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Vertebrates! Fish & Amphibians! Created by: Andrew Alyssa Robin Chordates • All Chordates have: – A notochord – a hollow dorsal nerve cord – Pharyngeal Slits – Post-Anal Tail Chordata • Unlike echinoderms, the class Agnatha: – Hagfish and other chordate have bilateral body symmetry. – Skeletons are NOT made of calcite, but cartilage. – They have evolved from craniates This is a hagfish. Be scared. Word of the Day • Paedogenesis- the act of reproduction by an organism that has not achieved physical maturity. – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paedogenesis Chondrichthyes: Bony Fishes! • Jawed fishies obtained jaws when the two skeletal supporting rods in their gills modified to open and close their mouth • This eventually strengthened to form jaws to capture food. Sharks V. Bony Fish • Bony Fish: – Their skeleton is of bone, go figure. – Their upper jaw is attacthed to their skull. – It gets better, they sometimes have this 2nd set of jaws called a pharyngeal. Don’t ask me. • Sharks: – Shark’s skeletons are formed from cartilage, like your ear! – Shark’s have an upper jaw which is NOT attached to their skull. Chondrichthyes: Sharkies! Chondrichthyes: Sharkies! • To adapt to sea life, a shark has: – Gills • To extract the 02 from the H20 – Fins • dorsal, caudal, anal, pelvic, and pectoral. The latter two of which are paired. – Tail • Provides forward thrust, whereas fins direct water flow. Buoyancy • Sharks use a large liver filled with oil to stay buoyant. • Sharks skeletal system is made of cartilage which is half as dense as bone. • Whereas, bone fish use gas-filled bladders as their buoyancy system. Lateral Line System • Primary purpose of the LLS – Detection of vibrations cause by other organisms’ movement. – Can be use by ie., a shark to detect a wounded fish. Shark’s Skin! • Layers of Flexible collagenous fibers called dermal denticles. – Acts like an outer skeleton – Reduces drag from water • Bony Fishes use bony scales for skin – Layered with mucus to protect from infections and reduce drag. Amphibian(s) Amphibia • The Bare Facts of Amphibia: – THREE-Chamber heart – Cold Blooded – Derive Heat From Sunlight – Produce Larvae Amphibia v. Land • To deal with the enviroment of land, amphibians developed: – Legs: Not only for swimming, but support them on land. – Gills replaced with lungs – Skin excretes mucus to stay moist. Breeding • For amphibians to breed, they must return to water • For those who don’t they need at least need a moist environment • This is because the egg is jelly-like, without moisture the egg will dry out. Amniote Examples Vertebrata • ALL VERTEBRATE HAVE: – A stiff rod running through the length of the animal with a hollow tube of nervous tissue above it and the gastrointestinal tract below. • Tetrapods were essentially the first land bound creatures, developing four (tetra) legs (pods). More Evolution etc. • Amniotic eggs are the next step in evolution, where eggs good be laid on land (ie., turtles) • The Amniotes are the organisms that breed amniotic eggs. – In Humans, the amniotic sac is layers of a amniotic membrane – The earliest amniotes were lizard like creatures who laid their brood on land and returned to the sea.