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Kingdom Animalia/Phylum Chordata. Kingdom Animalia : General Characteristics. All multicellular All eukaryotic cells All heterotrophic ingest food Carbohydrate reserve is glycogen Lack cell walls.
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Kingdom Animalia: General Characteristics • All multicellular • All eukaryotic cells • All heterotrophic ingest food • Carbohydrate reserve is glycogen • Lack cell walls
Have highly differentiated body cells organized into tissues/organs/organ systems for specialized functions such as: - Digestion • Internal transport • Gas exchange • Movement • Coordination • Excretion • Reproduction
Reproduction is usuallySEXUAL • Flagellated sperm fertilizes non-motile, larger eggs • DIPLOID stage dominates life cycle • Zygote undergoes series of mitotic divisions called CLEAVAGE, which produces a BLASTULA in most animals • GASTRULATION occurs after blastula is formed (embryonic forms of adult body tissues formed during it) • Development usually direct to maturation
Found in SW, FW, and terrestrial habitats Each of these habitats present special problems/challenges to the animals living there • 11 – 35 Phyla total (Kingdom Animalia) Invertebrates = 95% Vertebrates = 5% >1 million species
Symmetry Types • Asymmetrical • No definite “head/tail” end, no left/right sides. • Amoeba proteus
Spherical • “Round” No L/R, H/T Yeast cell
Radial • Show polarity (H/T), but no L/R sides
Bilateral • Definite head/tail ends AND left/right sides. One side is usually a “mirror image” of the other side
Anatomical Directions • Dorsal: top • Ventral: bottom (belly) • Anterior: front (head) end • Posterior: back (tail) end • Lateral: side surfaces
Invertebrate Phyla • Porifera: Sponges. Asymmetrical. Most marine. No tissues/organs. Body wall consists of two layers of independent cells.
Cnideria • Jellyfish, corals, hydra, sea anemones. Radial symmetry. Marine or FW. Most gelatinous. Distinct tissues and a baglike body of two cell layers.
Ctenophora • Comb jellies. Radial symmetry. All marine, transparent, and gelatinous.
Platyhelminthes • Flatworms. Bilaterally symmetrical. Planaria, flukes, tapeworms.
Nematoda • Roundworms. Unsegmented, long & slender. ALL Parasites.
Rotifera • Free-living, aquatic.
Mollusca • Soft-bodied. Three part body (foot, visceral mass, mantle). Marine, FW, and terrestrial. Snails, slugs, clams, mussels, oysters, conches.
Annelida • Segmented worms. Earthworms, sandworms, bloodworms, leeches.
Arthropoda • Segmented bodies. Paired, jointed appendages. Exoskeleton. Insects, arachnids, centipedes, millipedes, crustaceans.
Echinodermata • All marine. Adults have pentaradial symmetry. Most have a water-vascular system and tube feet. Starfish, sea stars, feather stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers.
Kingdom AnimaliaPhylum Chordata • Fish • Amphibians • Reptiles • Bird • Mammals
Phylum Chordata: General Characteristics • Notochord Embryonic structure. Stiff cartilagenous rod found on dorsal side of embryo. Serves as an internal skeleton (support). Replaced by vertebral column in most vertebrates early in life.
Phylum-Chordata Subphylum-Cephalochordata Amphioxus, Lancelet notochord
Dorsal Nerve Cord Hollow. Surrounded by vertebral column. Anterior end = Brain. Rest = spinal cord Brain + Spinal Cord = Central Nervous System (CNS)
Gill slits or clefts Paired gill slits or pouches in throat region at some point in ALL vertebrate lives.
Chordate General Characteristics • Endoskeleton of bone or cartilage; jointed and flexible. Consists of: Vertebral Column (backbone): replaced notochord. Surrounds and protects dorsal nerve cord. Cranium encloses brain. Vertebral column + Cranium = Axial Skeleton
Girdles • Groups of bones that connect limbs to axial skeleton • Pectoral Girdle: connect arms, forearms to axial skeleton
Limbs: Usually paired. Legs, wings, flippers…. Girdles + Limbs = Appendicular Skeleton
2 Major Body Regions = Head & Trunk Head contains brain & sense organs ….. Cephalization
Specialized Vertebrate Body Systems • Integumentary Outer body covering. Protection & temperature regulation. • Skeletal Bones, cartilage. Protection, support, anchor for muscle tissue.
Muscular Provides body movement. Forms organ walls. • Digestive Physically and chemically breaks food down into usable liquid nutrients • Excretory Processes, then rids body of various wastes (solid, liquid, gaseous)
Respiratory Gas exchange. Gets O2 to all cells, carries CO2 from them. • Circulatory “Internal transport.” Ventral heart. Arteries, Veins, Capillaries. Closed system. Blood contains RBCs with hemoglobin. • Immune Detects & destroys invaders of the body.
Endocrine Glands. Produce & secrete hormones that regulate body processes. • Nervous Sensory perception & voluntary movement • Reproductive Produces gametes though meiosis
Vertebrate Lines of Development • The movement to land caused many changes. What changes had to occur due to the new demands of life on land? Gills to lungs Stronger bones & muscles Reinforced joints Reproduction… why???
Vertebrate Behavior • Inborn Innate, Instinct - Reflexes - “Instinct” for Self/Species Preservation
Learned Behavior Not inherited. “Conditioned Response” “Intelligent behavior such as…… * Problem Solving * Judgement * Decision Making