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Evolution of Vertebrates Chapter 19 Chordate Characteristics • • • • Dorsal, hollow nerve cords Notocord between GI tract and nerve cord Pharyngeal slits Post-anal tail Phylum Chordata Subphylum Cephalochordata Subphylum Urochordata • Tunicates or Sea squirts • Lancets • Substrate causes metamorphosis • All 4 characteristics present – Larva: all 4 characteristics & motile – Adult: slits only & sessile • Mucus aids filter feeding – Swollen tip of nerve cord • Mucus for filter feeding • Shows segmentation Development of Vertebrates Emphasizes (in blue) characteristics of vertebrate evolution Should refer back to with each Class Class Agnatha (Jawless fish) Craniates, no jaws, and notochord as main support Hagfishes • Weak vision, developed touch and smell (habitat) • Enter prey through openings or create holes • Can knot body or secrete slime Lampreys Beginnings of vertebrae Larvae are suspension feeders that live in stream sediment Fish parasites Problematic in Great Lakes from St. Lawrence Seaway Class Chondricthyes (Cartilaginous fishes) Craniates, jaws, and cartilage vertebrae as main support Lateral line system to detect changes in water pressure and vibrations No operculum or swim bladder Clades Sharks Most are predators with powerful jaws (largest are filter feeders) Detect prey muscle movement through electrosensors on their head Sharp vision, keen smell, and streamlined bodies Stingrays and skates Suspension feeders Dorsoventrally flattened with eyes on top of head Barbed tails with venom glands (not skates) Class Osteichthyes (Bony fishes) Craniates, jaws, and bony skeleton as main support • Calcium phosphate mineralized cartilage • Flattened scales covered in mucus = reduces drag • Operculum , protective flap covering the gills – Can breathe without swimming, contrast to most sharks • Swim bladder keeps them afloat • Two dorsal fins, paired pectoral and pelvic fins (one bone) • Clades – Ray-finned fishes – Lobe-finned fishes • Coelacanth, lungfishes, and tetrapods Evolution of Tetrapods • Lobe fins seem homologous to limbs – Digits to create ground force • Early development of lunglike structures • Sense organs from water to land • Fossils show fused girdles and head/neck separation – Fish with necks Class Amphibia Tetrapods with 2 pairs of limbs Damp habitats so skin stays moist Skin has poison glands and coloration for defense Distribution limited by vulnerability to dehydration Ectothermic = metabolism doesn’t make heat must absorb Clades Salamanders and newts Walk side to side Caecilians legless Frogs Most adult life on land, but lay eggs in water Metamorphosis from tadpole (fish characteristics) to adult frog Class Reptilia Tetrapods with terrestrial egg (amniotes) • • • • Eggs develop in fluid-filled amniotic sacs protected by a leathery shell Skin with scales and waterproofed by keratin Rib cage helps ventilate lungs Ectothermic – Small dinosaurs may have been endothermic, using metabolism • Clades – Turtles and tortoises • Shell and vertebrae are fused – Lizards and snakes • Snakes likely lost legs due to burrowing nature; can detach jaws • Lizards can detach tail, moveable eyelids, and external ear openings – Crocodilians • Most time in water with nostrils out • Advanced behavior resembles birds and mammals Class Aves Feathered reptiles adapted to flight • Lightened body structure – No teeth, tail with few vertebrae, feather shafts hollow, and honeycombed bones • Feathers of keratin provide lift and maneuverability – Wings resemble air foils with large breast muscles • Basis for classification – Courtship and insulation role too • High metabolism = energy for flight and endothermic • Highly efficient circulatory system, lungs, and vision • Complex behavior, both sexes incubate hard shelled eggs and feed Class Mammalia • Hair (keratin) and mammary glands – Hair to insulate and increase size (goose bumps) – Milk to nurture young • Efficient respiratory and circulatory systems for high metabolism – Endothermic • • • • Large brain and long parental care Differentiation of teeth for variety of foods One evolution from reptiles (current view) 3 lineages – Offspring are hatched or birthed (loss of the egg) Monotremes • Egg-laying mammals – No nipples, milk sucked from glands on belly • Only in Australia and New Guinea • 2 existing members – Duck-billed platypus (1) – Spiny anteaters (4) Marsupials • Higher metabolic rates and nipples • Birth live young – Complete development while nursing in external pouch – No direct yolk sac/amnion connection • Most live in Australia and New Zealand – Opossums only ones in North America Eutherians (Placental Animals) • Longer gestation = fully developed live young – Nurtured by a placenta • Placenta nurtures by nutrient diffusion between mother’s and embryo’s blood • Many resemble marsupials convergent evolution Order Primate Phylogeny Order Primates • Limber joints, 5 digits, flexible thumb and big toe – Aids grasping and manipulation behaviors – Adapted for arboreal (tree-dwelling) life • Flat nails, not claws • Reduced olfaction, increased vision – Smaller noses, but larger forward facing eyes • Smaller litter size, longer gestation, increased maternal care • Fewer specialized teeth – 2 incisors, 1 canine, 3 premolars, and 3 molars in each quadrant • 2 taxonomic arrangements (generally) Prosimians • Lemurs – Only in Madagascar – Primarily nocturnal – Most social • Lorises – Africa and southern Asia – All nocturnal • Tarsiers Loris – Specialized for vertical climbing and leaping – Southeast Asia and Indonesia – Diet is almost completely animal matter Tarsier Anthropoids • Fully opposable thumb • Monkeys – Active during the day and live in social bands – Fore- and hindlimbs about equal length – New world • • • • Central and South America Nostrils wide open and far apart Long prehensile tail E.g spider monkeys and tamarins – Old world • • • • Africa and Asia Lack prehensile tail Nostrils open downward E.g macaque, baboons, and rhesus • Hominoids (Apes) Hominoids (Apes) • Lack tails • Long arms and short legs • Mainly vegetarians – Humans are omnivorous, eating plants and animals • More flexible • Larger brain relative to body size • High degree of social organization • 5 divisions Hominoid (Ape) Divisions • Gibbons – – – – 9 species, all in Southeast Asia Only entirely arboreal apes Smallest, lightest and most acrobatic Monogamous for life • Orangutan – Solitary species in rain forests of Sumatra and Borneo – Largest arboreal mammal, occasionally move on ground • Gorillas – Largest ape, found only in African rainforests – Live in groups of up to 20 – Stand upright, walk on 4 legs with knuckles on the ground Hominoid (Ape) Divisions (cont.) • Chimpanzees (and bonoboos) – Knuckle walkers – Tropical Africa – Behavior closely mirrors humans • Make simple tools • Respond to mirrors – Can learn human sign language • Humans – Bipedal, larger brain, capable of language, thought, and complex tools Vertebrate Diversity Review List characteristics responsible for each branch point (a-i)