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Transcript
Animal Groups
Animal Evolution –
The Invertebrates
Chapter 23
Comparing Key Groups
Body Symmetry: Radial and Bilateral
ƒ Most animals are bilateral
ƒ Evolutionary trends toward
• Greater size
• Compartmentalization (division of labor among
cells, tissues, and organs)
• Integration of specialized activities that keep the
organism alive
1
Body Organization
Body Cavities
ƒ Cephalization
ƒ Most bilateral animals
have a coelom and a
complete gut
• Sensory cells concentrated at the head
ƒ Segmentation
• Repetition of body units, front-to-back
Key Concepts:
INTRODUCING THE ANIMALS
placozoans
sponges cnidarians flatworms rotifers mollusks annelids roundworms arthropods echinoderms chordates
protostomes,
mouth forms first in embryos
radial ancestry,
two germ layers
no true tissues
deuterostomes,
anus forms first in embryos
bilateral ancestry,
three germ layers
true tissues
ƒ Animals
• Multicelled heterotrophs (ingest other organisms)
• Grow and develop through a series of stages
• Actively move about during all or part of life cycle
multicelled body
fungi
choanoflagellates
ƒ Cells of most animals form tissues and
extracellular matrixes
Fig. 23.6, p.364
2
23.3 Sponges (Phylum Porifera)
Sponges
ƒ Sponges
• No symmetry, tissues, or organs
• Flattened cells line the body wall (many pores;
spikes of silica and/or proteins)
• Filter feeders (flagellated collar cells absorb food;
amoeboid cells digest and distribute it)
• Hermaphrodites
• Zygote develops into free-living larva
23.4 Cnidarians (Phylum Cnidaria)
Cnidarian Body Plans
ƒ Jellyfishes, corals, and sea anemones
• Radial, tentacled carnivores
• Gastrovascular cavity (respiration and digestion)
• True epithelial tissues with a jellylike matrix in
between
• Simple nervous system (nerve net)
• Hydrostatic skeleton
3
Unique Cnidarian Weapons
Cnidarian Predators
ƒ Nematocysts
• Used to capture prey and for defense
Cnidarian Life Cycles
23.5 Flatworms (Phylum Platyhelminthes)
ƒ Free-living turbellarians (planarians), parasitic
tapeworms and flukes
• Simplest animals with organ systems
• Paired nerve cords, ganglia
• Hermaphrodites
4
Parasite Life Cycle: Blood Fluke
Parasite Life Cycle: Tapeworm
23.6 Annelids
ƒ Segmented worms (earthworms, polychaetes)
and leeches
• Closed circulatory system
• Digestive and excretory systems, soluteregulating nephridia
• Nervous system, ganglia in each segment
• Muscles and fluid in chambers act as a
hydrostatic skeleton
• Hermaphrodites
head
end
secretory organ
Fig. 23.18, p.371
5
Polychaete
23.7 Mollusks (Phylum Mollusca)
ƒ Including gastropods (snails), bivalves
(scallops), chitons, nudibranchs, cephalopods
• 100,000 named species
Aquatic Snail Body Plan
Cephalopods
ƒ The fastest (squids), largest (giant squids), and
smartest (octopuses) invertebrates
ƒ Have a mantle
• Sheetlike part of the body mass, draped back on
itself
6
Cephalopods
Cuttlefish Body Plan
23.8 Roundworms (Phylum Nematoda)
Parasitic Roundworms
ƒ More than 22,000 kinds of roundworms
•
•
•
•
•
•
Free-living decomposers or parasites
Some agricultural pests and human parasites
Cylindrical body with bilateral features
A cuticle that is molted
A complete gut
Organ systems in a false coelom
7
Key Concepts:
BILATERAL INVERTEBRATES
Simple Arthropods
ƒ Trilobite, millipede, centipede
ƒ Most animals show bilateral symmetry
ƒ Bilateral animals have tissues, organs, and
organ systems
ƒ All adult tissues arise from two or three simple
layers that form in early embryos
Arthropod Characteristics
23.10 Chelicerates
ƒ Key arthropod adaptations
ƒ Horseshoe crabs and arachnids (spiders,
scorpions, ticks, and mites)
•
•
•
•
Hardened exoskeleton
Jointed appendages
Specialized and fused segments (wings)
Efficient respiratory and sensory structures (eyes,
antennae)
• Predators, parasites, or scavengers
8
23.11 Crustaceans
Insect Diversity
ƒ Mostly marine crustaceans (crabs, lobsters,
barnacles, krill, and copepods)
23.13 Unwelcome Arthropods
23.14 Echinoderms
ƒ Spiders, ticks, and mosquitoes
ƒ Sea stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, etc.
• Exoskeleton with spines, spicules, or plates of
calcium carbonate
• Water-vascular system with tube feet
• Adults are radial, but bilateral traits appear in
larval stages
9
Echinoderms: “Spiny-Skinned”
Fig. 23.34, p.381
24.1 Chordate Heritage
ƒ Four features define chordates
Animal Evolution –
The Vertebrates
Chapter 24
•
•
•
•
A notochord
A dorsal hollow nerve cord
A pharynx with gill slits
A tail extending past the anus
ƒ All features form in embryos
• May or may not persist in adults
10
Chordate Family Tree
Invertebrate Chordates
ƒ Tunicates and lancelets (marine filter-feeders)
Lancelet Body Plan
Craniates
ƒ Chordates with a braincase of cartilage or bone
• Hagfish (jawless fish): Simplest modern craniate
11
24.2 Vertebrate Evolution
Major Vertebrate Groups
ƒ Key innovations laid the foundation for adaptive
radiations of vertebrates
• Vertebral column of cartilaginous or bony
segments
• Jaws evolved in predatory fishes
• Gills evolved in water, then lungs for dry land
• Paired fins were a starting point for other limbs
ƒ Gill-Supporting Structures
Key Concepts:
TRENDS AMONG VERTEBRATES
24.3 Jawed Fishes and Tetrapods
ƒ In some vertebrate lineages, a backbone replaced the notochord as
the partner of muscles used in motion
ƒ Jawed fishes
ƒ Jaws evolved, sparking the evolution of novel sensory organs and
brain expansions
ƒ On land, lungs replaced gills, and more efficient blood circulation
enhanced gas exchange
ƒ Fleshy fins with skeletal supports evolved into limbs, now typical of
vertebrates on land
• Cartilaginous fishes (sharks and rays)
• Bony fishes
ƒ Body plans adapted to life in water
• Streamlined shape reduces drag
• Swim bladder (in bony fishes) adjusts buoyancy
12
Cartilaginous Fishes
Bony Fishes
ƒ The most diverse vertebrates
• Lungfishes
• Lobe-finned fishes (coelacanth)
• Ray-finned fishes
Early Lineages
24.4 Amphibians
ƒ Coelacanth, lungfish, and Devonian tetrapod
ƒ Frogs, toads, and salamanders
• Carnivorous vertebrates
• Adapted to life on land (lungs, 3-chambered
heart)
• Nearly all return to the water to reproduce
13
Amphibian Evolution
24.5 Vanishing Amphibians
ƒ Many amphibians now face extinction due to
pollution and habitat loss
24.6 Amniotes
24.7 Dinosaur Extinctions
ƒ K-T asteroid impact hypothesis
ƒ First vertebrates able to complete their life cycle
on dry land
• A huge asteroid impact caused extinction of last
dinosaurs; spared earliest birds and mammals
• Water-conserving skin and kidneys
• Amniote eggs (four membranes)
• Active life-styles
14
24.8 Modern Reptiles
ƒ Major Groups
•
•
•
•
•
Turtles (shell attached to skeleton)
Lizards (the most diverse reptiles)
Snakes (limbless)
Tuataras (some amphibian-like traits; third eye)
Crocodilians (closest relatives of birds)
Fig. 24.17, p.397
Fig. 24.17, p.397
Fig. 24.17, p.397
15
Reptile Characteristics
hindbrain, midbrain,
forebrain
ƒ General characteristics
• Live on land or in water
• Cold-blooded
• Have a cloaca (opening for wastes and
reproduction)
• Eggs are fertilized in the body, usually laid on
land
olfactory lobe
(sense of smell)
spinal vertebral
cord column
gonad
kidney (control of water,
solute levels in internal
environment)
snout
unmatched rows
of teeth on upper
and lower jaws esophagus lung heart liver stomach
intestine
cloaca
Fig. 24.16, p.396
24.9 Birds
Bird Eggs
ƒ Birds are the only modern animals with feathers
ƒ Birds are warm-blooded amniotes
16
Adaptations for Flight and Migration
24.10 Mammals
ƒ Feathers, lightweight bones, and highly efficient
respiratory and circulatory systems
ƒ Animals with hair, females that nourish young
with milk from mammary glands, a single lower
jawbone and four kinds of teeth
Modern Mammals
Three Major Lineages
ƒ Three major lineages
• Egg-laying mammals (monotremes)
• Pouched mammals (marsupials)
• Placental mammals (eutherians), the most
diverse and widespread mammals
17
Placental Mammals
Primates
Primate Evolution
The Foramen Magnum
ƒ Four-legged walkers versus upright walkers
ƒ Key trends
•
•
•
•
•
•
Better daytime vision
Upright walking (bipedalism)
More refined hand movements
Smaller teeth
Bigger brains
Social complexity (extended parental care;
culture evolved in some lineages)
18
24.12 Emergence of Early Humans
Australopiths: Upright Walking
ƒ Hominoids and hominids originated in Africa
Early Humans
24.13 Emergence of Modern Humans
ƒ Humans (Homo) arose 2 million years ago
ƒ Extinct Neandertals and modern humans are
close relatives with distinct gene pools
• H. habilis was an early toolmaking species
• H. erectus dispersed into Europe and Asia
ƒ Modern H. sapiens evolved 195,000 years ago
19
Dispersal of Homo sapiens
ƒ Based on fossils and studies of genetic markers
20