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Complex Invertebrates Jointed Leg Animals  Ex. Insects, spiders crayfish  Have an exoskeleton, a skeleton on the outside of the body make of hard, waterproof, nonliving substances. It also protects body from injury and drying out, and provided a place for growth to occur  Bilateral symmetry  Have appendages or structures that grow out of an animals body. Examples of appendages are arms legs and antenna. They are jointed to allow for quick movement  80% of all known animal types on earth are Arthropods  Molting is a process of shedding an exoskeleton. This is essential for arthropods to grow 5 Classes of Arthropods  Crayfish  Have mouthparts that hold, cut, and crush food  2 pairs of antennae(appendages on head for sensing smell and touch)  Compound eyes for seeing. These eyes have many lenses  2 body sections  5 pairs of legs for walking  1 claw like pair of legs at head for grabing and holding food Spiders and Scorpions  4 pairs of walking legs  Simple eyes. These eyes have 1 lense  No antennae  2 body sections  Feeding mechanism: Trap food in fangs bite into inject poison stun prey eats prey  All are dangerous to humans Centipedes  Have a head, long segmented body, many legs  100 (centi)feet (pede)  30 legs maximum  Appendages on first segment are poison claws used to capture food  Eat insects (carnivores)  Can be dangerous to humans Millipedes  Have a head, long and segmented body 2 pares of legs  1000 (milli) feet (pede)  Slow moving  Eat plants (herbivores)  2 pairs legs per segment Insects  5th class or Arthropods- more types of insects than all other     animals combined!!! Live all over (air, ocean, mountains…) Many shapes and colors Mouthparts varies according to type of food (chewing, sucking, lapping) Body has 3 main parts  3 pairs of walking legs  2 compound eyes and 3 simple eyes  1 pair of antennae  Several have wings  Only invertebrate than can fly  Reproduce sexually by eggs and sperm  Have separate sexes  Helpful in the following ways  Eat harmful insects for food  Moths eat aphids that feed on plants  Bees carry pollen from flower to flower  Bees produce honey  Harmful in the following ways  Destroy crops  Termites eat wood  Moths destroy cloths  Houseflies carry bacteria and cause disease Spiny skin (ex. Sea urchin sand dollar, starfish  5 part body structure  Radial symmetry  Has spines  Starfish have tube feet suction cups on the bottom of starfish that help it move, attach to rocks, and get food  Starfish reproduce sexually with separate sexes by egg and sperm  Also reproduce asexually by regenerating arms that are removed Vertebrates  Chordates A phylum in which an animal has a tough, flexible rod along its back  Live on land or the water  Have an endoskeleton- a skeleton on the inside of the body that allows for growth of an organism (unlike and exoskeleton)  In most vertebrates, the cord along the back is replaced by a backbone  Largest animals on earth  Well developed body systems  Circulatory system with a heart and blood vessels  Digestive system to change food into a useful form  Skeletal system for support  respiratory system for gas exchange  Nervous system for control  Large brains, very intellegent 7 classes of chordates  Jawless fish  Cartilaginous fish  Bony fish  Amphibians  Reptiles  Birds  mammals General fish characteristics  Cold – blooded, or having a body temperature that changes with the temp of surroundings  Live in water, breathe with gills. Water is pumped into mouth 02 picked up in gills Excess water leaves through gill slits  Most fish have scales to protect their bodies  Have fins to help fish to move from side to side when swimming  Lateral line runs along each side of the body detects water movement and presence of objects  Three classes of fish Jawless, Cartilage, boney 7 Classes of Vertebrates  Jawless Fish (ex. Lamprey)  No jaws  No scales  Endo skeleton, cartilage is a tough, flexible tissue that supports & shapes the body  Smooth skin  No fins  Feeding Mechanism: Lamprey are parasites. They attach to other animals with sharp, tooth structures which cut a hole in the skin. They then suck out blood & body fluids. Cartilaginous ex. Skates and rays  Cartilage skeleton  No bone  Tooth like scales on the body  Paired fins  Sharks have tube like bodies, paired fins, rows of teeth to hold & cut up food  Rays are flat, live on the ocean bottom, eat protists & invertebrates in the ocean, most are harmless to humans, but some sting rays have whip like tails that can cause a painful wound. Boney fish (ex perch, bass, flounder)  Endo boney skeleton  Smooth, boney scales on body to provide protection against enemies & indections. Scales are covered with a slimy covering to help them glide through the water.  Have an air bladder, a bag like pouch that fills with gas to allow fish to adjust their depth in the water (go up or down in water)  Reproduce via sexual reproduction: the female lays eggs in the water, the male deposits sperm, and the egg gets fertilized in the water. Fertilization & development occur OUTSIDE the mothers body. Amphibians  Animal that lives part of its life on land, part in water. (ex. Frogs, toads, salamanders)  Young amphibians live in water adult amphibians live on land  Adults need to remain in moist areas so skin won’t dry out  Reproduce via sexual reproduction  Cold blooded (their body temperature can change to the temperature of their surroundings). They also hibernate during cold weather, which means they are sleeping during cold weather, and eat no food & and use very little exygen.  They help contain insect populations by eating them  Used in medical research, eaten be reptiles, birds, mammals tadpole frog  Live in water  Live on land, in moist areas  Breathe with gills (take in  Breathe with lungs O2)  Have no tails  Have no tails  Frogs have a broad mouth with a sticky tongue to catch insects  2 pairs of front legs hind legs more powerful for jumping  Webbed feet for swimming  Eyes stick out from the head for hunting to catch prey  Salamanders have a tail all throughout their lives  2 pairs of legs are the same size  Live only in moist places  Keep gills throughout life Reptiles  An animal that has dry, scaly skin & can live on land. (ex. Snakes, lizards, turtles, crocodiles, alligators)  Cold blooded vertebrates  Have a backbone & endoskeleton  Dry scaly skin protects and prevents water loss  Some reptiles skin sovered by scaly plates  Well developed lings  2 pairs of legs & clawed toes for running, climbing & digging nests in the soil (snakes & some lizards don’t have legs)  Move quickly  Reptiles egg has tough, leathery shell to protect it & keep it from drying out  Eggs are laid on land  Many reptiles live in or near water  Eat insects, pests, eats mice  Eaten by other reptiles Birds  Have wings, a beak, 2 legs & a covering of scales  Scales on legs  Claws on toes  Well developed lungs  Young develop inside the female body  Adapted for flying, hollow bones, powerful muscles. Some do NOT fly (ex. Ostrich)  Warm blooded (they control their body temperature so that it stays the same no matter what the temperature of the surroundings)  Feathers help keep the body temperature constant  Have beaks to get food  Can be helpful to farmers & humans: food source, kill destructive insects in crops Mammals  An animal that has hair & feeds milk to its young (ex humans- Homo sapiens)  Warm blooded  Hair to keep constant body temperature  Young feeds on milk produced by mother’s mammary glands—body parts that produce milk  Reproduce via sexual reproduction (fertilization & development occur inside the mothers body 3 types of mammal development  Inside mother’s body (human)  In pouches(kangaroos, opossum)  Inside eggs (duck-billed platypus)