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Name _____________________________________________________________ Period _____ Chapter 27: Introduction to Animals Section 1 Characteristics of Animals Objectives: Identify the features that animals have in common. Distinguish radial symmetry from bilateral symmetry. Summarize the importance of a body cavity. Identify how scientists determine evolutionary relationships among animals. Characteristics of Animals (Video clip) __________________________ __________________________ ____________ make their own food Must seek out __________ sources. Movement in many different ways to seek: o ____________ o ____________ o ____________ Sexual Reproduction Differentiation of ____________ General Features of Animals Heterotrophy Animals are _____________________ — that is, they __________ make their own food. Most animals move from place to place searching for food. Once food is located, it is eaten and then digested in a _______________ inside the animal’s body. Comparing Autotrophs and Heterotrophs (Video Clip) Autotophs obtain energy by _________________ their own food. o Most autotrophs, such as plants, use ________________ as their source of energy. o Other autotrophs use ___________ in their environment as their source of energy. Hetertrophs must take in food to meet their energy needs. Mobility Animals are unique among living things in being able to perform rapid, _____________ movements. Animals move by means of ___________________________, specialized cells that are able to ______________ with considerable force. Animals can swim, crawl, walk, run, and even fly. In fact, _________________________ _____________________ among animals, in insects, pterosaurs (extinct reptiles from the time of the dinosaurs), birds, and bats. Multicellularity All animals are _________________________. In spite of differences in body size, there is _______________________________ in the _____________________________________________ that make up these animals. The cells on the skin of your hand are roughly the same size as the cells in the heart of a whale or in the wing muscle of a hummingbird. Comparing Organisms That Are Unicellular and Multicellular (Video clip) Unicellular Organism Multicellular Organism _____________ : 1 ________ : over 100 trillion # of cells Example & Number of cells Can individual cell live on its own? Diploidy With few exceptions, animals are ____________, meaning adults have ____ copies of each chromosome, ______ inherited from their father and _____ from their mother. Only their ________________ (egg and sperm) are _______________. A great advantage of diploidy is that it permits an animal to _______________________ between the two copies of a set of chromosomes, creating _________________________ of genes. Comparing Haploid and Diploid Cells (Video Clip) Examples of organisms Diploid Haploid ____________ & many other ___________________ ____________________ & ________________ (sperm & eggs) of many eukaryotes # of sets of chromosomes # of chromosomes in humans Sexual Reproduction __________________________________________________ by producing gametes, as do many plants, fungi, and protists. The _____________________________________________ than the males’ sperm cells. Unlike the egg cells, the sperm cells of animals have a flagella and are highly _________. Absence of a Cell Wall Among the cells of multicellular organisms, only animal cells lack rigid _____________. The _________________________________________________________________ that other multicellular organisms do not have. You may not realize this, but there are ________________________________________ _______________________. Cells called macrophages, for example, act as mobile garbage collectors, crawling over tissues and removing debris. Blastula Formation In all animals except sponges, the _____________ (_____________________________) undergoes cell divisions that form a hollow ball of cells called a __________________. Cells within the blastula eventually develop into three distinct layers of cells— ___________________, ___________________, and ___________________. These layers are called the ________________ tissue layers because they ____________ _______________________________________________________________________. Origin of Animal Tissues and Organs Cleavage and Blastula Formation (Video clip) After fertilization, a zygote undergoes ____________, a series of rapid mitotic divisions. The fertilized cell first divides into ____ cells each of which is roughly _________ the size of the original. Each of these ___________________ cells divides again. The resulting cells are roughly _______ the size of the fertilized egg. This process continues until the zygote is a mass of cells. While the ________________ ___________________________, the total ________________________________ has remained roughly the _____________ as that of the fertilized egg. The zygote has become a hollow ball of cells called a ____________________. The hollow space in the center of the blastula is called a blastocoel. Cleavage and Blastula Formation Tissues The cells of all animals except sponges are organized into structural and functional units called __________________. Tissues are ______________________________________________________ that work together to perform a specific function. Body Symmetry All animals have their own particular _____________________, a term used to describe an animal’s ___________, _________________, and ____________________________. An animal’s body plan results from a pattern of development ______________________ into the animal’s __________________________________________. Sponges have the simplest body plan of all animals. Sponges are asymmetrical, or _____ ____________________, and sometimes their shape depends on where they are growing. Radial Symmetry • Animals with radial symmetry have body ____________________________ around a ___________________________, somewhat like the spokes around a bicycle wheel. • A plane passing through the central axis divides the organism into roughly equal halves. • Today’s radially symmetrical animals are ___________________. Most move slowly or drift in ocean currents. Bilateral Symmetry • The bodies of _______________________________ show bilateral symmetry, a body design in which there are _________________________________________________. • A plane passing through the animal’s ____________________ divides the animal into mirror image halves. • Most bilaterally symmetrical animals have evolved an anterior concentration of sensory structures and nerves, a process called _______________________________. Radial and Bilateral Symmetries Symmetry in Body Structure (Video clip) The symmetry of an animal describes the overall pattern or structure of its body. Sponges are irregular in shape; they are called ______________________________. In an animal with ________________ symmetry, the body parts are arranged in a circle around a central point. Sea anemones have radial symmetry. You can cut through the center of a sea anemone in any direction and both halves would look the _______________. Most animals have _____________________ symmetry Two sides of their bodies ____________ each other. There is only one way you could cut through the center of a bilaterally symmetrical organism for both halves to look the same. Animals with bilateral symmetry usually have a ________________________________. Cephalization (Video clip) Cephalization is the concentration of sensory organs and nerves in the anterior end of an animal. Cephalized animals have a _________. Animals that are bilaterally symmetric have an ________________ and a _______________ and are therefore usually cephalized. Cephalization is a major evolutionary change because it allows animals to seek out mates, sense food and avoid prey as they move in the forward direction through their environment. Internal Body Cavity Bilaterally symmetrical animals have one of three basic kinds of internal body plans. The body plan may include a body cavity, or _________________, a ________________ _______________________ found between the body wall and the digestive tract (gut). This space is lined with cells that come from mesoderm. Animals with ________________________________ are called acoelomates. Animals called _________________________________ have a body cavity located between the mesoderm and endoderm. Coelomates have a true coelom, a body cavity located entirely within the ____________. A ___________ coelom provides an internal space where mesoderm and endoderm can be in contact with each other during embryonic development. Body Cavity (Video clip) Many animals that are bilaterally symmetric have a body cavity or coelem, a fluid filled space that forms between the digestive tract and the outer wall of the body during development. o __________________________ are coelomates, animals that have a true coelom that is completely surrounded by mesoderm. o The true coelom ____________________________________________________ suspending and protecting digestive organs. o It also provides a firm base for the animal’s muscles to push against. o The fluid in the coelom also serves as a __________________ for nutrients and waste that diffuse into and out of the animal’s cells. Some bilaterally symmetric animals like ______________ worms are pseudocoelomates. o Their body cavity is surrounded by mesoderm on one side and endoderm on the other side. A few animals that are bilaterally symmetric do not have a coelom at all. o For example, ____________________ have bodies that are completely filled with tissue. These animals are called __________________________. Three Body Plans of Symmetrical Animals Body Segmentation Segmented animals are composed of a series of repeating, similar units called ________. Segmentation underlies the organization of all “advanced” animals and is easy to observe in some animals, such as ______________________. In _____________________, segments are ___________________________________, but there is evidence of segmentation in a ______________________. Segmentation (Video clip) In animals, segmentation refers to a body composed of a series of _________________________________ that can move independently permitting great ______________ and _______________. Within the phylum Arthropoda, segments may look different and have different functions. A small change in a segment can modify it for eating, defense or reproduction. In some arthropod species, like this butterfly, the ___________ exhibit segmentation, but many segments are fused in the ____________. Kinds of Animals Kingdom Animalia contains about ________ major divisions called _______________ (singular, phylum), depending on how certain organisms are classified. To visually represent the relationships among various groups of animals, scientists often use a type of branching diagram called a __________________________________. A phylogenetic tree shows how animals are _____________________________________. The animal kingdom is often divided into _____ groups: _________________________ (animals without a backbone) and ______________________ (animals with a backbone). Evolutionary Relationships in the Animal Kingdom The Animal Body: An Evolutionary Journey Animal Body Features and Phylogeny (Video clip) A phylogenic tree is a visual representation of the evolutionary relationships among different animals. o Animals that are more _______ related are shown on the same branch of the tree. o Animals that are more _________ related are shown on different parts of the tree. These relationships are based on the presence or absence of various traits. o For example all of the animals on the bracketed portion of the tree share the trait of being multicellular. Only the protists at the base are unicellular. o All animals except the sponges have true tissues. They are grouped together in the part of the tree in the red bracket. o Animals that have body cavities are grouped together in the region of the tree indicated by the green bracket. o Animals that have jointed appendages, such as crabs, shrimp & lobsters, are all grouped together on the branch circled in purple. Each of these groupings - multicellularity, tissues, body cavities and jointed appendages represent key evolutionary innovations found in animals that are alive today. Phylogenetic Tree (Video clip) A phylogenetic tree is a family tree that shows the evolutionary relationships thought to exist between groups of animals. This phylogenetic tree shows the relationship thought to exist between vertebrates. The branch points on phylogenetic trees represent common ancestors. o For example, reptiles and birds are believed to share a relatively recent common ancestor. o Therefore reptiles and birds lie relatively close to a branch point. o The common ancestor for reptiles and mammals lived sometime before the common ancestor for reptiles and birds. o Therefore the branch point or reptiles and mammals is further down the phylogenetic tree. o Lampreys and hagfishes shared a common ancestor with reptiles back in time. o Therefore the branch point for reptiles and lampreys is even further down the phylogenetic tree. Section 2: Animal Body Systems Objectives: Summarize the functions of the digestive, respiratory, circulatory, nervous, skeletal, and excretory systems. Compare a gastrovascular cavity with a one-way digestive system. Differentiate open from closed circulatory systems. Distinguish asexual from sexual reproduction. Tissues and Organs Digestion _______________________ organisms and sponges digest their food _______________ ______________________. All other animals digest their food extracellularly (outside of their body cells) within a ________________________________. Simple animals, such as the hydra and flatworms, have a _________________________ __________________, a digestive cavity with only ________________________. Other animals have a digestive tract (gut) with _____________________, a mouth and an anus. Digestion A hydra has a gastrovascular cavity, while a roundworm has a digestive tract in which food travels in one direction only. Respiration In simple animals, ________________________________________________________ __________________ directly with the environment by __________________. The uptake of oxygen and the release of carbon dioxide, called ____________________, can take place only across a moist surface. Some aquatic (and a few terrestrial) animals respire with ____________, very thin projections of tissue that are rich in blood vessels. Parts of the Human Respiratory System (Roll over) Label! 10 3 Fish Gills (Video clip) Fishes breathe with gills. Gills are supported by _______ sets of curved bone on each side of the fish’s head called gill arches. Each gill has a double row of tiny tissue projections called gill filaments. These are rich in blood vessels and have a large surface area for rapid _______ exchange. Water flows from the fish’s mouth over its gills through the gill filaments. As the _______________________________ the gill filaments and ________________ _________________, blood travels toward the ________________________. Deoxygenated blood moves against the water and ________________________ from the water. The blood releases carbon dioxide back into the water. This pattern of flow is called _________________ exchange. It allows for more efficient gas exchange than if the blood and water flowed in the same direction. Circulation In complex animals, oxygen and nutrients must be transported to these body cells by a __________________________________. In an open circulatory system, a __________________________________ containing oxygen and nutrients through a series of vessels out _____________________________. In a _______ circulatory system, a heart pumps blood through a system of blood vessels. Comparing Open and Closed Circulatory Systems (Video clip) Both transport ___________________________ to cells and _________ away from cells. Open circulatory system: o A blood like circulatory fluid called ____________________ is pumped from vessels into a body cavity and then is returned to vessels. o Ex: arthropods and most mollusks Closed circulatory system o A heart circulates blood through a ______________________________________ that form a ___________________________. o Materials pass into and out of the blood by _____________________ through the blood vessels. o Ex: cephalopods and ______________________ (us!) Conduction of Nerve Impulses Nerve cells (________________) are specialized for _____________________________ in the form of electrical impulses (conduction). Bilaterally symmetric animals have clusters of neurons called ____________________. More-complex invertebrates, such as the grasshopper, have brains with sensory structures, such as eyes, associated with them. The hydra has a simple __________________________, while the flatworm and the grasshopper have more-complex nervous systems. Support Many soft-bodied invertebrates have a _________________________ skeleton. A hydrostatic skeleton consists of water that is contained under pressure in a closed cavity, such as a gastrovascular cavity or a coelom. Other invertebrates, such as insects, have a type of skeleton known as an ____________, which is a rigid ______________________________ that encases the body of an animal. An _______________________ is composed of a hard material, such as ___________, embedded within an animal. Comparing Exoskeletons and Endoskeletons (video clip) Check the appropriate box. Exoskeleton Rigid external skeleton that encases the body of an animal Rigid internal skeleton embedded within an animal Act as frames that support and protect the animal’s internal organs Provides surfaces against which the muscles can pull Arthropods and mollusks are examples Vertebrates and echinoderms are examples Some vertebrates such as a turtle Does not grow with the animal; must be shed and grown again as the animal gets bigger Grows w/ an animal & is able to support a large heavy body Endoskeleton Excretion The term excretion refers to the __________________________ produced by cellular metabolism. Simple aquatic invertebrates and some fishes excrete ___________________ into the water through their skin or gills by diffusion. Other animals, especially terrestrial animals, _______________________________ to nontoxic chemicals, like __________. As the excretory system ___________________ ______________________, water and other useful substances are returned to the body. Asexual Reproduction Reproduction that ________________ involve the _______________________________ is called _______________________ reproduction. An unusual method of asexual reproduction is ________________________________, in which a new individual develops from an unfertilized egg. Animals that reproduce asexually are _____________ able to _____________________ ____________________________. Sexual Reproduction In sexual reproduction, a new individual is formed by the ______________ of a male and a female gamete. Gametes are produced in the ________________________. The ___________ produce the male gametes (___________), and the ________________ produce the female gametes (__________). Some species of animals, called hermaphrodites, have both ______________________. Most aquatic animals simply release the male and female gametes near one another in the _______________, where fertilization occurs. This method is called ________________ fertilization because the egg is fertilized __________________ of the female’s body. Most terrestrial animals reproduce sexually by means of internal fertilization. In _______ fertilization, the union of the sperm and egg occurs _____________ the female’s body. Sexual Reproduction (Video clip) Reproduction is the process by which new offspring are produced. In sexual reproduction, the genetic material from ________________________________ combines to produce offspring. This makes these offspring _______________. Sexual reproduction enables species to _______________ rapidly to new conditions. Chapter 37: Introduction to Body Structure Section 1 Body Organization Objectives: Identify four levels of structural organization within the human body. Analyze the four kinds of body tissues. List the body’s major organ systems. Evaluate the importance of endothermy in maintaining homeostasis. Levels of Structural Organization The body is organized into four levels: ________________________________________. A ________ is a group of similar cells that work together to perform a common function. The body has four basic kinds of tissues: ______________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Tissue Organ Organ System (Video clip) In most multicellular organisms, cells are organized into tissues. A tissue is a group of similar cells that perform a common function. o The function of the spongy tissue in the lung is to take in oxygen and release carbon dioxide. An organ is a collection of tissues that carry on a particular function of the body or specialized task. o The function of the lungs is to take ______________ from the air and deliver it to the blood and take __________________ from the blood and transfer it to the air. An organ system is a set of organs that work together to perform a set of related tasks. o The lungs are part of the respiratory system, a group of organs that work together to help you breathe. Four Kinds of Tissues Epithelial tissue __________________________________________ and ___________ ________________________________ from damage and dehydration. Nervous tissue consists of nerve cells, which _________________ throughout the body. Various kinds of connective tissue support, ____________, and ____________ the body. Muscle tissue enables the _________________ of body structures by muscle contraction. Human Body Tissues Body Tissues (Thumbnails) The human body has 4 main types of tissue: nervous, connective, muscle and epithelial. Nervous tissue contains special cells called neurons that ________ and _______________ messages in the form of electrical impulses. Connective tissue (CT) binds, supports and protects structures in the body. o ____________ is a mineralized CT with blood vessels for nourishment. o _______________ and lymph are also types of CT o Adipose CT is composed of fat cells and lies under the top layers of skin to help insulate the body and store energy. o _________________ are CT that attaches skeletal muscle to bone. o ____________________ are CT that attaches bone to other bone. Muscle tissue is composed of cells that can __________________. Cardiac muscle, found in your heart, pumps blood through the body. Skeletal muscles are attached to your bones and contract to help you ______________. Smooth muscle handles body functions that ____________________________________ ______________ such as the movement of food through your digestive system. Stem Cells Embryonic stem cells are early, undifferentiated cells that _________________________ _______________________________ in the developing body. ____________________ stem cells will ________________________________. Adult stem cells are not as versatile and do not divide indefinitely. Organ Systems Body organs are made of combinations of _____________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ An organ system is a group of organs that work together to carry out major activities or processes. Some organs function in more than one organ system. Major Organ Systems of the Human Body Overview of Organ Systems (Video clip) Body Cavities The human body contains four large fluid-filled spaces, or ________________________, that ____________________________________________________________________. These body cavities are the _____________ cavity (heart and lungs), __________ cavity (brain), _______________ cavity (digestive organs), and _________ cavity (spinal cord). Cavities of the Human Body Inside the Human Coelom Endothermy Like all mammals, ______________________________________. Humans maintain a fairly constant internal temperature of about 37°C (98.6 °F). The human body uses a great deal of energy to maintain a constant body temperature. Advantage of Endothermy (video clip) Unlike ____________________ that __________ their ___________________________ along with the ______________________________________, endothermic animals such as mammals and birds generate body heat internally. Most endotherms, like humans, are also _______________________ meaning they maintain a fairly constant internal temperature regardless of environmental conditions. To maintain our body temperature, we __________________________________ and ________________________________. Endotherms have the advantage to live in a wide range of ___________________. The ability to ______________________ between vastly different habitats is another advantage of endothermy.