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1. BIO 230 - Invertebrate Zoology aka: ‘Everything you ever wanted to know (and some stuff you didn’t) about the little things that run the Earth.’
2. Classification of Life “Kids Playing Chicken On Freeways Get Squished”
What does this mean?
Let’s start from the bottom…
3. Classification of Life 3 Domains are Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya
Bacteria/Archaea have prokaryotic cell types
No nucleus
No cytoskeleton
No membrane-bound organelles
Eukaryotes
Both unicellular and multicellular
Nuclei, cytoskeleton, and organelles present
5. Classification: Kingdoms of Eukarya Protozoa (often called Protista)
Euglena, Amoeba, etc.
Plantae
Fungi
Animalia
6. Fungi Unicellular or Multicellular
Eukaryote
Non-motile
Heterotrophs – no photosynthesis
Have a cell wall
A subject of this class?
7. Plantae Multicellular
Autotrophs
Non-motile
Eukaryotes
Have a cell wall (cellulose)
A subject of this class?
8. Animalia Multicellular
Heterotrophs
Eukaryotes
Most are motile
No cell wall
A subject of this class?
9. Protozoa Mostly Unicellular
Many are colonial, many motile
Can be photosynthetic (autotrophs)
Some have a cell wall
A subject of this class?
10. So, what is an invertebrate? It definitely includes animals…
11. that simply lack vertebra (no true backbone)
12. But… Protists (amoeba, paramecium, euglena) blur the line between animal and plant
So we will consider organisms in Kingdoms Animalia & Protozoa
But mostly Animalia…
13. Who cares about inverts? You should.
Comprise about 98% of animal life on Earth
Vertebrates = ~40,000 species
Inverts = 2 million described but as many as 8 million still undescribed
Found in basically all environments
14. Inverts Incredibly diverse
Most small but…
Giant squid - 60 ft long & >4,000 lbs
Ribbon worms (nemerteans) can grow up to 180 ft long
At the other end, rotifers mostly <0.001 mm smaller than some bacteria
15. Inverts Form part of the foundation of most food webs
Pollinate flowers & crops
Cycle nutrients & waste materials
Important food sources
Basically form the ‘backbone’ of most ecosystems
16. “If human beings were not so impressed by size alone, they would consider an ant more wonderful than a rhinoceros."
"If invertebrates become extinct, the world as we know it would cease to exist."
“…. the little things run the world.”
-- E.O. Wilson
Professor Emeritus
Harvard University
17. Diversity of Invertebrates Major Invertebrate Environments
Marine
Estuaries
Freshwater
Terrestrial
Host organisms
18. Diversity of Invertebrates Land = ca. 22% of surface area
Water = ca. 78%
Oceans - 97.3%
Lakes, ponds, reservoirs (lentic) - 0.009%
Rivers (lotic)
So, not surprisingly most of invertebrate diversity is in the oceans
Why else might this be?
19. Life on land is challenging! Water...
allows simple gas exchange across body surface (simpler respiration systems)
prevents dehydration (no need for systems to prevent this – e.g. worm mucus)
provides movement of sperm and egg and allows for external fertilization
flushes away waste
is a versatile solvent – makes nutrients available
is less dense than air – no need for rigid support and allows easy movement
has high specific heat so temps are more stable
20. But… Light is in much shorter supply (extinguishes over a shorter distance)
reduces primary productivity
Air carries more oxygen than air
Oxygen moves 30,000x faster in air
Non-moving aquatic organisms need water flow!
Water much more viscous so increases drag on larger animals
Water sources collect wastes
21. Influences on Invert Diversity