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Chapter 19 Chordate Characteristics Dorsal, hollow nerve cords Notocord between GI tract and nerve cord Pharyngeal slits Post-anal tail Phylum Chordata Subphylum Urochordata Sea squirts Adult has pharyngeal slits only, larva has all four No brain Subphylum Cephalochordata Lancelets Suspension feeders Mucus net to trap food Simplistic brain, swollen tip of nerve cord Subphylum Craniata Species with a head containing a brain, sensory organs, and a skull Development of Vertebrates Class Agnatha (Jawless fish) Chordates with heads, no jaws, and a notocord for support Hagfishes Nearly blind, but excellent sense of smell and touch Enter holes in prey or create holes with tooth structures Ties tail in knots or secretes slime for feeding and protection Lampreys Larvae are suspension feeders that live in sediment Most are parasitic to fishes Attach to sides of fish and feeds on tissue and blood From ocean to Great Lakes by St. Lawrence Seaway Class Chondricthyes (Cartilaginous fishes) Flexible skeletons of cartilage Lateral line system to detect changes in water pressure and vibrations Sharks Detect prey through electrosensor s on their head Sharp vision and keen smell Rays Suspension feeders Dorsoventrally flattened with eyes on top of head Tails have spines that have venom glands Class Osteichthyes (Bony fishes) Ray-finned fishes Skeleton made of bone including the ray fins Operculum , protective flap covering the gills Can breathe without swimming, contrast shark Swim bladder, lung-derived organ to keep them afloat Adaptaions based on environment Female seahorses deposit eggs in male’s pouch to develop Lobe-finned fishes Rod shaped bones in pectoral and pelvic fins Coelocanth, lungfishes, and tetrapods Class Amphibia Damp habitats so water can supplement for lungs Skin has poison glands and coloration for defense Distribution limited by vulnerability to dehydration Caecilians Nearly blind and legless Live in moist tropical areas Frogs Most adult life on land Lay eggs in water and juveniles (tadpoles) live in water until metamorphosis Toads have rough skin and entirely terrestrial Mating calls during breeding season Class Reptilia Amniotes, eggs develop in protective sacs Include lizards, snakes, turtles, crocodilians, and dinosaurs Skin with scales and waterproofed by keratin ‘Cold-blooded’ so metabolism doesn’t make heat Ectothermic absorbs heat Dinosaurs may have been endothermic, using metabolism Snakes lost legs due to burrowing nature Crocodilians most time in water with nostrils out Class Aves Evolved from small, 2-legged dinosaurs (therapods) Body adapted for flight, strong but light No teeth, tail has few vertebrae, feather shafts hollow, and honeycombed bones Feathers provide lift and maneuverability High metabolism for energy demands of flight Endothermic so feathers act as insulation Highly efficient circulatory system, lungs, and vision Complex behavior, both sexes incubate eggs and feed Class Mammalia Hair and mammary glands that produce milk Endothermic so hair acts to insulate Efficient respiratory and circulatory systems for high metabolism Large brain and long parental care Differentiation of teeth for variety of foods Offspring are hatched or birthed Order Monotremata (Monotremes) Egg-laying mammals Duck-billed platypus and spiny anteaters are only existing members Subclass Theria Embryo is nurtured in the mother by a placenta Allows nutrients to diffuse between mother’s and embryo’s blood Infraclass Metatheria (Marsupials) Brief gestation Tiny offspring that develop in an external pouch Infraclass Eutheria (Eutherians) Bear fully developed live young Placental animals because more complex then marsupials Order Primates (Human order) Opposable thumb and big toe Aids grasping and manipulation behaviors Adapted for arboreal (tree-dwelling) life Flat nails and not claws Reduced olfaction, but increased reliance on vision Smaller noses, but larger eyes in front close together Smaller litter size, longer gestation, increased maternal care Fewer teeth, but specialized 2 incisors, 1 canine, 3 premolars, and 3 molars in each quadrant 2 taxonomic arrangements (generally) Prosimians Lemurs Only in Madagascar Evolved in isolation Primarily nocturnal Lorises Africa and southern Asia Loris All nocturnal Tarsiers Specialized for vertical climbing and leaping Southeast Asia and Indonesia Diet is almost completely animal matter Ring-tailed lemur Tarsier Anthropoids Monkeys (not monophyletic) Active during the day and live in social bands Forelimbs about equal length as hindlimbs New world Central and South America Nostrils wide open and far apart Long prehensile tail-specialized for grasping tree limbs Old world Africa and Asia Lack prehensile tail Nostrils open downward Hominoids (Apes) Hominoids (Apes) Lack tails Long arms and short legs Mainly vegetarians Humans are omnivorous, eating plants and animals More flexible Larger brain relative to body size High degree of social organization 5 divisions Hominoid Divisions Gibbons 9 species all in Southeast Asia Only entirely arboreal apes Smallest, lightest and most acrobatic Monogamous for life Orangutan Solitary species in rain forests of Sumatra and Borneo Largest arboreal mammal, occasionally move on ground Gorillas Largest ape found only in African rainforests Live in groups of up to 20 Stand upright, walk on 4 legs with knuckles on the ground Hominoid Divisions (cont.) Chimpanzees (and baboon) Knuckle walkers Tropical Africa Behavior closely mirrors humans Make simple tools Respond to mirrors Can learn human sign language Humans Hominid fossils found that are closer to humans than chimpanzees Human evolutionary branch, but don’t confuse with hominoid Humans didn’t evolve in a direct path. Dead end groups broke off and ended in extinction; except for us. From Hominoid to Hominid Initial theory Increased brain size credited with divergence Led to changes in food-gathering skills, parental care, and social interactions Bipedalism, upright walking , afterwards Hypothesis untested till female skeleton, ‘Lucy’, found Bipedilism conclusively shown to emerge first Opening at base of skull supports upright evolution Quaprepeds have openings that angle back Stephen Gould, “mankind stood up first, and got smart later.” From Hominid to Homo Evidence from fossils and comparing to earlier species Increased skull size relative to brain can estimate brain size which can indicate intelligence Complexity of tools found Changes in teeth and jaws Smaller to adapt to meat eating and allow brain growth in skull Long, slender legs with hip joints for distance walking Narrow pelvis constrained fetal head size so parental care needed for longer Homo sapien Spread All living humans suggested to originate from ancestors in Africa Mitochondrial DNA, inherited maternally All trace to one common woman Y chromosomes, passed from father to son Mutations can serve as markers for ancestry Believed to spread because of increased cognition Capacity to speak strong factor Emergence of Speech Human language is unique Other animals vocalize sounds to communicate Human communication is more complex which creates societies with shared language Used in concrete and abstract ways FOXP2 gene linked to a family with impaired speech and brain development Found in other species Humans and song-birds are most similar Both learn vocalization from others of the species Linked to brain development of speech area Other genes contribute, but connected to passing on Skin Color Skin color varies geographically One of the most striking differences Not genetically distinct Results from melanin, a pigment of specialized skin cells Activity levels effect degree of pigmentation Absorbs visible and UV light Synthesizes vitamin D, necessary for bone development Less pigment adapted to maximize vitamin D as moved north Protects folate degradation Necessary for fetal development Damaged by UV light Pigmentation Trade Off Hypothesized as an adaptation trade off Balanced folate protection with vitamin D production Similar environments have similar pigmentations Not a useful phylogenetic character