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Introduction to Animals Section 3: Evolutionary Trends in Animals Section 3 Introduction to Animals Section 3 Key Ideas • What evolutionary trends in body structure do animals exhibit? • What characterizes early embryonic development in animals? • What types of internal body plans do animals have? • What two body characteristics gave animals a greater ability to move and to be more flexible? Introduction to Animals Section 3 Tissues and Symmetry • body plan – Shape – Symmetry – internal organization • more-complex through time including true tissues and bilateral symmetry Introduction to Animals The Animal Body: An Evolutionary Journey Section 3 Introduction to Animals Section 3 Tissues and Symmetry, continued Tissues • Tissues – groups of cells that have the same structure and work together to perform a specific function • Organs – different tissues working together to perform particular jobs Introduction to Animals Section 3 Tissues and Symmetry, continued Symmetry • Sponges are asymmetrical. – No symmetry • radial symmetry – body parts arranged around a central axis. • bilateral symmetry – a plane that passes down the middle of the animal from head to tail divides the animal into mirror-image halves – Allowed specialized body parts Introduction to Animals Section 3 Tissues and Symmetry, continued Symmetry, continued • Cephalization – anterior (head) concentration of sensory structures and nerves Introduction to Animals Section 3 Early Embryonic Development • Most animals reproduce through sexual reproduction. • zygote is produced through the union of sperm and egg • Cleavage is a series of cell divisions that occur immediately after an egg is fertilized – cells do not grow Introduction to Animals Section 3 Early Embryonic Development, continued • Blastula – hollow ball formed as the end result of cleavage – fluid-filled interior is called the blastocoel. • Gastrulation – transformation of the blastula into the gastrula or the formation of the embryonic germ layers. – a pocket is formed called the blastopore. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Early Embryonic Development, continued Differentiation • dividing cells become increasingly different from each other • ectoderm – form the outer layer of the body – the sense organs – and the nervous system • endoderm – gut – respiratory system – and many glands • mesoderm – – – – Skeleton Muscles circulatory system organs of reproduction and excretion. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Visual Concept: Cleavage and Blastula Formation Introduction to Animals Section 3 Origins of Animal Tissues and Organs Introduction to Animals Section 3 Early Embryonic Development, continued Patterns of Development • Gastrula pocket folds inward. • This process changes the pocket into the gut of the developing embryo. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Early Embryonic Development, continued Patterns of Development, continued • protostomes, the mouth develops from the end of the embryo near the blastopore, anus develops at the opposite end. • Flatworms, earthworms, snails and clams, spiders and insects, and their relatives are all protostomes. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Early Embryonic Development, continued Patterns of Development, continued • deuterostomes, the mouth develops from the end of the embryo opposite the blastopore, anus develops at or near the blastopore. – Opposite of protostomes – Evolved 650 million years ago – First animal with endoskeleton • Sea stars and their relatives and vertebrates and their relatives are all deuterostomes. Introduction to Animals Patterns of Animal Development Section 3 Introduction to Animals Section 3 Body Cavities • A coelom is a fluid-filled space that contains the internal organs between the body wall and the gut. • Humans and other vertebrates have a coelom. • Animals with no body cavity are called acoelomates. Flatworms are acoelomates. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Body Cavities, continued • Segmented worms and all other more "advanced" animals have a true coelom and are called coelomates. • The gut and other internal organs of coelomates are suspended within the coelom. • The coelom allows an animal to move without damaging its organs or interfering with their functions. Introduction to Animals Visual Concept: Body Cavity Section 3 Introduction to Animals Section 3 Segmentation and Jointed Appendages • Segmentation is obvious in some animals, such as earthworms or caterpillars. • In other animals, such as vertebrates, the segments are visible only during early development. • The muscles of vertebrates develop from segments of tissue called somites. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Segmentation and Jointed Appendages, continued • Segmentation can allow great mobility and flexibility. For example, an earthworm can tie its body in knots. • A small change in an existing segment can produce a new type of segment with a different function. • Arthropods were the first animals to have jointed appendages. – Allows animals to perform complex movements Introduction to Animals Visual Concept: Segmentation Section 3 Introduction to Animals Section 3 Summary • Through evolutionary time, animals have developed more-complex body plans, including true tissues and bilateral symmetry. • The steps of early embryonic development in animals include cleavage, blastula formation, and gastrulation. • Animals with bilateral symmetry have one of three basic kinds of internal body plans. The body plan may include a body cavity, or coelom. Introduction to Animals Section 3 Summary, continued • The evolution of body segmentation and jointed appendages gave animals a greater ability to move and to be flexible.