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Animal Classification Zoology 1 Taxonomy • Taxonomy – Field of science that classifies organisms and defines their relationships – All about grouping organisms (plants and animals) – Originally by traits or characteristics – Today, DNA is a part of the classification 2 Taxonomy • Divisions – broad to specific – Kingdom – Phylum – Class – Order – Family – Genus – Species 3 Taxonomy • Kingdom – 2 original kingdoms • Plants and animals – Original 2 kingdoms started getting split in the mid-20th century – only 50-60 years ago – Today: 5-6 kingdoms 4 Kingdoms • Modern Kingdoms – Monera – bacteria • Prokaryotes (no nucleus); always single-celled; may have plant, fungus, or animal characteristics – Archaea • Prokaryotes; single-celled; adapted to unusual and/or extreme conditions; have several different cellular chemistries from Monera – Protista • Eukaryotes (nucleus in cell); mostly single-celled or collections of very similar cells; may have plant, fungus, or animal characteristics 5 Kingdoms – Plantae - plants • Eukaryotes; multicellular; capable of photosynthesis, production of complex molecules from simple molecules using light – Animalia – animals • Eukaryotes; multicellular; must obtain complex food molecules from external source, broken down and absorbed internally; usually capable of movement – Fungi – fungus • Eukaryotes; almost all multicellular; must obtain complex food molecules from external source, absorbed through external surface; almost never capable of movement 6 Taxonomy • Variations • Some taxonomies include “super” kingdoms or Domains – Three domains • Bacteria – Monera • Archaea – Archaea • Eukarya – Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia • Remove Monera and Archaea and combine them into Bacteria • Separate Protista into Protista and Chromista 7 8 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Porifera – Sponges – 5000 total – No tissues – Absorb food through filtration – Most have water intake and outlet openings – Can remold their bodies because most cells can move within the body and some change type 9 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Cnidaria and Ctenophora – jellyfish – 2 cell layers with jelly-like layer between them, inter-cell connections – Carnivores – Cnidaria – cnidocytes, fire harpoons, – Ctenophora – colloblasts, cell used to capture prey – Major Classes of Cindaria • Hydrozoa – hydras • Scyphozoa – Jelly fish • Antozoa – Sea annenanenamies 10 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Platyhelminthes – tapeworms – Flatworms – No body cavity, no specialized circulatory and respiratory organs • Nematoda – round worms - unsegmented worms – Digestive system is a tube with openings at both ends – Space between digestive organs and outer skin – Major Classes • Hookworms – enter body through skin and up in digestive track • Pinworms – live in lower intestine and lay eggs in your rectum • Trichinella – flu like worm 11 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Mollusca – snails, clams, squids – 150,000 species – Mantle (cavity for breathing), shell, organization of the nervous system, broad muscular foot, radula (rasping “tongue”), multiple functions of organs, open system circulation, complete digestive system – Major Classes • Bivalvia – oysters, clams, muscles • Gastropoda – Snails and slugs 12 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Annelida – segmented worms – earthworms, leeches – Over 15,000 species – Long bodies with segments, repetition of internal organs, closed circulatory systems, outer covering made of collagen – Bilateral semetry – Major Classes • Polychaeta – Bristleworms • Hirudinea – leaches • Oligochaeta - Earthworms 13 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Echinodermata – starfish – 6,000 species – mostly marine – Adults possess five-side symmetry, skeleton composed of plates, ring water vascular system, regeneration – Major Classes • Brittle Stars, Sand Dollars, Sea Lilies, Sea Cucumbers, Sea Urchins, Sea Stars 14 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Arthropoda – insects, arachnids, crustaceans – Exoskeleton, segmented body, and jointed appendages 15 Phylum (for Animal Kingdom) • Chordata - Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals – Notochord (spine), hollow dorsal nerve cord (spinal cord), pharyngeal slits, post-anal tail – Subphylums • Vertebrata - vertebrates • Cephalochordata “The Lancelets” – fish-shaped animals with no brains • Urochordata “The Tunicates” – bags of jelly 16 PHYLA: ARTHROPODS 17 18 Subphylum and Classes of Arthropods • Chelicerata – spiders, mites, scorpions – Appendages just above/in front of the mouth – Classes • Arachnida – spiders, scorpions, mites • Pycnogonida – sea spiders • Merostomata – extinct sea scorpions and horseshoe crabs 19 Orders of Arachnida • • • • Araneae – true spiders Opiliones – daddy-long-legs Scorpiones – scorpions Acarina – mites and ticks 20 Subphylum and Classes of Arthropods • Myriapods – millipedes, centipedes – Many body segments each with one or two pairs of legs – Classes • • • • Chilopoda – centipedes Diplopoda - millipedes Pauropoda – small, similar to millipedes Symphyla – look like centipedes but are smaller and translucent 21 Subphylum and Classes of Arthropods • Hexapods – insects – Bodies have three parts (anterior head, thorax, and posterior abdomen), 6 legs – Classes • Insecta – insects • Entognatha - wingless 22 Orders of Insecta • Orders – Orthoptera – grasshoppers – Diptera – flies and mosquitoes – Lepidoptera – butterflies and moths – Hymenoptera – bees, wasps, and ants – Coleoptera - beetles 23 Subphylum and Classes of Arthropods • Crustaceans – lobsters, crabs, barnacles, crayfish, shrimp – Biramous appendages (claws), primarily aquatic – Classes • Branchiopoda – brine shrimp • Maxillopoda – barnacles • Malacostraca – crabs, lobsters, shrimp, krill 24 PHYLA MOLLUSCA 25 Gastropoda (snails & slugs) Mollusca Bivalvia (clams, oysters, scallops Cephalopoda (squid, octopus) 26 Classes of Mollusca • Gastropoda – snails and slugs – Very diverse group, no defining characteristics • Cephalopoda – squid, octopus – Bilateral body symmetry, prominent head, set of arms or tentacles 27 Classes of Mollusca • Bivalvia – clams, oysters, scallops – Shell consisting of two asymmetrically rounded halves called valves joined with a hinge, filter feeding 28 PHYLA CHORDATA - VERTEBRATES 29 Chordata Subphyla: Urochordata Class: Agnatha Subphyla: Vertebrata Subphyla: Cephalochordata (jawless fish) Class: Chondrichtheyes (cartilaginous fish) Subclass: Elasmobranchii (sharks, rays) Subclass: Holocephali (chimaeras) Class: Amphibia Class: Reptilia Class: Osteichtheyes (bony fish) Subclass: Actinopterygii (ray-finned fish) Subclass: Sorcopterygii (lobe-finned fish) Class: Aves Subclass: Neognathe Subclass: Palaegognatha (flightless) Class: Mammalia Subclass: Prototheria (egg laying) Subclass: Metatheria (marsupials) Subclass: Eutheria 30 (placental) Classes of Vertebrata • Agnatha – jawless fish – No jaws, no paired fins, notochord in adults, seven or more paired gill pouches – Lampreys and hagfish 31 Classes of Vertebrata • Chondrichthyes – cartilaginous fishes – Jawed fish, paired fins, paired nares, scales, twochambered hearts, cartilage skeleton – Subclasses • Elasmobranchii – sharks and rays • Holocephali - chimaeras 32 Classes of Vertebrata • Osteichthyes – bony fish – Bony skeleton, most have gills, most are cold bloodes – fish – Subclasses • Actinopterygii – ray-finned fish – Herring • Sarcopterygii – lobe-finned fish – Coelacanths, lungfish 33 Classes of Vertebrata • Amphibia – amphibians – Cold blooded, metamorphose from a juvenile water-breathing form, either to an adult airbreathing form or to a pedomorph that retains some juvenile characteristics – Orders • Anura – frogs and toads • Caudata – salamanders and newts • Gymnophiona – caecilians, limbless amphibians that resemble snakes 34 Classes of Vertebrata • Reptilia – reptiles – Breath air, lay shelled eggs, scales, cold-blooded, – Orders • • • • Crocodilia – crocodiles, gavials, caimans, and alligators Sphenodontia – tuataras from New Zealand Squamata – lizards, snakes, worm lizards Testudines – turtles and tortoises 35 Classes of Vertebrata • Aves – birds – Winged, bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying – Subclass • Neornithes – modern birds • Superorders – Palaeognathe – flightless birds – Neognathae – rest of the birds 36 Orders of Aves • Palaeognathae – flightless birds – Orders • Struthioniformes – ostriches, emus, kiwis • Tinamiformes - tinamous 37 Orders of Aves • Neognathae – rest of the birds – Orders – 27 • • • • • • • Anseriformes – waterfowl Charadriiformes – gulls, button-quails, plovers Sphenisciformes – penguins Falconiformes – falcons, eagles, hawks Phaethontiformes – tropicbirds Strigiformes – owls Galliformes – fowl, pheasant 38 Classes of Vertebrata • Mammalia – mammals – Air-breathing, mammary glands, hair or fur, three middle ear bones, neocortex region in the brain – Subclasses • Prototheria – egg laying, – Monotremes – platypuses and echindnas • Metatheria – marsupials • Eutheria - placentals 39 Orders of Mammalia • Metatheria or Marsupialia – Pouch – Orders • • • • Didelphimorphia – opossums Dasyuromorphia – Tasmanian devil Peramelemorphia – bandicoots Diprotodontia – koala, wombats, kangaroos, 40 Orders of Mammalia • Eutheria – Placental, give birth to more fully developed young – Superorder • • • • Xenarthra Afrotheria Euarchontoglires Laurasiatheria 41 Orders of Mammalia • Xenarthra – Vertebra joints have extra articulations, have lowest metabolic rates in the class, only exist in the Americas – Orders • Cingulata – armadillo • Pilosa – sloths, anteater 42 Orders of Mammalia • Afrotheria – Belong to groups from Africa or of African origin – Orders • • • • • Afrosoricia – golden moles, otter shrews Macroscelidea – elephant shrews Tubulidentata – aardvark Proboscidea – elephants Sirenia - manatees 43 Orders of Mammalia • Euarchontoglires – Orders • Rodentia – 2 incisors – rats, squirrels, porcupines, beavers • Lagomorpha – 4 incisors – Pika, rabbits, hares • Dermoptera– gliding mammals – Flying lemur • Scandentia – treeshrews 44 Orders of Mammalia • Euarchontoglires – Order • Primate – Large brains, opposable thumbs, slower rates of development, vision dominant sensory system – Lemurs, marmosets, monkeys, gibbons, humans 45 Orders of Mammalia • Laurasiatheria – Based on similar gene sequences – Orders • • • • • Erinaceomorpha (Insectavores) – hedgehogs Soricomorpha – moles, shrews Cetacea – whales, dolphins, porpoises Carnivora – cats, dogs, bears, seals, raccoons Chiroptera – bats 46 Orders of Mammalia • Laurasiatheria – Orders • Artiodactyla – even toed – pigs, hippopotamuses, camels, giraffes, deer, cattle, sheep • Perissodactyla – odd-toed – horses, tapirs, rhinoceroses 47 Family • Family – Division of Orders – Common families • Carnivora – Canidae – dogs – Ursidae – bears – Felidae – cats • Primates – Hominidae – great apes (humans) 48 Genus and Species • Families are divided into Genus • Naming of individual species – Contain two parts • Genus – Listed first – First letter capitalized • Species – Listed second – Not capitalized – Example – humans • Homo sapiens 49 Genus and Species • Genus – Generic name – Groups animals of the same type • Usually based on physical features, sometimes on DNA – Guidelines for deciding what species belong in a genus • Monophyly – all descendants of an ancestral taxon are grouped together • Reasonable compactness – a genus should not be expanded needlessly • Distinctness – in regards of evolutionarily relevant criteria – Ecology, morphology, or biogeography 50 Genus and Species • Species – Specific animal – Definition has changed over the years • Distinctly-describable type • Distinct types that could not interbreed • Distinct types that could breed and produce offspring that themselves could go on as adults to breed • “a group that, in natural surroundings, breeds exclusively within the group” – Exception wolves, dogs, coyotes 51 Genus and Species • Subspecies – Some species are divided further – Either no subspecies or two or more – Differences more distinct than the differences between races or breeds but less than differences between species – Usually result of geographical distribution – Criteria • Different morphology or different DNA 52 Genus and Species • Subspecies – Criteria • Different morphology or different DNA • If two groups don’t interbreed because of something intrinsic to their genetic make-up different species • If two groups would interbreed if an external barrier were removed subspecies • Animals positions (species, subspecies, genus) are constantly being re-evaluated as more information is collected 53 Genus and Species • Example • Order: Carnivora - carnivores • Family: Canidae – dogs, wolves, foxes, jackals, coyotes • Genus: – Canis – “true dogs” – dogs, wolves, jackals – Vulpes – “true foxes” - foxes 54 Genus and Species • Genus: Canis – Canis latrans – coyote – Canis lupus – gray wolf • • • • • Canis lupus lupus – Eurasian wolf Canis lupus baileyi – Mexican wolf Canis lupus dingo – Dingo Canis lupus familiaris – domestic dog Canis lupus lycaon – Eastern wolf (Timberwolves) 55 Human Classification • • • • • • • Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species 56