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Table of Contents

Table of Contents. What Is a Vertebrate? Fishes Amphibians Reptiles Vertebrate History in Rocks. - What Is a Vertebrate?. Ancient Jawless Fish.

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Table of Contents

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  1. Table of Contents • What Is a Vertebrate? • Fishes • Amphibians • Reptiles • Vertebrate History in Rocks

  2. - What Is a Vertebrate? Ancient Jawless Fish • Look backward in time, into an ocean 530 million years ago. There you see a strange-looking creature—a jawless fish—that is about as long as your index finger.

  3. Chordate Characteristics • Chordates belong to the phylum Chordata • Members of this phylum include vertebrates and invertebrates • 3 common characteristics: a notochord, nerve cord, and gill slits • A notochord is a flexible rod that runs down the back • A nerve cord serves as the connection between the brain and the nerves on which messages travel back and forth • All chordates have pharyngeal slits that either disappear before birth or function as gills for their entire lives.

  4. Human Embryo

  5. - What Is a Vertebrate? Characteristics of Chordates • This lancelet shows the characteristics of a chordate: a notochord, a nerve cord down its back, and gill slits.

  6. Characteristics of Vertebrates • Vertebrates have backbones that are part of an internal skeleton (endoskeleton) • Vertebra include any of the bones or segments composing the spinal column, consisting typically of a cylindrical body that allows the spinal cord to pass through it • Vertebrae include all the bones that make up the backbone • Internal skeleton or endoskeleton protects the internal organs of the body, helps give the body shape, and gives muscles a place to attach • *Having an endoskeleton allows vertebrates to grow bigger than animals with exoskeletons

  7. Quick Review: What are the four major functions of animals? Obtaining food & oxygen Keeping conditions stable Movement Reproduction

  8. Keeping Conditions Stable • Major groups of vertebrates control their body temperatures in one of 2 ways: • An ectotherm is an animal that does not produce much internal heat so their body temperature changes depending on the temperature of its environment (fish, amphibians, and reptiles) • An endotherm is an animal that regulates its own temperature by controlling the internal heat it produces (birds and mammals) • Endotherms body temperatures do not change much and this allows them to live in many different environments

  9. Key Terms: Examples: ectotherm endotherm - What Is a Vertebrate? Building Vocabulary • A definition states the meaning of a word or phrase by telling about its most important feature or function. After you read the section, reread the paragraphs that contain definitions of Key Terms. Use the information you have learned to write a definition of each Key Term in your own words. Key Terms: Examples: chordate All members of this phylum are called chordates. An ectotherm is an animal whose body does not produce much internal heat. notochord The phylum name Chordata comes from the notochord, a flexible rod that supports a chordate’s back. The beaver is an example of an endotherm—an animal whose body regulates its own temperature by controlling the internal heat it produces. vertebra You can see in Figure 2 that the backbone is formed by many similar bones called vertebrae.

  10. End of Section:What Is a Vertebrate?

  11. FISH

  12. Question: • What is the name for a person who studies fishes? • Ichthyologist

  13. Characteristics of Fishes • Fins are thin membranes stretched across a bony support that provides larger surface area for fishes to push against the water • Most fishes have external fertilization where female eggs are released outside the female’s body • In contrast, sharks and some other species have internal fertilization • Nervous/sense organs help fish to find food and avoid predators

  14. - Fishes Characteristics of Fishes • Most fishes obtain oxygen through gills. • What are gills? • A gill is a respiratory organ found in many aquatic organisms that extracts dissolved oxygen from water

  15. Fishes have a closed circulatory and 2 chambered heart • Blood moves from the heart to gills and then to the rest of the body

  16. Classes of Fish • Agnatha – Jawless Fish • Chondrichthyes – CartilagenousFish • Osteichthyes – Bony Fish

  17. Class Agnatha (Jawless Fish) • Cartilagenous • Simplest and oldest known vertebrates • No Jaw • No scales • Scavengers or parasites • Lamprey & Hagfish

  18. Class Chondrichthyes (Cartilaginous Fishes) • Hinged jaw • Paired fins • Scales • Cartilagenous skeleton • Muscles attached to skin, not skeleton • Skates, Rays, and Sharks

  19. Class Osteichthyes (Bony Fishes) • Largest group of fishes • Skeleton made of bone and cartilage • Hinged jaws • Paired fins • Hard, protective scales • Covered gills (operculum)

  20. - Fishes Bony Fishes • A bony fish has jaws, scales, a pocket on each side of the head that holds the gills, and a skeleton made of hard bones.

  21. - Fishes Previewing Visuals • Before you read, preview Figure 12. Then write two questions that you have about the diagram in a graphic organizer like the one below. As you read, answer your questions. Structure of a Fish Q. What is a swim bladder? A. A swim bladder is an internal, gas-filled sac that helps stabilize the fish at different depths in the water. Q. What is the function of the tail fin? A. It helps provide the power for swimming.

  22. End of Section:Fishes

  23. What is an Amphibian? • Vertebrates • Ectotherms • Aquatic and terrestrial animals! • Two major groups: • Salimanders • Frogs and Toads

  24. - Amphibians What Is an Amphibian? • During its metamorphosis from tadpole to adult, a frog’s body changes dramatically.

  25. - Amphibians Living on Land • Many adult amphibians have lungs, a heart with three chambers, and a double-loop circulatory system. • The two upper chambers of the heart are called atria (atria is plural for atrium). • The ventricle is the lower chamber of the heart where oxygen-rich blood mixes with oxygen-poor blood.

  26. - Amphibians Respiration and Circulation Activity • Click the Active Art button to open a browser window and access Active Art about respiration and circulation.

  27. - Amphibians Sequencing • Make a cycle diagram like the one below that shows the different stages of a frog’s metamorphosis during its life cycle. Write each step of the process in a separate circle. Frog Metamorphosis Adult frog Tail is absorbed. Fertilized egg Front legs develop. Tadpole hatches. Hind legs develop.

  28. - Amphibians More on The Frog Life Cycle • Click the PHSchool.com button for an activity aboutthe frog life cycle.

  29. End of Section:Amphibians

  30. What is a Reptile? • A reptile is an ectothermic vertebrate with lungs and scaly skin • Reptiles include turtles, snakes, lizards, alligators & crocodiles • Ancestors of modern reptiles were first vertebrates to live completely outside of an aquatic environment • Land animals must be able to conserve water and the skin, kidneys, and eggs of reptiles have these adaptations • Kidneys are organs that filter wastes from the blood and excreted through urine. • Reptiles have internal fertilization and lay their eggs on land • An egg with a shell and internal membranes that keep the embryo moist is called an amniotic egg.

  31. - Reptiles Adaptations for Life on Land • The membranes and shell of an amniotic egg protect the developing embryo.

  32. - Reptiles Characteristics of a Lizard • This lizard, a Jackson’s chameleon, has many adaptations that help • it survive in its • environment.

  33. - Reptiles The Sex Ratio of Newly Hatched Alligators • The temperature of the developing eggs of the American alligator affects the sex ratio of the young. (Sex ratio is the number of females compared with the number of males.)

  34. 29.4ºC Reading Graphs: At which temperature(s) did only females hatch? - Reptiles The Sex Ratio of Newly Hatched Alligators

  35. The warmer the incubation temperature, the greater the proportion of males. Drawing Conclusions: What effect does the temperature of developing eggs have on the sex of the baby alligators? - Reptiles The Sex Ratio of Newly Hatched Alligators

  36. According to the graph, out of the 50 alligators that were incubated at 31.7ºC, about 40 (or 80%) were males. So 80% of 100 eggs (80) could be expected to hatch as males. Calculating: If 100 eggs developed at 31.7ºC, about how many of the young would be male? - Reptiles The Sex Ratio of Newly Hatched Alligators

  37. - Reptiles Extinct Reptiles–The Dinosaurs • Dinosaurs were the earliest vertebrates that had legs positioned directly beneath their bodies.

  38. - Reptiles Identifying Main Ideas • As you read the information under the heading “Adaptations for Life on Land,” write the main idea in a graphic organizer like the one below. Then write three supporting details that further explain the main idea. Main Idea Reptiles are adapted to conserve water. Detail Detail Detail Reptiles have a thick, scaly skin that prevents water loss. Reptile eggs have a shell and membranes that keep them from drying out. A reptile’s kidneys concentrate wastes before excreting them so that little water is lost.

  39. - Reptiles More on Reptiles • Click the PHSchool.com button for an activity about reptiles.

  40. End of Section:Reptiles

  41. - Vertebrate History in Rocks Interpretation of Fossils • Fossils are the preserved remains of remains or traces of animals, plants, and other organisms from the remote past. • http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/investigations/es2903/es2903page01.cfm • Fossils most often form in layers of sedimentary rock which is made of hardened clay, sand, mud, or silt.

  42. A paleontologist is a scientist who studies paleontology, learning about the forms of life that existed in former geologic periods, chiefly by studying fossils. • Types of fossil preservation: • Cold or Warm/Dry environments favor the fossilization process because lack of decomposing bacteria • Famous Fossil Discoveries • Lucy • Ardi • Megalosaurus

  43. - Vertebrate History in Rocks Interpretation of Fossils • The pattern of vertebrate evolution is branching.

  44. Oldest Living Things On Our Planet

  45. - Vertebrate History in Rocks Asking Questions • Before you read, preview the red headings. In a graphic organizer like the one below, ask a what or how question for each heading. As you read, write answers to your questions. Questions Answers How do fossils form? Fossils form from imprints or the remains of organisms. How are fossils interpreted? Scientists examine fossil structure and make comparisons to present-day organisms.

  46. - Vertebrate History in Rocks Links on Fossils • Click the SciLinks button for links on fossils.

  47. - Vertebrate History in Rocks Interpreting Fossils • Click the Video button to watch a movie aboutinterpreting fossils.

  48. End of Section:Vertebrate History in Rocks

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