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Chapter 34 Reading Quiz. The deuterostome branch has two modern phyla: the chordates & the ____________. List the four anatomical features that characterize the Phylum Chordata. (4 point question). 1. Describe the four unique characteristics of chordates.
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Chapter 34 Reading Quiz • The deuterostome branch has two modern phyla: the chordates & the ____________. • List the four anatomical features that characterize the Phylum Chordata. (4 point question)
1. Describe the four unique characteristics of chordates. • Notochord flexible rod located between the gut and nerve cord • Dorsal hollow nerve cord where the brain & spinal cord develop • Pharyngeal slits similar to gills, allows water through mouth to exit before digestive system • Muscular postanal tail
2. Distinguish between the three subphyla of the phylum Chordata and give examples of each. • Urochordata tunicates - are filter feeders and sessile • Cephalochordata lancelets - all 4 characteristics persist into adulthood • Vertebrates any animal with a backbone - have a greater degree of cephalization
3. Describe the specialized characteristics found in the subphylum Vertebrata and explain how each is beneficial to survival. • Neural crest helps with formation of certain skeletal components • Cephalization sensory organs on anterior end for quicker processing • Vertebral column support and strong anchor – basic skeleton • Closed circulatory system heart, arteries, capillaries, veins
4. Compare and contrast members of Agnatha, Placadermi, and Chondrichthyes. • Agnatha jawless fishes (400-500 mya) - lampreys, hagfishes, about 60 species • Placadermi now extinct, has paired fins and hinged jaws • Chondrichthyes 750 species - sharks, skates, and rays - skeletons of cartilage, well-developed jaws, paired fins, lateral line system - sexual reproduction with internal fertilization
5. Explain how members of the class Osteichthyes have become so diversified. • 30,000 species • They spread from freshwater to marine and back at some point • Swim bladders • Maneuverable swimmers • Lobe-finned • Lungfishes • Ray-finned fishes
6. Summarize the evidence supporting the fact that amphibians evolved from crossopterygians. • Evolved from lobe-finned fishes (skeletal structure) • Anatomical similarities • Molecular data suggests close relation to lungfishes
7. Distinguish between the three orders of living amphibians. • Urodela salamanders, 400 species • Anura frogs and toads, 3500 species • Apoda caecilians (legless & blind), 150 species
8. List the distinguishing characteristics of members of the class Reptilia and explain any special adaptations to the terrestrial environment. • Scales prevent desiccation & dehydration • Gas exchange via lungs • Dioecious with sexual reproduction and internal fertilization - most are oviparous and produce an amniotic egg • Ectotherms use behavioral adaptations to absorb solar energy and regulate body temperature - can survive on less than 10% calories of that of mammals
9. Explain how environmental changes during the Cretaceous Period may have affected the dinosaurs. • The climate became cooler and more variable and mass extinctions occurred • A few survived into the early Cenozoic, but all these reptiles were gone by the end of the Cretaceous (65 mya)
10. List the distinguishing characteristics of members of the class Aves and explain any special adaptations for flight. • Each part of bird anatomy is modified in some way that enhances flight • Bones with honeycombed internal structure • No teeth, a gizzard • Endothermic and insulated (feathers) • 4 chambered heart with efficient lungs • Well-developed nervous system • Dioecious with sexual reproduction and internal fertilization
11. Summarize the evidence supporting the fact that birds evolved from reptilian ancestors. • Possess distinct reptilian characteristics such as the amniotic egg and scales on legs • Common ancestor Archaeopteryx lithographica - clawed forelimbs, teeth, long tail, feathers - not considered direct ancestor to modern birds but a side branch • Birds arose from a theropod ancestor
12. Explain why mammals underwent an adaptive radiation during the Cenozoic. • 4500 species • The extinction of the dinosaurs and fragmentation of continents opened new adaptive zones at the end of the Mesozoic era
13. Distinguish between monotreme, marsupial, and placental mammals. • Monotreme egg laying, hair, milk - found in Australia - Ex: platypus, spiny echidna • Marsupials young are born early and finish development in pouch, attached to teat - mostly Australia - Ex: kangaroos, opossum, koala • Placental uterus, placenta, live birth - also called “eutherian”
14. Explain how convergent evolution produced marsupial and placental ecological counterparts on different continents. • Marsupials and placentals diverged from a common ancestor about 80 – 100 mya • Adaptive radiation during the late Cretaceous and early Tertiary periods (70 – 45 mya) produced the orders of extant placental mammals
15. Compare and contrast the four main evolutionary lines of placental mammals. • Chiroptera & Insectivora bats and shrews, modified forelimbs
Lagomorpha, Perissodactyla, Artiodactyla, Sirenia, Proboscidea - rabbits, odd-toed and even-toed ungulates, sea cows (manatees), and elephants - medium herbivores
Carnivora cats, dogs, sea lions, etc • Primates & Rodentia rats, squirrels, beavers; monkeys, apes, humans
16. Describe the characteristics found in early primates which indicate an arboreal (tree-living) existence. • Limber shoulder joints which allow swinging • Dexterous hands for hanging and manipulating food • Sensitive fingers with nails, not claws • Eyes close together for good depth perception (to swing) • Excellent hand-eye coordination • Parental care with usual single births and long nurturing of offspring
17. Appraise the significance of the three most prominent misconceptions about human evolution. • Our ancestors were chimpanzees or other modern apes actual: they represent 2 divergent branches of the anthropoid lineage evolved from a common, less specialized ancestor • Human evolution represents a ladder with a series of steps leading directly from an ancestral anthropoid to Homo sapiens actual: progressively have become more modern, many branches and dead ends along the way • Various human characteristics like posture and brain evolved in unison actual: mosaic evolution different things evolved at different times
18. Diagram and evolutionary tree for humans. • First of all: it is uncertain • Humans and apes diverged 6 – 8 mya from a common African anthropoid • Australopithecus africanus erect, teeth & hands like ours, 1/3 the brain, about 3 – 4 mya • Australopithecus afarensis “Lucy”, 1m tall, upright • A. anamensis • A. ramidus • Homo habilis coexisted with Australopithecus • H. erectus 1.8 mya – 250,000; taller, larger brain, Neanderthals • H. sapiens out of Africa
19. Explain how humans have influenced the extinction rates of other organisms. • Humans are the most numerous and widespread of the large animals rate of extinctions this century is 50x greater than the average for the past 100,000 years due mostly to habitat destruction, chemical pollution, overpopulation temperature increase, alteration of world climate, fossil fuel consumption especially rain forests (effect on species & world) • Homo sapiens may be the most devastating crisis in the history of life