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Figure 5.2 (a)

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Title: Figure 5.2 (a)


1
Chapter 5
2
Figure 5.2 (a)
3
Figure 5.2 (b)
4
Figure 5.3
5
Figure 5.4 (a)
6
Figure 5.4 (b)
7
Figure 5.6 (a)
8
Figure 5.6 (b)
9
Species and Speciation
  • Fundamental unit of classification is the
    species.
  • Species a group of populations in which genes
    are actually, or potentially, exchanged through
    interbreeding.
  • Problems
  • Reproductive criterion must be assumed based on
    phenotype and ecological information.
  • Asexual reproduction
  • Fossil
  • Geographical isolation

10
Reproductive isolation leads to Speciation
  • the formation of new species
  • Requirement
  • Subpopulations are prevented from interbreeding
  • Gene flow does not occur (Reproductive isolation)
  • Reproductive isolation can result in evolution
  • Natural selection and genetic drift can result in
    evolution

11
Allopatric Speciation
  • geographical isolation
  • Adaptation to different environments
  • Genetic drift
  • Results in members not being able to mate
    successfully
  • Most common type of speciation
  • i.e. Galapagos island Finches

12
Fig 5.7 Allopatric Speciation
Geographic barrier divides a population 3
subpopulation of Freshwater fish A, A1, and A2
Genetic exchange occurs between A and A1 and
between A1 and A2. Exchanges less likely in A and
A2
Rise in water forces the breakup of A1 and makes
A and A2 separate populations.
Genetic drift and different selection pressures
result in B and C
13
Sympatric Speciation
  • Occurs within a single population
  • Even though populations are together (sympatric)
    they may be reproductively isolated

14
To demonstrate sympatric speciation
  • Researchers
  • Demonstrate species share a common ancestor
  • Arose without geographical isolation
  • i.e. studies of indigobirds from Africa

15
Morphological variation between indigobird
species
  • Nestling mouth markings in V. camerunensis (a)
    and V. chalybeata (b) mimic the young of their
    firefinch hosts, L. rara and L. senegala,
    respectively. Dark wing and plumage in V.
    chalybeata from West Africa (c). Pale wing and
    green plumage in V. raricola (d). White bill and
    blue plumage in V. camerunensis (e). Red bill and
    orange feet in V. chalybeata from southern Africa
    (f).

16
Figure 5.8
Rates of Evolution
17
Fig 5.1 Speciation of Darwins Finches
Warbler
18
Fig 5.1 (b) Large ground finch
19
EOC Figure
20
Opener Chapter 7
Chapter 7 Animal Classification, Phylogeny,
and Organization
21
  • Common names
  • Crawdads, crayfish, or crawfish?
  • English sparrow, barn sparrow, or a house
    sparrow?
  • Problem with common names
  • Vary from region to region
  • Common names often does not specify particular
    species

22
  • Binomial system of Nomenclature brings order to a
    chaotic world of common names
  • Universal
  • Clearly indicates the level of classification
  • No two kinds of animals have the same binomial
    name
  • Every animal has one correct name International
    Code of Zoological Nomenclature

23
  • Genus begins with a Capital letter
  • Entire name italicized or underlined
  • Homo sapien or H. sapien

24
Kingdom of Life
  • 1969 R. Whittaker- five kingdom classification
  • System of classification that distinguished b/w
    kingdoms according to
  • cellular organization
  • mode of nutrition

25
  • Monera- bacteria and cyanobacteria are prokaryotic

26
  • Protista- single or colonies of eukaryotic cells
    (Ameoba, Paramecium)

27
  • Plantae- eukaryotic, multicellular, and
    photosynthtic. Have cell wall, and usually
    nonmotile

28
  • Fungi-eukaryotic and multicellular. Have cell
    wall and nonmotile. Mode of nutrition
    distiguishes fungi from plant- fungi digest
    extracellularly and absorb the breakdown products

29
  • Animalia- eukaryotic and multicellular, usually
    feed by ingesting other organisms, cell lack cell
    walls, and usually motile

30
Figure 7.2 (a)
31
Challenge of the five class system
  • Ribosomal RNA excellent for studying evolution
  • rRNA changes very slow (evolutionary
    conservation)
  • Closely related organisms have similar rRNAs
  • Comparison of rRNA of different organisms
    concludes
  • All life shares a common ancestor
  • Three major evolutionary lineage (domains) and
    supersedes the kingdom as the broadest taxonomic
    grouping

32
The three domains
  • Arhaea- prokaryotic microbes live in extreme
    environments, inhabit anaerobic environments
  • Reflect the conditions of early life
  • Archaea the most primitive life form
  • Archaea give rise to two other domains
  • Eubacteria- true bacteria and are prokaryotic
    microorganisms
  • Eukarya- include all eukaryotic organisms,
    diverged more recently thus more closely related
    to archae (protists, fungi, plants and animals)

33
Figure 7.2 (b)
34
Text devoted to animals
  • Except for Chapter 8 Animal like protists (Amoeba
    and Paramecium)
  • The inclusion of protozoa is part of a tradition
  • Once considered a phylum (Protozoa) in the animal
    kingdom

35
Pattern of Organization
  • Symmetry
  • Asymmetry
  • Radial symmetry
  • Bilateral symmetry

36
Figure 7.7 Asymmetry red encrusting sponge
37
Figure 7.8
Radial symmetry tube coral pulp
38
Part 2
39
Acoelomate Bilateral Animals
  • Consist of phyla
  • Phylum Platyhelminthes
  • Phylum Nemertea
  • Others

40
Bilateral animals
  • Bilateral symmetry important evolutionary
    advancement
  • Important for active, directed movement
  • Anterior, posterior ends
  • One side of body kept up (dorsal) vs. down
    (ventral)

41
  • Directed movement evolved with anterior sense
    organs? cephalization
  • Cephalization
  • specialization of sense organs in head end of
    animals

42
Bilateral Symmetry
  • Divided along sagittal plane into two mirror
    images
  • sagittal divides bilateral organisms into right
    and left halves

43
  • Anterior head end
  • Posterior tail end
  • Dorsal back side
  • Ventral belly side

44
  • Symmetry, fig. 7.9
  • Median sagittal

45
Other Patterns of Organization may reflect
evolutionary trends
  • Unicellular (cytoplasmic)- organisms consist of
    single cells or cellular aggregates,
  • provide functions of locomotion, food
    acquisition, digestion, water and ion regulation,
    sensory perception and reproduction in a single
    cell.
  • Cellular aggregates consist of loose association,
    cells that exhibit little interdependence,
    cooperation, or coordination of function
  • Some cells may be specialized for reproduction,
    nutritive or structural function

46
  • Diploblastic Organization
  • Cells are organized into tissues in most animal
    phyla
  • Body parts are organized into layers derived from
    two embryonic tissue layers.
  • Ectoderm- Gr. ektos, outside derm, skin gives
    rise to the epidermis the outer layer of the body
    wall
  • Endoderm- Gr. Endo, within, gives rise to the
    gastrodermis that lines the gut

47
  • Mesoglea- between the ecto and endo and may or
    may not contain cells
  • Derived from ecto and/or endo
  • Cells form middle layer (mesenchyme)
  • Layers are functionally inderdependent, yet
    cooperate showing tissue level organization i.e.
    feeding movements of Hydra or swimming movements
    of a jellyfish

48
Figure 7.10
49
The Triploblastic (treis, three blaste, sprout)
  • Animals described in chapters 10-22
  • Tissues derived from three embryological layers
  • Ectoderm- outer layer
  • Endoderm- lines the gut
  • Mesoderm- meso, middle, Third layer between Ecto
    and Endo
  • Give rise to supportive cells

50
Figure 7.11
51
  • Most have an organ system level of organization
  • Usually bilaterally symmetrical or evolved from
    bilateral ancestors
  • Organized into several groups based on the
    presence or absence of body cavity and for those
    that posses one, the kind of body cavity present.
  • Body cavity- fluid filled space in which the
    internal organs can be suspended and separated
    from the body wall

52
Body cavities are advantageous
  1. Provide more room for organ development
  2. Provide more surface area for diffusion of gases,
    nutrients, and waste into and out of organs
  3. Provide area for storage
  4. Often act as hydrostatic skeletons (supportive
    yet flexible)
  5. Provide a vehicle for eliminating wastes and
    reproductive products from the body
  6. Facilitate increase in body size

53
What does acoelomate mean?
  • No coelom

54
Acoelomate a, without kilos, hollow
  • Mesoderm relatively solid mass
  • No cavity formed between ecto and endo
  • These cells within mesoderm often called
    parenchymal cells
  • Parenchymal cells not speciallized for a
    particular fnc.

55
Whats a coelom?
  • coelom
  • true body cavity
  • Fluid-filled
  • lined by mesoderm-derived epithelium

56
  • Acoelomates lack a true body cavity
  • Solid body
  • no cavity b/w the digestive tract and outer body
    wall

57
Do these questions now
  • Think about aceolomate bilateral animals
  • To what domain do they belong
  • kingdom
  • What phyla include these organisms
  • What is bilateral symmetry, and why was it an
    important evolutionary advantage

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58
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59
Acoelomate Bilateral Animals
  1. Simplest organisms to have bilateral symmetry
  2. Triploblastic
  3. Lack a coelom
  4. Organ-system level of organization
  5. Cephalization
  6. Elongated, without appendages

60
Acoelomate Bilateral Animals
  1. Simplest organisms to have bilateral symmetry
  2. Triploblastic
  3. Lack a coelom
  4. Organ-system level of organization
  5. Cephalization
  6. Elongated, without appendages

61
Triploblastic Pseudocoelomate pseudes, false
  • Body cavity not entirely lined by mesoderm
  • No muscle or connective tissue associated with
    gut
  • No mesodermal

62
The Triploblastic Coelomate Pattern
  • Coelom is a body cavity completely surrounded by
    mesoderm
  • Peritoneum- mesodermal sheet that lines the inner
    body wall and serosa (outer covering of visceral
    organs)
  • Having mesodermally derived tissue (muscle,
    connective tissue) enhances the function of all
    internal body systems.

63
Figure 7.12
64
Figure 7.3
Groups traced to separate ancestors
All descendants of a single ancestor
Includes some but not all of a members of a
lineage
Fig 7.3 Evolutionary groups
65
Figure 7.4
Fig 7.4 Vertebrate Phylogenetic tree depicts the
degree of divergence from a common ancestor
66
Figure 7.5
Fig 7.5 Interpreting Cladograms Five taxa (1-5)
and characteristics (A-H)
Symplesiomorphies- common characters in a group
67
Figure 7.6
68
EOC Figure
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