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Chapter 26-1 Introduction to the Animal Kingdom What is an animal? • • • • Members of the Kingdom Animalia Multicellular Eukaryotic cells whose cells lack a cell wall Heterotrophs • Animals have: i. Epithelial tissue - covers the body surfaces, lines the inside of tubes found in the body and form the glands of an animal. -cells tend to be thin, flat structures through which gases and nutrients can move through. ii. Muscle tissue iii. Connective tissue iv. Nervous tissue • 95% of animals are categorized as invertebrates. -range in size from microscopic dust mites to the giant squid which is more than 20 meters long. -include sea stars, sponges, jelly fish, worms, insect, clams. -5% of animals are categorized as vertebrates - includes fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. What do animals do to survive? Essential functions include: 1. Feeding. 2. Respiration 3. Circulation 4. Excretion 5. Response 6. Movement 7. Reproduction. • Homeostasis is often maintained by internal feedback mechanisms called feedback loops. Feedback loops involve feedback inhibition in which the product or result of a process stops or limits the process. Ex. When a dog becomes to hot it pants – panting releases heat – body temperature of the dog cools – dog stops panting. 1. Feeding -Absorb food, ingest food? -Herbivore, carnivore, amnivore, detrivore? -Filter feeder? -Symbiotic relationship/ parasisitic? 2. Respiration Transport of Oxygen and Carbon dioxide. Aquatic or Terrestrial? Simple system of diffusion or a Complex system involve different organs? 3. Circulation Transport of gases, nutrients and waste products. Aquatic vs Terrestial animals? Simple diffusion vs circulatory system? 4. Excretion Elimination of waste products -Ammonia, urea, uric acid – elimination of excess nitrogen. -elimination of excess salts, water 5. Response -responding to external environment Specialized nerve cells? Nervous System -responding to internal environment Hormones? 6. Movement Sessile? Motile? Cilia? Flagella? Muscle cells? Muscle System? Skeleton? 7. Reproduction Asexually? Sexually? Trends in Animal Evolution • Complex animals tend to have high levels of cell specialization and internal body organization, bilateral symmetry, a front end or head with sense organs and a body cavity. Early Development • Animals that reproduce sexually begin life as a Zygote ( 2n) or fertilized egg (2n). • Embryology is the study of embryo development • Draw out diagram from text p 661 Blastula – hollow ball of cells which develops into either a protostome or deuterostome Blastula – formation of a blastopore – inward indentation of the blastula in the centre of the blastula – this tube becomes the digestive tract and is formed in one of two ways: • 1. Protosome -mouth is formed from the blastospore – incl most invertebrates. 2. Deutrosome -an animal whose anus is formed through the blastospore – the mouth is formed 2nd after the anus. -includes echinoderms and all vertebrates During early development, the cells of the embryo develop (differentiate) into three layers called germ layers. Endoderm – inner most germ layer – develop into the linings of the digestive and much of the respiratory organ systems. Mesoderm - middle layer – differentiates into muscles and much of the circulatory, reproductive and excretory organ systems Ectoderm - outermost layer – gives rise to sense organs, nerves and the outer layer of skin. Body Symmetry -except sponges 1. Radial Symmetry -body parts that repeat the centre of the body – sea anemone, sea stars, etc. 2. Bilateral Symmetry -can divide the body into two equal halves- left and right sides – usu have a front (anterior) and back (posterior) ends and upper (dorsal) and lower (ventral) sides. • An anatomy with bilateral symmetry allows for segmentation in which the is constructed of many repeated and similar parts or segments. • Also animals with b.l. symmetry have external body parts that repeat on either side of the body – arms, legs, etc. Cephalization • Is the concentration of sense organs and nerve cells at the front end of the body. • Increased cephalization – animals can respond to their environment quickly. • Move with anterior end forward, so this end comes into contact with new parts of the environment first. Body Cavity Formation • Fluid filled space that lies between the digestive tract and the body wall. • Provides a space in which internal organs can be suspended so that they are not pressed on by muscles or twisted out of shape by body movements. • Also allow for specialized regions to develop