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Animal Diversity & Systems From Invertebrates to Vertebrates The “Big 5” of Kingdom Animalia • • • • • Multicellular Eukaryotic Heterotrophic Motile No cell walls Taxonomy Review • Kingdom – Phylum (or Division) - Class -Order - ??? - ??? - ??? Which group is the largest? Which is the smallest? Student Misconceptions: 1. SpongeBob really wears “so called” square-pants. 2. SpongeBob can actually digest “crabby patties”. 3. SpongeBob can “run and play” as seen on TV. Phylum Porifera • Ex: sponges • aquatic • No tissues/organs • Filter feeders (intracellular digestion) • Diffusion w/surrounding water • Hard spicules for protection Digestive System • Intracellular digestion – Can only eat tiny food particles (smaller than cells) – Ex: sponges • Extracellular digestion – Can eat big food; must have gut of some type – Ex. All other animals Digestive System • Incomplete digestive system – Only one opening; inefficient! – Ex: jellyfish & flatworms • Complete digestive system – Two openings (mouth & anus) – Ex: all other higher animals! Phylum Cnidaria • • • • aquatic Radial symmetry Stinging cells to get food Incomplete digestive cavity • Simple muscle & nerve cells Ex: jellyfish, corals, sea anemones Animals exhibit symmetry: • Asymmetry – No symmetry – ex: sponges • Radial Symmetry – No front/back, only top/bottom – Ex: jellyfish • Bilateral Symmetry – Front/back/top/bottom – Ex: most all other animals • Nerves allow for movement and sensory input • Cephalization – is the centralization of nerve tissue to the head region – better movement/ brain formation Phylum Platyhelminthes Ex: Planaria (free-living); tapeworms & flukes (parasitic) • • • • Flat! Aquatic or parasitic Bilateral – head region Tissues, but no organs • Incomplete digestive system • Simple muscles & nerves • No body cavity Having a body cavity allows for more specialization of organs: • Acoelomates – No cavity; Ex: flatworms • Pseudocoelomates – “false” cavity; Ex: round worms • Coelomates – True cavity; Ex: earthworms & all higher Phylum Nematoda • Ex: roundworms, pinworms • round • Most are parasitic • Complete digestive system • Bilateral symmetry • Pseudocoelomate Nervous System - Nerves allow for movement and sensory input • Some animals like sponges, have no nervous tissues. • Others, like the jellyfish have some cells to detect stimuli. • Most animals developed nerves and a brain. Phylum Mollusca • • • • • Soft bodies Mantle secretes shell Bilateral symmetry Coelomate Complete digestive system Phylum Mollusca Class Gastropoda “stomach-foot” molluscs ex: snails & slugs sensory tissue 1 shell* herbivores/predators Phylum Mollusca Class Bivalvia “two shell” molluscs ex: clams, oysters, scallops filter feeders aquatic Phylum Mollusca Class Cephalopoda “head-foot” molluscs closed circulatory system ex: octopus, squid, nautilus brain; great vision & mvmt No shell use ink against predators Phylum Echinodermata “spiny skin” Sea stars; sea urchins; sand dollars; sea fans Complexity of Form • Coelomates – True cavity; Ex: earthworms & all higher – Body sections are sign of more complexity in function – Appendages (like arms, legs and antennae show complexity too Compartments allow for specialization of function Phylum Annelida • Ex: earthworm, leech • Segmented (ringed) • Typically in soil; some parasitic or aquatic • Coelomate – true cavity • Brain & sensory tissue • Hermaphrodites Skeletal – Muscular System Muscles allow for movement, but must pull on something rigid - could pull on… - water filled tubes - shells • Exoskeletons - like on arthropods • Endoskeletons - like bones Phylum Arthropoda “jointed feet” • • • • • Jointed appendages Body segments Exoskeleton of chitin Coelomate Bilateral symmetry Class Insecta Phylum Arthropoda Class Insecta • • • • Wings & 6 legs 3 body segments Compound eyes Trachea & spiracles for respiration • Terrestrial Most numerous group of animals and most endangered – many specialized adaptations Phylum Arthropoda Class Arachnida Spiders Scorpions Mites Ticks Phylum Arthropoda Class Arachnida • • • • • • • 8 legs No wings or antennae 2 body segments Compound/simple eyes Some spin silk/webs Carnivores/parasites Terrestrial Abdomen Cephalothorax Phylum Arthropoda Class Crustacea Crayfish Lobsters Crabs Shrimp Roly-polies Phylum Arthropoda Class Crustacea • 10 legs (front usually modified to catch prey) • 2 sets antennae • 2 body segments • Gills for respiration • Aquatic; “swimmerets” (roly-polies = terrestrial) Phylum Arthropoda Class Chilopoda • • • • Ex: centipedes 1 pair legs per segment 1 set antennae Predators, often poison Phylum Arthropoda Class Diplopoda • • • • Ex: Millipedes 2 pair legs per segment 1 set antennae Herbivores/detritivores (eat dead stuff) The End Embryo Formation • Label on your paper: A = zygote E = blastula G = gastrula Animal Reproduction • Sexual – exchange gametes • Asexual – no gamete exchange • Internal Fertilization – usually smaller #s of offspring; more parental care • External Fertilization - usually larger #s of offspring; less parental care Embryo Formation • Label on your paper: A = zygote E = blastula G = gastrula Circulatory System • Simple diffusion – Nutrients move in and out from surrounding water • Open circulatory system – Have heart but no blood vessels, just cavities for blood • Closed circulatory system – Have heart & blood vessels Respiratory System • Some animals move gases by simple diffusion. • Most have developed special structures to move gases. These include: – skin, spiracles, book lungs, gills, lungs Phylum Echinodermata • Radial symmetry* • Water vascular system = system of tubes for mvmt & transport • No brain; has nerve ring • Regeneration Complete Metamorphosis in Insects Organ systems in animals work together to do certain things: • Integumentary – Protects against pathogens; helps regulate body temperature, keratin formed from epidermis waterproofs skin, forms hair and nails; body covering • Skin; epidermis, keratin; dermis, sebaceous glands (oil) and sweat glands • Skeletal – Provides structure; supports and protects internal organs; axial includes skull, vertebral column and rib cage; appendicular includes limbs; support; what muscles pull on • 206 bones; osteocytes, axial skeleton, appendicular skeleton, joints; fixed, moveable; ligaments, tendons Organ systems in animals work together to do certain things: • Muscular – Provides structure; supports and moves trunk and limbs; moves substances through body; skeletal – conscious movement; cardiac – heart; smooth – unconscious movement like digestive tract; movement • Muscles (skeletal, cardiac, and smooth) • Nervous – Cerebrum controls intelligence/creativity; cerebral cortex controls and coordinates body movements and senses; medula oblongata helps monitor and maintain other body systems (homeostasis); somatic n. system controls voluntary system; autonomic n. system controls activities that are not under conscious control • Brain; cerebrum, cerebral cortex, cerebellum, medulla oblongata; spinal cord, nerves; cell body, dentrites, axon; sensory neurons, motor neurons, synapse, sense organs, receptors; five senses. Organ systems in animals work together to do certain things: • Circulatory – Transports nutrients, and wastes to and from all body tissues. Pulmonary circulation – right side of heart; systemic circulation – left side of heart; rbc – hemoglobin/O2; wbc – immune response; platelets – clotting. • Heart; right atrium/ventricle, left atrium/ventricle; blood vessels – veins, arteries, capillaries; blood – red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets. • Respiratory – Carries air into and out of lungs, where gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) are exchanged, breathing is mechanical movement of air, respiration is diffusion of O2/CO2 across membranes; gas exchange • Nose, mouth, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, bronchioles, alveoli, diaphragm Organ systems in animals work together to do certain things: • Digestive – Stores and digests food; absorbs nutrients; eliminates waste, stomach – HCL, pepsin; pancreas – enzymes, insulin; liver – bile (breaks down fats); break down food • Mouth, esophagus, stomach, liver, pancreas, small and large intestines • Excretory – Eliminates waste; maintains water and chemical balance; ammonia converted to urea • Kidneys, ureters, bladder, urethra, skin, lungs • Reproductive – Produces ova and milk in females, sperm in males, and offspring after fertilization • Ovaries, uterus, mammary glands (in females), testes (in males) Organ systems in animals work together to do certain things: • Immune – Provides protection against infection and disease • Lymph nodes and vessels, white blood cells (lymphocytes) • Endocrine – Maintains homeostasis; regulates metabolism, water and mineral balance, growth and sexual development, and reproduction • Glands ex: adrenal – metabolism, stress; thyroid – growth/develop; pancreas – insulin; hypothalamus – controls pituitary; testis – testosterone; ovary - estrogen