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Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom Animalia

... Have a hard covering (exoskeleton) and molt as part of the growth process; have jointed legs; three-part body (head, thorax, and abdomen); includes crustaceans (crabs, shrimp, lobster, crayfish), arachnids (spiders) and insects; is the largest phylum of animals containing 97% of all living animals o ...
6.3.1 Compare the characteristic structures of invertebrate animals
6.3.1 Compare the characteristic structures of invertebrate animals

... 6.3.1 Compare the characteristic structures of invertebrate animals (including sponges, segmented worms, echinoderms, mollusks, and arthropods) and vertebrate animals (fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals). Animal Kingdom is divided into 35 different phyla. These phyla can be classified in ...
The Animal Kingdom Chapter 2: Mollusks, Arthropods and
The Animal Kingdom Chapter 2: Mollusks, Arthropods and

... – Three body segments: head, thorax and abdomen. – Three pairs of legs attached to the thorax. – One pair of antenna. – Some have one or two pairs of wings; some have no wings. – Large, compound eyes; some also have simple eyes. – Open circulatory system. ...
04 CRAYFISH 2008
04 CRAYFISH 2008

... -can’t roll over ...
Animal Body Symmetry
Animal Body Symmetry

... When studying and describing animals, some basic body characteristics are important. These include: Animal Body Symmetry – the way body parts are arranged around a center point. ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Most live on land – but water is required due to external fertilization: ...
Arthropods
Arthropods

...  Live on soft bottoms in shallow water on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of North America and South East Asia.  Horseshoe-shaped carapace that encloses body with five pairs of appendages. ...
Animal Evolution
Animal Evolution

... Turtles (shell attached to skeleton) Lizards (the most diverse reptiles) Snakes (limbless) Crocodilians (closest relatives of birds) ...
Document
Document

... B. about the same time as the first reptiles. C. during the Triassic when dinosaurs were the dominant land animals. D. long after the extinction of the dinosaurs. ...
File
File

... (jointed-foot) consists of most of the known animals and many are enormously abundant as individuals. The general characteristics of the arthropods include a hard exoskeleton called a cuticle made up of chitin and proteins. This hard exoskeleton gives the organism’s segmented body protection and a p ...
Mollusks and Echinoderm PowerPoint
Mollusks and Echinoderm PowerPoint

... to digest it—then suck the predigest liquid into its mouth. – Have book lungs where O2 and CO2 are exchanged. ...
Introduction to Animals
Introduction to Animals

... Support Systems • Have some type of skeletal support • Endoskeleton inside and made of cartilage &/or bone • Exoskeletons found in arthropods – Cover the outside of the body – Limit size – Must be molted making animal vulnerable to predators ...
Arthropods - ustarbiology
Arthropods - ustarbiology

... regions, called tagmata (e.g., head, thorax, abdomen). The paired appendages (e.g., legs, antennae) are jointed. They posses a chitinous exoskeletion that must be shed during growth. They have bilateral symmetry. The nervous system is dorsal (belly) and the circulatory system is open and ventral (ba ...
Segmented Worms
Segmented Worms

... When studying and describing animals, some basic body characteristics are important. These include: Animal Body Symmetry - the way body parts are arranged around a center point. Directions on the body - used to describe areas on the body of an animal. ...
Chapter 14 Notes - Herscher CUSD #2
Chapter 14 Notes - Herscher CUSD #2

...  Internal organs are bathed by body fluids in the hemocoel  provides for the exchange of nutrients, wastes, and gases ...
Classifying Organisms
Classifying Organisms

... reproducing. Some frogs lay eggs in plants, some carry the eggs inside of their bodies, and some frogs carry their eggs around on their backs. Eggs that are laid in water develop into larvae, such as tadpoles, first. Then they later change into an adult form, such as a frog, that looks very differen ...
Arthropods!
Arthropods!

... adapted to catching prey: ◦ Some spiders spin webs to trap prey. ◦ They also have chelicerae modified as fangs that inject venom. ◦ Spiders can also immobilize their prey by wrapping them in silk. ...
animal groups - New Path Learning
animal groups - New Path Learning

... An AMPHIBIAN is an animal.  Amphibians live on water and on land.  When they live in water, they breathe through gills.  When they live on land, they breathe through their lungs. ...
Animal Kingdom Vertebrates
Animal Kingdom Vertebrates

... Have outer covering made of feathers, two legs used for walking or perching, and forelimbs modified into wings Feathers separate birds from all other animal species Feathers provide insulation for warmth; can generate on body heat Beak/Bills adapted to type of food they eat Highly efficient respirat ...
Animal Kingdom Vertebrates Biology 1
Animal Kingdom Vertebrates Biology 1

... Have outer covering made of feathers, two legs used for walking or perching, and forelimbs modified into wings Feathers separate birds from all other animal species Feathers provide insulation for warmth; can generate on body heat Beak/Bills adapted to type of food they eat Highly efficient respirat ...
Animals
Animals

... other, many of them have similar features that allow us to put them into groups. • Putting different species into different groups according to their features is called classification. ...
Chordate Test Review Pre AP
Chordate Test Review Pre AP

... _______Reptiles____________ do not undergo metamorphosis either. They develop in an ____amniotic_________ egg with a ______leathery____________ shell. Once they hatch, respiration is only through _____lungs________. Most reptiles have the ability to pick up scent molecules with their tongue. They fl ...
Animal Characteristics
Animal Characteristics

... Animals tend to exhibit cephalization. • Cephalization: – concentration of sensory and brain structures in the anterior end (a cephalized animal has a head). The more complex an animal the more pronounced the degree of ...
CRAYFISH BODY SYSTEMS
CRAYFISH BODY SYSTEMS

... CEPHALIZATION (has a head with cerebral ganglia) Crustaceans are only arthropods with 2 PAIR of ANTENNA long ANTENNA: touch & taste; short ANTENNULES: touch, taste and EQUILIBRIUM; DECAPOD = 10 pair of legs (8 walking legs & 2 chelipeds) EXOSKELETON made of CHITIN and PROTEINS and LIPIDS (CALCIUM CA ...
Lesson 8 Classifying Animals pg. 46-49
Lesson 8 Classifying Animals pg. 46-49

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Terrestrial locomotion



Terrestrial locomotion has evolved as animals adapted from aquatic to terrestrial environments. Locomotion on land raises different problems than that in water, with reduced friction being replaced by the effects of gravity.There are three basic forms of locomotion found among terrestrial animalsLegged - Moving by using appendagesLimbless locomotion - moving without legs, primarily using the body itself as a propulsive structure.Rolling - rotating the body over the substrate
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