amphibians without tails
  • most live in or near water, and return to water
    to reproduce
  • eggs fertilized externally and hatch into
    tadpoles
  • metamorphosis

48
Poison dart frogs
49
Proboscis frog
50
African goliath frog
51
Jabba the Frog
52
Flying Frog
53
Chinese fire-bellied toad (most venomous)
54
History of the Amphibians
  • Urodela (Caudata) - salamanders
  • have elongated bodies, long tails, and sooth,
    moist skin
  • fertilization is usually external

55
Worlds largest salamander
56
Spotted salamander
57
Rodent surprise for lunch!
58
History of the Amphibians
  • Apoda
  • caecilians - highly specialized group of tropical
    burrowing amphibians
  • legless, but have jaws and teeth
  • internal fertilization

59
Caecilian
60
Reptiles
  • Characteristics
  • amniotic egg
  • chorion - outermost membrane
  • amnion - encases embryo
  • yolk sac - surrounds yolk (food)
  • allantois - surrounds waste cavity
  • dry skin with scales
  • Internal fertilization usually external
    development

61
Baby komodo dragon
62
allantois
airspace
albumen
eggshell
amnion
embryo
chorion
Yolk sac
63
Rise and Fall of Dominant Reptiles
  • Dinosaurs learning to run
  • body located directly over legs
  • increased speed and agility

64
Apatosaurus
65
Triceratops
66
Diplodocus
67
Stegosaurus
68
Velociraptor
69
Another reconstruction of Velociraptor
70
Some pterosaurs were the size of small airplanes
71
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72
Plesiosaurs were aquatic
73
Japanese fisherman caught this creature in 1977
74
Todays Reptiles
  • Of the 16 orders of reptiles that have existed,
    only 4 survive
  • turtles
  • lizards and snakes
  • tuataras
  • crocodiles

75
Rise and Fall of Dominant Reptiles
  • Other important characteristics
  • internal fertilization
  • improved circulatory system
  • ectothermic - heat obtained from external sources
  • endothermic - generate own heat

76
Gaping is a means of cooling the blood
77
Living Reptiles
  • Order Chelonia turtles and tortoises
  • differ from other reptiles because their bodies
    are encased within a protective shell

78
Some tortoises have lived to 150 years
79
Green sea turtle
80
Pacific leatherback sea turtle
81
Rise and Fall of Dominant Reptiles
  • Order Rhynchocephalia tuatara
  • lizardlike animals about half a meter long
  • contain parietal eye
  • only found on island off New Zealand coast

82
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83
Rise and Fall of Dominant Reptiles
  • Order Squamata lizards and snakes
  • three suborders
  • Sauria - lizards
  • Amphisbaenia - worm lizards
  • Serpentes - snakes
  • paired copulatory organ in males
  • lower jaw not joined directly to skull

84
The chameleon is a lizard
85
Jacksons chameleon
86
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87
Gecko
88
Gila monster (venomous)
89
Skinks are sometimes called worm lizards
90
Blue-tongued skink
91
Worlds smallest skink
92
Rainbow boa constrictor
93
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94
Scarlet king snake
95
Coral snake
96
King or Coral?
97
Copperhead
98
Sidewinder rattlesnake
99
Rattlesnake victim
100
Rise and Fall of Dominant Reptiles
  • Order Crocodilia crocodiles and alligators
  • remained relatively unchanged
  • only two species of alligators
  • southern US and China
  • resemble birds more than other living reptiles
    (care for young and four-chambered heart)

101
Nile crocodile
102
Caimans live in South America
103
Gharial
104
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105
Birds
  • Class Aves contains 28 orders containing 166
    families and about 8,600 species.
  • key characteristics
  • feathers
  • modified reptilian scales ?
  • flight skeleton
  • thin, hollow bones

106
History of the Birds
  • Archaeopteryx (similar to modern Hoatzin)
  • Aves listed as separate class because of key
    evolutionary novelties of feathers, light bones,
    and super-efficient lungs

107
History of the Birds
  • Birds today
  • adaptations for flight energy demands
  • efficient respiration
  • efficient circulation
  • Endothermy

108
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109
The Great Nest measures 9.5 ft. across, 20 ft.
deep, and weighs an estimated 2 tons.
110
Mammals
  • Key mammalian characteristics
  • hair
  • heat loss
  • camouflage
  • sensory structures
  • defense weapon
  • mammary glands
  • about 50 of energy in milk comes from fat

111
A mother tiger, like other mammals, will not have
to leave her young in order to find food for them
112
Key Mammalian Characteristics
  • endothermy
  • crucial adaptation that allowed activity at any
    time of the day to colonize severe environments
  • placenta
  • specialized organ allowing food, water, and
    oxygen to pass from mother to child
  • teeth
  • heterodont dentition (different teeth for
    different functions)

113
Neither of these animals is a fierce carnivore,
despite the appearance of their teeth
114
Key Mammalian Characteristics
  • digestion of plants
  • cellulose major source of food for herbivores
  • mammals do not have necessary digestive enzymes
    to break apart cellulose
  • some have evolved four-chambered stomachs
  • some contain mutualistic bacteria in a cecum

115
Giraffes, like cows, possess a chambered stomach.
All ruminants chew cuds
116
Although horses and zebras are herbivorous like
giraffes, they do not have a rumen. Instead, they
possess a cecum.
117
Key Mammalian Characteristics
  • hooves and horns
  • hooves specialized pads of keratin
  • horns composed of core of bone surrounded by
    keratin sheath
  • flight
  • bats have wing of leathery membrane of skin
    stretched over the bones of four fingers
  • second largest order of mammals
  • echolocation

118
History of the Mammals
  • Orders of mammals
  • monotremes egg-laying mammals
  • lay shelled eggs
  • marsupials pouched mammals
  • finish development in external pouch
  • placental mammals
  • placenta nourishes embryo throughout entire
    development
  • Gestation length related to size

119
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120
echidna
The echidna is also known as the spiny anteater
121
koala
Koala young stay with the mother for an extended
period of time, hitching a ride on moms back
122
Theyre even cute when theyre asleep
123
Tasmanian devil
There really is a Tasmanian devil
Tasmanian Devil
124
kangaroo
There are many species of kangaroo. In addition
to the red (shown here), there is even a species
that climbs trees
125
You didnt believe me, did you?
126
The capybara is the worlds largest rodent.
127
sloth
128
Star nosed mole
129
Manatee?
  • Manatees are very docile creatures

130
Notice the teeth on this orca
131
Beluga whale
132
The blue whale can measure over 90 ft. long and
weigh over 200 tons
133
Evolution Among Primates
  • Primates
  • two distinct features allowed them to succeed in
    arboreal environment
  • grasping fingers and toes
  • binocular vision
  • Prosimians (lemurs and tarsiers)
  • Very smell oriented
  • Usually have long tails

134
The tamarin is a prosimian
135
The aye-aye is a most unusual prosimian
136
Anthropoids
  • Higher primates - includes apes, monkeys, and
    humans
  • The term Anthropoid means Like us
  • Direct descendents
  • New World monkeys (South America)
  • Old World monkeys (Africa)

137
mandrill
The mandrill is an anthropoid monkey related to
the baboon
138
New world monkeys like this spider monkey have
prehensile or grasping tails. The Old World
monkeys lack the ability to grasp with the tail
139
gorilla
The silverback is a mature male gorilla who
fears nothing
140
orang
The orangutan is found only on Borneo and Sumatra
141
gibbon
Gibbons are extremely athletic apes found in
Southeast Asia. Like all apes, gibbons are
tail-less
142
Chimpanzees have very complex social groups,
interact often with one another, and are very
devoted parents
143
Chimps have often been seen in the wild using
tools. What do you suppose this guy is doing with
the stick?
144
  • Human evolution is very controversial
  • Fossils are extremely rare and difficult to
    interpret
  • Dating of fossils is also suspect
  • H. sapiens is the only surviving hominid.
  • The best fossils are between 90,000 and 100,000
    years old.
  • Cro-Magnons replaced Neanderthals about 40,000
    years ago.
  • Humans of modern appearance eventually spread
    across Siberia to North America about 13,000
    years ago.

145
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