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Introduction to Animals. Characteristics. Multicellular Organization Heterotrophic Sexual reproduction and development Movement. Multicellular Organization. Most animals contain large numbers of cells. Humans contain 50 trillion cells. In most animals, there is a division of labor.
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Characteristics • Multicellular Organization • Heterotrophic • Sexual reproduction and development • Movement
Multicellular Organization • Most animals contain large numbers of cells. • Humans contain 50 trillion cells. • In most animals, there is a division of labor. • Specialization is the adaptation of a cell for a particular function. • Tissues are the organization of cells. Cell are able to organize by the joining of cells by cell junctions. • Cell specialization has allowed organisms to evolve and adapt to many environments.
Animals are Heterotrophic • They must obtain complex organic material from other sources. • Most accomplish this through ingestion. • Digestion is accomplished within the animal. This process extracts the carbohydrates, protein and lipids from the food eaten.
Sexual Reproduction and Development • Sexual reproduction restores the diploid number and increases genetic variation. • During the developmental process, the zygote undergoes many mitotic divisions. These identical cells must undergo differentiation. • Differentiation is process of cell becoming different from each other and being specialized.
Movement • Most animal are able to move. • The ability to move results from the interrelations of two types of tissues found only in animals: nervous tissue and muscular tissue. • There are a few animals that are sessile.
Origin and Classification • The first animals probably arose from the sea. • Taxonomists have grouped animals into several phyla based on evolutionary relationships. • Many taxonomist recognize 30 or more animal phyla. We will investigate 11 phyla. Ten of the phyla include invertebrates and only Chordata includes the vertebrates.
Animal Body Structure • Symmetry • Germ layers • Body Cavities
Symmetry • Symmetry refers to the consistent overall pattern of structure of an animal. • Animals have three patterns of symmetry. • Asymmetry – no symmetry • Radial Symmetry – similar parts branch in all directions from a central point • Bilateral Symmetry- similar halves on either side of a central plane.
Most animals have a dorsal, ventral, anterior and posterior side or orientation. • Dorsal – top • Ventral – bottom • Anterior – head • Posterior - tail • Most animals exhibit cephalization, the concentration of sensory and brain structures in the anterior. Animals with cephalization have a head!
Germ Layers • Germ layers are fundamental tissue types found in all animals except sponges (no true tissues). • Ectoderm • Mesoderm • Endoderm
Body Cavities • Most animals have a fluid filled space that forms between the digestive tract and the outer wall of the body during development. This space is known as a COELOM.
Acoelomate (without a coelom) • 2 germ layers • ectoderm and endoderm • not separated by a cavity • least complex body plan • sponges and cnidarians • 3 layer acoelomate • 3 germ layers • endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm • not separated by a cavity • flatworms • Pseudocoelomate • pseudocoelom • cavity formed between mesoderm and endoderm • roundworms and rotifers • Coelomate • cavity developed within the mesoderm • most complex body plan • mollusks, annelids, arthropods, echinoderms, and chordates
Animal Diversity • Invertebrates • 10 phyla • 95% of animals • Chordates • Notochord • Dorsal nerve cord • Pharyngeal pouches • Postanal tail • Vertebrates • Include fishes, birds and mammals
What is the difference in a vertebrate and an invertebrate? A vertebrate is an animal with a backbone and invertebrates do not have a backbone.
Comparison of Invertebrates and Vertebrates • Vocabulary