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Animals: The Chordata Phylum Review. Chapters 30-32:. Chordata. Vertebrates fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals internal bony skeleton backbone encasing spinal column skull-encased brain deuterostome. hollow dorsal nerve cord. becomes brain & spinal cord.
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Animals: The Chordata Phylum Review Chapters 30-32:
Chordata • Vertebrates • fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals • internal bony skeleton • backbone encasing spinal column • skull-encased brain • deuterostome hollow dorsal nerve cord becomes brain & spinal cord becomes gills or Eustachian tube pharyngeal pouches becomes vertebrae postanal tail becomes tail or tailbone notochord
450 mya salmon, trout, sharks Vertebrates: Fish • Characteristics • body structure • bony & cartilaginous skeleton • jaws & paired appendages (fins) • scales • body function • gills for gas exchange • two-chambered heart; single loop blood circulation • ectotherms • reproduction • external fertilization • external development in aquatic egg gills body
Humerus Femur Ulna Pelvis Shoulder Tibia Radius Lobe-finned fish Fibula Femur Pelvis Humerus Shoulder Radius Tibia Ulna Fibula Early amphibian Transition to Land Evolution of tetrapods
lung buccal cavity glottis closed 350 mya frogs salamanders toads Vertebrates: Amphibian • Characteristics • body structure • legs (tetrapods) • moist skin • body function • lungs (positive pressure) & diffusion through skin for gas exchange • three-chambered heart;veins from lungs back to heart • ectotherms • reproduction • external fertilization • external development in aquatic egg • metamorphosis (tadpole to adult)
leathery shell embryo amnion chorion allantois yolk sac 250 mya dinosaurs, turtles lizards, snakes alligators, crocodile Vertebrates: Reptiles • Characteristics • body structure • dry skin, scales, armor • body function • lungs for gas exchange • thoracic breathing; negative pressure • three-chambered heart • ectotherms • reproduction • internal fertilization • external development in amniotic egg
lung trachea anterior air sacs posterior air sacs 150 mya finches, hawk ostrich, turkey Vertebrates: Birds (Aves) • Characteristics • body structure • feathers & wings • thin, hollow bone;flight skeleton • body function • very efficient lungs & air sacs • four-chambered heart • endotherms • reproduction • internal fertilization • external development in amniotic egg
muscles contract diaphragm contracts 220 mya / 65 mya mice, ferret elephants, batswhales, humans Vertebrates: Mammals • Characteristics • body structure • hair • specialized teeth • body function • lungs, diaphragm; negative pressure • four-chambered heart • endotherms • reproduction • internal fertilization • internal development in uterus • nourishment through placenta • birth live young • mammary glands make milk
Vertebrates: Mammals • Sub-groups • monotremes • egg-laying mammals • lack placenta & true nipples • duckbilled platypus, echidna • marsupials • pouched mammals • offspring feed from nipples in pouch • short-lived placenta • koala, kangaroo, opossum • placental • true placenta • nutrient & waste filter • shrews, bats, whales, humans
Vertebrate quick check… • Which vertebrates lay eggs with shells? • Which vertebrates are covered with scales? • What adaptations do birds have for flying? • What kind of symmetry do all vertebrates have? • Which vertebrates are ectothermic and which are endothermic • Why must amphibians live near water? • What reproductive adaptations made mammals very successful? • What characteristics distinguish the 3 sub-groups of mammals?
Comparing Chordates Chapter 33:
Evolutionary Trends in Vertebrates • Adaptive Radiation: process by which a single species or small group of species evolves into several different forms that live in different ways • Rapid growth in the diversity of a group of organisms • Convergent Evolution: process by which unrelated organisms independently evolve similarities when adapting to similar environments
Body Temperature & Homeostasis • The control of body temperature is important for maintaining homeostasis in vertebrates… • Particularly in habitats where temperature varies widely within time of day and with season
Body Temperature & Homeostasis • Ectotherm: animal that relies on interactions with the environment to help it control body temperature (“cold blooded”) • Reptiles, fishes and amphibians
Body Temperature & Homeostasis • Endotherm: animal that generates its own body heat and controls its body temperature from within (“warm blooded”) • Birds and mammals
Feeding • Skulls and teeth adapted for feeding on a much wider assortment of foods
Respiration • Aquatic chordates: tunicates, fishes, and amphibian larvae • GILLS • Land vertebrates: adult amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals • LUNGS
Circulation • Single-loop Circulation • Double-loop Circulation • Heart Chambers (3 or 4)
Excretion • Carried out by the kidneys
Response • Nonvertebrate chordates have a relatively simple nervous system with a mass of nerve cells that form a brain • Vertebrates have a more complex brain with distinct regions, each with a different function
Movement • The skeletal and muscular system support a vertebrate’s body and make it possible to control movement
Reproduction • Almost all chordates reproduce sexually • Oviparous: eggs develop outside the mother’s body • Ovoviviparous: eggs develop within the mother’s body –young born alive • Viviparous: embryos obtain nutrients directly from the mother’s body-young born alive
Animal Behavior Chapter 34:
Elements of Behavior • Behavior: the way an organism reacts to changes in its internal condition or external environment • Stimulus: any kind of detectable sign that carries information • Response: single, specific reaction to a stimulus
Types of Stimuli • Light • Sound • Odors • Heat • THE SENSES • Some are different for different animals; i.e. echolocation in dolphins
How Animals Respond • When an animal responds to a stimulus, the body systems… • sense organs • nervous system • muscles • …interact to produce the resulting behavior
Behavior and Evolution • Innate Behavior: instinct, or inborn behavior; behavior that appears in a fully functional form the first time it is performed • Learned Behavior: behavior that is altered as a result of experience
Learned Behavior • Habituation • Classical conditioning • Operant conditioning • Insight learning
Habituation • Learning process by which an animal decreases or stops its response to a repetitive stimulus that neither rewards nor harms it
Learning process in which an animal makes a mental connection between a stimulus and some kind of reward or punishment Classical Conditioning
Operant Conditioning • Learning process in which an animal learns to behave in a certain way through repeated practice, in order to receive a reward or avoid punishment • Trial-and-error learning
Insight Learning • Learning process in which an animal applies something it has already learned to a new situation without a period of trial and error • Reasoning
Imprinting • Learning based on early experience • Once imprinting has occurred, the behavior cannot be changed
Patterns of Behavior • Behavioral Cycles • Courtship • Social Behavior • Competition and Aggression • Communication
Behavioral Cycles • Many animals respond to periodic changes in the environment with daily or seasonal cycles of behavior • Migration: periodic movement and return of animals from one place to another • Circadian Rhythm: behavioral cycle that occurs in a daily pattern; i.e. sleep
Courtship • Type of behavior in which an animal sends out stimuli… • Sounds • Visual displays, or • Chemicals • …in order to attract a member of the opposite sex
Social Behavior • Usually members of a society are related to one another • Related individuals share a large proportion of each other’s genes • Helping a relative survive increases the chance that the genes an individual shares with that relative will be passed along to offspring
Competition and Aggression • Territory: specific area occupied and protected by an animal or group of animals • Aggression: threatening behavior that one animal uses to gain control over another
Communication • Passing of information from one organism to another • Visual signals • Chemical signals • Sound signals • Language**
Animal Behavior Terminology • Behavior • Anything an animal does in response to a stimulus in its environment • Innate behavior • Inherited behavior of animals (instinctive) • Ex. The way a toad catches its prey. • Fight-or-flight response • Preparation of the body to either fight or run from the danger • Controlled by hormones
Animal Behavior Terminology • Instinct • A complex pattern of innate behavior that begins with a stimulus and continues until all responses have been completed • Ex. Migration, aggressive behavior, courtship behavior, circadian rhythm, and territorial behavior • Circadian rhythm • A 24-hour cycle of behavior, cycle of sleeping and wakefulness • Mimicry • The resemblance of one organism to another or to an object in its surroundings for concealment and protection from predators
Animal Behavior Terminology • Migration • The instinctive seasonal movement of animals • Ex. Birds, Pacific salmon • Hibernation • A state in which the body temperature drops substantially, oxygen consumption decreases, and breathing rates decline to a few breaths per minute in order to conserve energy • Ex. Bears • Habituation • A repeated stimulus that the animal finally ceases to respond to
Animal Behavior Terminology • Imprinting • When an animal at a critical time of its life forms a social attachment to another object • Ex. Ducklings attachment to its mother • Conditioning • Learning by association • Insight • Learning when an animal uses previous experiences to respond to a new situation