Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Evolution of Animal Body Plans • Anatomical features in animals’ body plans mark the branching points on the evolutionary tree. • Relationships on this tree are inferred by studying similarities in embryological development and shared anatomical features. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Development of Tissues • The first major change in body plan was the development of tissues. • Sponges are the only animal without true tissues. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Symmetry • Symmetry is the next branching point after tissues. • Symmetry is the balance or similarity of body structures of an organism. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Symmetry Asymmetry • Irregular shape, no symmetry or balance in body structures. Radial symmetry • An animal with radial symmetry can be divided along any plane, through a central axis, into roughly equal halves. Bilateral symmetry • Bilateral symmetry means an animal can be divided into mirror image halves along only one plane. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Symmetry Bilateral symmetry • Animals with bilateral symmetry also have anterior (head) and posterior (tail) ends. • This body plan is called cephalization, and involves a tendency to concentrate nervous tissue and sensory organs at the anterior end of the animal. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Body Cavities • Animals with bilateral symmetry have a gut, which is either a sac inside the body or a tube that runs through the body, where food is digested. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Body Cavities Coelomates • A coelom is a mesoderm-lined, fluid-filled cavity between the gut and the outside body wall. • Specialized organ and body systems develop from the mesoderm that encloses and lines the coelom. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Body Cavities Pseudocoelomates • A pseudocoelom is a fluid-filled body cavity that develops between the mesoderm and the endoderm. • Only partially lined with mesoderm. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Body Cavities Acoelomates • Acoelomates do not have a coelom. • Have solid bodies without a fluid-filled body cavity between the gut and the body wall • Nutrients and wastes diffuse between cells; no circulatory system Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Development in Coelomate Animals Protostomes • Organisms that are protostomes develop mouths from the first opening in the gastrula. • As the embryo develops, the mesoderm splits down the middle to form the coelom. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Development in Coelomate Animals Deuterostomes • In organisms that are deuterostomes, the anus develops from the first opening in the gastrula. • Coelom develops from two pouches in the mesoderm. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans Segmentation • Segmented animals can be “put together” from a succession of similar parts. • Can survive damage to one segment • Movement is more effective Copyright © McGraw-Hill Education Animal Body Plans