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Chapter 9: The Architectural Pattern of an Animal Chapter 10: Classification and Phylogeny of Animals Who was the first person to classify animals? Aristotle, Greek Philosopher, 384-322 B.C. Who was Carolus Linnaeus? What did he do? Carolus Linnaeus, developed the modern classification system for living things and binomial nomenclature (Genus + species such as Homo sapiens). Hierarchy and Taxon • What is a hierarchy? – Arranging organisms in groups from the most inclusive to the least inclusive • Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, • Species • What is a taxon? – Any taxonomic group or entity Binomial Nomenclature • Examples of binomial nomenclature: – Homo sapiens – Holocanthus ciliaris – Centropyge loriculus – Scutigera coleoptrata – Canis familiaris – Felis domesticus – Ginko biloba Phylogeny, clade and outgroup • Phylogeny – The origin and diversification of any taxon. • Clade – A taxon or ancestral group consisting of an ancestral species and all its decendants, forming a distinct branch on a phylogenetic tree. • Outgroup – A species or group of species closely related to but NOT included within a taxon whose phylogeny is being studied, and used to polarize variation of characters and to root the phylogenetic tree Species • Species: – A group of interbreeding individuals of common ancestry that are reproductively isolated from all other such groups in their natural habitat. – A taxonomic unit ranking below genus and designated by a binomen consisting of its genus and the species name • Exp. The human species is Homo sapiens not sapiens, that is the specific epithet Criteria for recognizing a species • Common descent • Smallest distinct groupings • Reproductive community Typological Species Concept A species is considered a distinct and immutable entity. Species are defined by fixed, essential features (usually morphological) that were interpreted as a divinely created pattern or archetype. Type specimens were used. Biological Species Concept • A species is a reproductive community of populations (reproductively isolated from others) that occupies a specific niche in nature. – Theodosius Dobzhansky and Ernst Mayr (1982) Major subdivisions of the animal kingdom • Branch A: (Mesozoa), phlum mesozoa • Branch B: (Parazoa), phylum Porifera [sponges] and phylum Placozoa • Branch C: (Eumetazoa), all other phyla – Grade 1: (Radiata): phylum Cnidaria, Ctenophora – Grade 2: (Bilateria): all other phyla • Division A (Protostomia) – Aceolomates: phyla platyhelminthes, Gnathostomulida, Nemertea Major Subdivisions of the animal kingdom continued • Division A (protostomia) continued: – Pseudocoelomates: phyla • Rotifera, Gastrotricha, Kinorhyncha, Nematoda, Acathocephala, Entoprocta, Priapulida, Loricifera – Eucoelomates: phyla • Mollusca, Annelida, Arthropoda, Echiurida, Sipunculida, Tardigrada, Pentastomida, Onychophora, Pogonophora • Division B (Deuterostomia): Phyla • Phoronida, Ectoprocta, Chaetognatha, Brachiopoda, Echinodermata, Hemichordata, Chordata Eumetazoan! (true tissues) Mammal! Kingdom: Animalia Euceolomate (or just ceolomate) [has a true body cavity, lined on all sides by mesoderm] Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Mammalia Order: Primate Family: Hominidae Genus: Homo Species (specific epithet): Sapiens David Doty Jillian Doty Subspecies: Sapiens How to write a scientific name • Homo sapiens sapiens • Gramma loreto Zebrasoma flavesenes Chapter 40: Animal Ecology Hierarchy of Ecology • • • • • Individual Population Community Ecosystem Biosphere What do all organisms need? • Food, air, water, shelter, mates, minerals, etc. • We call these RESOURCES! • Sometimes certain resources are less abundant than others. These are called limiting resources. – Exp. Water in a desert. What is a niche? • A niche is the job an organism does in its environment. • Examples: – Lion = top predator – Rat = omnivore – Cat = low trophic level predator – Ant = omnivore • A fundamental niche is the job an organism could do in its environment, a realized niche is the actual job it does. Population and Deme • Population: A group of the same species. – Exp. A population of white tailed deer, but NOT a “population” of mule deer and white tailed deer (that would be a community). • Deme: A local population of closely related animals. – Exp. Black squirrels in Berkley. – Demes have the following characteristics: • Age structure, sex ratio, and growth rate Survivorship Curve What is competition? Why do organsims compete? • What is competition? – Organisms trying to get X resource, sometimes at the expense of other organisms, but always at the reduced fitness of both species. • Why do organisms compete? – To get resources for survival and to improve their chances at reproduction. Character Displacement • Partitioning a shared resources and using different portions of it. – Example: Four different species of bird living in one tree, but at different heights, and feeding at those heights as well. Predators and Parasites • Predators eat their prey, such as lions, • mantids, sharks etc. • Parasites live on their host (prey), such as • fleas, tapeworms, flukes, plasmodium (causes malaria), etc. Symbiosis • Symbiosis: Two organisms living in close proximity that rely upon each other to some extent. • Parasitism: One benefits the other harmed: – Flea and Dog, tapeworm and you • Commensalism: One benefits the other neither harmed nor helped: – Remora and Shark • Mutualism: Both organisms benefit: – Cleaner shrimp and cleaned fish Mimicry • Mimicry: Appearing as another organism to benefit from the other organisms defenses. – Exp. Monarch butterflies and Viceroys, Cuckoo wasp and Yellowjacket – Two types of mimicry: Batesian (one organism is harmful, the other is not) and Mullerian, both are harmful Keystone Species • When the influence of one population on others is so pervasive that its absence drastically changes the character of the entire community. – Exp. Seastar [Pisaster], alligator, elephant What makes up an ecosystem? • All the biotic and abiotic factors in a given area and their interactions. –Biotic = living –Abiotic = non living Energy Budget of an Animal • Gross productivity: total energy assimilated. (gross pay) • Net productivity: Energy stored in an organism’s tissues (take home pay) • Respiration: The energy required for metabolic maintenance. (deductions from your check, which are always annoying!) • Biomass: The energy available for growth and reproduction – (energy budget of an animal equation) – Pn = Pg – R