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Vertebrae Evolution

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Title: Vertebrae Evolution


1
Vertebrae Evolution Diversity
2
Invertebrate Chordates The Origin of Vertebrates
  • The vertebrates are part of a phylogenetic branch
    of the animal kingdom consisting of
    deuterostomes.
  • The deuterostome branch has two main modern
    phyla the chordates and the enchinoderms.

3
Four anatomical features characterize the phylum
Chordata
4
  • Chordates are named for a skeletal structure, the
    notochord, present in all chordate embyros. The
    notochord is a longitudinal, flexible rod located
    between the digestive tube and the nerve cord.
    Composed of large, fluid-filled cells encased in
    fairly stiff, fibrous tissue, it provides
    skeletal support through most of the length of
    the animal.
  • In most vertebrates a more complex, jointed
    skeleton develops, and the adult only retains
    remnants of the embryonic notochord, the
    gelatinous material of the disks between the
    vertebrae of humans.

5
  • The nerve cord of a chordate embryo develops from
    a plate of ectoderm that rolls into a tube
    located dorsal to the notochord. The result is a
    dorsal, hollow nerve cord unique to chordates.
    The nerve cord of a chordate embryo develops into
    the central nervous system the brain and spinal
    cord.
  • Other animal phyla have solid nerve cords,
    usually ventrally located.

6
  • In the embryos of all chordates, a tube that
    eventually develops into the digestive tract
    extends between the future mouth and the future
    anus. The region posterior to the mouth is the
    pharynx, which has pairs of pouches in chordate
    embryos.
  • The pharyngeal pouches of various vertebrates
    develop into a diversity of other structures,
    including gills and components of auditory organs.

7
  • Most chordates have a tail extending posterior to
    the anus. The chordate tail contains skeletal
    elements and muscles and provides much of the
    propulsive force in many aquatic species.
  • Most nonchordates have a digestive tract that
    extends nearly the whole length of the body.

8
Invertebrate chordates provide clues to the
origin of vertebrates
9
Subphylum Urochordata
  • Urochordatesare commonly called tunicates. Most
    tunicates are sessile marine animals, but others
    are planktonic or colonial. Adult tunicates
    scarcely resembles a chordate, it doesnt display
    a trace of notochord, nerve cord or tail. All
    four chordate trademarks are manifest in the
    larval form of some groups of tunicates.

10
Subphylum Cephalochordata
  • Known as lancelets because of their bladelike
    shape, cephalochordates closely resemble the
    idealized chordate. The notochord dorsal, hollow
    nerve cord numerous gill slits and postanal
    tail all persist into the adult stage. Lancelets
    are small animals that live in the sand at the
    bottom of the sea in coastal regions.

11
The Relationship Between Invertebrate Chordates
Vertebrates
  • Molecular evidence suggests that cephalochordates
    are the vertebrates closest relatives, and
    urochordates are their next closest relatives.

12
  • According to one hypothesis, there are two stages
    in the evolution of vertebrates from
    invertebrates In the first stage, an ancestral
    cephalochordate evolved from a form resembling a
    modern urochordate larva in the second stage, a
    vertebrate evolved from a cephalochordate.
  • The first stage may have been preceded by
    paedogenesis, the precocious development of
    sexual maturity in a larva.

13
Introduction To The Vertebrates
14
Neural crest, pronounced cephalization, a
vertebral column, and a closed circulatory system
characterize the subphylum Vertebrata
  • In vertebrates, a group of embryonic cells called
    the neural crest forms near the dorsal margins of
    the closing neural tube. The neural crest
    contributes to the formation of certain skeletal
    elements such as some of the bones and cartilage
    of the cranium, and many other structures that
    distinguish vertebrates from other chordates.

15
An overview of vertebrate diversity
  • Gnathostomes have jaws and also have two sets of
    paired appendages. Among these jawed vertebrates,
    there are various classes of aquatic animals that
    we generally call fishes the cartilaginous
    fishes and three classes of bony fishes. In the
    case of fishes, the two sets of paired appendages
    are fins that function in swimming.

16
  • All the other gnathostomes are tetrapods, in
    which the two sets of paired appendages are
    modified as legs that can support the animal on
    land. The tetrapods include the amphibians along
    with the clade identified as amniotes. The
    amniotes are named for the amniotic egg.

17
Jawless Vertebrates
18
Some extinct jawless vertebrates had ossified
teeth bony armor
  • A diversity of taxa informally called
    ostracoderms thrived from about 450 to 375
    million years ago. Most species were small, less
    than 50 cm in length. Most lacked paired fins and
    apparently were bottom dwellers, but there were
    also some more active species with paired fins.

19
  • Ostracoderm means shelled skin, a reference to
    the armor of bony plates that encased these
    animals. The plates may represent an early
    evolutionary stage of ossification, the hardening
    of connective tissue that occurs when specialized
    cells secrete calcium and phosphate, which
    precipitate as calcium phosphate, a hard mineral
    salt.
  • Even earlier evidence of ossification is found in
    fossils of ancient vertebrates called conodonts,
    which date back as far as 510 million years.
    These vertebrates are named for their cone-shaped
    toothlike structures, which are ossified.

20
Fishes and Amphibians
21
Vertebrate jaws evolved from skeletal supports of
the pharyngeal slits
  • The remaining gill slits, no longer required for
    suspension feeding, remained as the major site of
    respiratory gas exchange with the external
    environment.
  • New adaptations usually evolve by the
    modification of existing structures. Evolution is
    limited by the raw material with which it must
    work.

22
Class Chondrichthyes Sharks rays have
cartilaginous skeletons
  • The vertebrates of the class Chondrichthyes are
    called cartilaginous fishes because they have
    relatively flexible endoskeletons made of
    cartilage rather than bone. Jaws and paired fins
    are well developed in the cartilaginous fishes.
    The cartilaginous skeleton is a derived
    characteristic because it evolved secondarily.

23
  • The largest sharks and rays are suspension
    feeders that feed on plankton. Most sharks,
    however, are carnivores that swallow their prey
    whole or use their powerful jaws and sharp teeth
    to tear flesh from animals too large to swallow
    in one piece. Shark teeth probably evolved from
    the jagged scales that cover the abrasive skin.
  • The digestive tract of many sharks is
    proportionately shorter than the digestive tube
    of other vertebrates. Within the shark intestine
    is a spiral valve, a corkscrew-shaped ridge that
    increases the surface area and prolongs the
    passage of food along the short digestive tract.

24
  • Sharks have sharp vision but cannot distinguish
    colors. The nostrils function only for olfaction
    (smelling), not breathing. Along with eyes and
    nostrils, the shark head also has a pair of
    regions in the skin that can detect electrical
    fields generated by the muscle contractions of
    nearby animals.
  • Shark eggs are fertilized internally. Some
    species of sharks are oviparous, which means they
    lay eggs that hatch outside the mothers body.
    Other species are ovoviviparous, which means they
    retain the fertilized eggs in the oviduct they
    are nourished by the egg yolk and then they hatch
    within the uterus. A few species are viviparous
    the young develop within the uterus, nourished
    prior to birth by nutrients received from the
    mothers blood through a placenta.

25
Osteichthyes The extant classes of bony fishes
are the ray-finned fishes, the lobe-finned
fishes, the lungfishes
  • Nearly all bony fishes have an ossified
    endoskeleton with a hard matrix of calcium
    phosphate. Glands in the skin of a bony fish
    secrete a mucus that gives the animal its
    characteristic sliminess, and adaptation that
    reduces drag during swimming. Bony fishes breath
    by drawing water over 4 or 5 pairs of gills
    located in chambers covered by the operculum.
    Another adaption of most bony fishes is the swim
    bladder. Most species are oviparous, however,
    internal fertilization and birthing characterize
    other species.

26
  • Nearly all the families of fishes familiar to us
    are ray-finned fishes. Examples are bass, trout,
    perch, tuna and herring. The fins, supported
    mainly by long flexible rays, are modified for
    maneuvering, defense, and other functions.

27
  • Lobe-finned fishes have muscular pectoral and
    pelvic fins supported by extensions of the bony
    skeleton. Many lobe-fins were large, apparently
    bottom dwellers.

28
  • Three genera of lungfishes live today in the
    Southern Hemisphere. They generally inhabit
    stagnant ponds and swamps, surfacing to gulp air
    into lungs connected to the pharynx of the
    digestive tract. Lungfishes also have gills,
    which are the main organs for gas exchange. When
    ponds shrink during the dry season, some
    lungfishes can burrow in the mud and aestivate.

29
Tetrapods evolved from specialized fishes that
inhabited shallow water
  • Amphibians were the first tetrapods to spend a
    substantial portion of their time on land. As the
    earliest tetrapods, amphibians benefited from an
    abundance of food and relatively little
    competition.

30
Class Amphibia Salamanders, frogs, caecilians
are the 3 extant amphibian orders
  • Today the amphibians are represented by a total
    of about 4800 species of salamanders (order
    Urodela), frogs (order Anura), and caecilians
    (order Apoda).
  • Some urodeles are entirely aquatic, but others
    live on land as adults or throughout life.

31
  • Anurans are more specialized than urodeles for
    moving on land. Frogs display a great variety of
    adaptations that help them avoid being eaten by
    larger predators. They exhibit color patterns
    that camouflage. The skin glands of frogs secrete
    distasteful, or even poisonous, mucus. Many
    poisonous species have bright coloration that
    apparently warns predators.

32
  • Apodans, the caecilians, are legless and nearly
    blind, and superficially resemble earthworms. The
    reduction of legs evolved secondarily from a
    legged ancestor.

33
  • Amphibian means two lives, a reference to the
    metamorphosis of many frogs. In spite of the name
    amphibian, however, many frogs do not go through
    the aquatic tadpole stage, and many amphibians do
    not live in a dualistic life. There are some
    strictly aquatic and strictly terrestrial frogs,
    salamanders, and caecilians. Most amphibians
    maintain close ties with water and are most
    abundant in damp habitats such as swamps and rain
    forests. They reply heavily on their moist skin
    to carry out gas exchange with the environments
    some terrestrial species lack lungs and breathe
    exclusively through their skin and oral cavity.

34
Amniotes
35
Evolution of amniotic egg expanded the success of
vertebrates on land
  • The amnioteclade consists of the mammals, birds,
    and vertebrates we commonly call reptiles. The
    amniotic egg, a reproductive adaptation that
    enabled terrestrial vertebrates to complete their
    life cycles on land and sever their last ties
    with their aquatic origins. Amniotic eggs have a
    shell that retains water and can hen be laid in a
    dry place.

36
  • The shells of bird eggs are calcareous and
    inflexible, while shells of many reptile eggs are
    leathery and flexible. Most mammals have
    dispensed with the shell instead, the embryo
    implants in the wall of the uterus and obtains
    nutrients from the mother.

37
  • Reptiles, birds, and mammals all have specialized
    membranes within the amniotic call called the
    extra-embryonic membranes. The extra-embryonic
    membranes arent part of the body of the
    developing animal, these structures function in
    gas exchange, waste storage, and the transfer of
    stored nutrients to the embryo.
  • Amniotes also show other adaptations to
    terrestrial life, including waterproof skin and
    increasing use of the rib cage to ventilate the
    lungs.

38
A reptilian heritage is evident in all amniotes
  • Reptilian Characteristics
  • Scales containing the protein keratin waterproof
    the skin of a reptile, helping prevent
    dehydration in dry air. Reptiles cant breathe
    through their keratinized dry skin, and they
    obtain all their oxygen with lungs.

39
  • Most reptiles lay shelled amniotic eggs on land.
    Fertilization must occur internally, before the
    shell is secreted as the egg passes through the
    reproductive tract.
  • They are sometimes labeled cold-blooded animals
    because they do not use their metabolism
    extensively to control body temperature. Because
    they absorb external heat rather than generating
    much of their own, reptiles are said to be
    ectotherms.

40
Birds began as feathered reptiles
  • Characteristic of Birds
  • Almost every part of a typical birds anatomy is
    modified in some way that enhances flight. The
    bones have an internal structure that is
    honeycombed. Another adaptations reducing the
    weight of birds is the absence of some organs.
    Birds are endothermic. Senses must be acute.

41
Mammals diversified extensively in the wake of
the Cretaceous extinctions
  • Mammalian Characteristics
  • All mammalian mother nourish their babies with
    milk. Hair is another mammalian characteristic.
    Mammals are endothermic and most have an active
    metabolism. Most are born rather than hatched.
    Have generally larger brains and many species are
    capable learners. Differentiation of teeth is
    another important mammalian trait.

42
  • Monotremes
  • The platypuses and the echidnas are the only
    mammals that lay eggs. Monotremes have hair and
    produce milk. On the belly of the mother are
    specialized glands that secrete glands. After
    hatching, the baby sucks the milk from the fur of
    the mother, who has no nipples.

43
  • Marsupials
  • Examples are opossums, kangaroos, bandicoots, and
    koalas. A marsupial is born very early in its
    development and completes its embryonic
    development while nursing. In most species, the
    nursing young are held within a maternal pouch
    called a marsupium.

44
  • Eutherian (Placental) Mammals
  • Young eutherians complete their embryonic
    development within the uterus, joined to the
    mother by the placenta.

45
Primates The Evolution of Homo sapiens
46
Primate evolution provides a context for
understanding human origins
  • Some General Primate Characteristics
  • Most primates have hands and feet adapted for
    grasping, and have large brains and short jaws,
    giving them a short face. Have forward-looking
    eyes and flat nails.
  • The opposable thumb is only found in monkeys,
    apes, and humans.

47
  • Modern Primates
  • Examples of prosimians (premonkeys) are lemurs
    of Madagascar and the lorises, pottos, and
    tarsiers that live in tropical Africa and
    southern Asia.
  • The antropoids include monkeys, apes, and humans.

48
Humanity is one very young twig on the vertebrate
tree
  • Paleonanthropology is the study of human origins
    and evolution.
  • Hominoid refers to great apes and humans fossils
    are more closely related to chimpanzees,
    gorillas, or orangutans.
  • Hominid refers to the twigs of evolutionary tree
    that are more related to us than others living
    species.

49
  • Some Major Features of Human Evolution
  • Brain size- Hominoids of about 6 million years
    ago had brains with volumes of about 400-450 cm3
    modern human brains average 1300 cm3.
  • Jaw Shape- Hominoids had prognathic (longer)
    jaws. During human evolution, shortening of jaws
    resulted in flatter faces with more pronounced
    chins.

50
  • Bipedal Posture- Hominoid ancestors walked on all
    four limbs when on the ground like modern apes.
  • Reduced Size Difference Between the Sexes- In
    hominoids the size difference between males and
    females is a major feature of dimorphism. Modern
    ape males weigh about twice as much as females.
    Monkey males are about 1.35 times heavier than
    females and human males average 1.2 times the
    weigh of females.

51
  • Some Key Changes in Family Structure- To identify
    evolutionary changes in social behavior,
    researcher rely more on comparisons between
    humans and other extant hominoids. In contrast to
    the social organization of most ape species (as
    well as most monkeys), monogamy prevails in most
    human cultures. Newborn human infants are
    dependent on their mothers and the duration of
    parental care for offspring is much longer in
    humans than in other hominoids. The extended
    parental car, couples with the large brain size,
    enhanced learning and is associated with the
    behavioral complexity of humans.
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