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Introduction To Animals The Invertebrates Introduction What is an Animal: five criteria, (1) Animals are multicellular, heterotrophic eukaryotes. (2) Animal cells lack cell walls that provide structural supports for plants and fungi. (3) Animals have two unique types of tissues: nervous tissue for impulse conduction and muscle tissue for movement. (4) Most animals reproduce sexually, with the diploid stage usually dominating the life cycle (5) The transformation of a zygote to an animal of specific form depends on the controlled expression in the developing embryo of special regulatory genes called Hox genes. Most Animal Reproduction The larva - sexually immature stage that is morphologically distinct. Think Butterfly!! Metamorphosis Complete and Incomplete Animal Origins animal kingdom is monophyletic. Likely a colonial flagellated protist that lived over 700 million years ago in the Precambrian era. Hello Cousin!!! Ideas Universal Genes have let us understand just how easy diversification would have been. DIVERSITY 35 phyla of animals phylogenetic tree is always under construction in the light of new evidence the molecular evidence of the past decade has challenged some of these long-held ideas about phylogenetic relationships When Did Animals Diversify The Cambrian Explosion This lasted about 40 million years (about 565 to 525 million years ago) Nearly all the major animal body plans appear in Cambrian rocks Fossilized animal embryos in China - 570 mya Fossilized burrows from rocks 1.1 bya. Molecular evidence suggests the origin of multicellular animals to be approx. 1 bya Diversification 3 main hypotheses for what caused the diversification of animals. (1) Ecological Causes: predator-prey relationships (2) Geological Causes: Atmospheric oxygen (3) Genetic causes: Hox genes within the embryo. The Universality of these body building genes is astounding!!!!! Invertebrates Over 1.6 million extant species of animals Our sense of animal diversity is biased in favor of vertebrates, less than 2% of all animal species. 98% of all species are Inverts. Estimate between 5 and 100 million species of animals on earth. (Parazoa) Phylum Porifera: sponges closest to the colonial choanoflagellates Made of a loose federations of cells Sessile animals Lack nerves or muscles. 9,000 or so species of sponges range in height from about 1 cm to 2 m and most are marine. About 100 species live in fresh water. Suspension feeders Sponges Cont… 2 cell layers separated by a gelatinous region, the mesohyl. Wandering though the mesohyl are amoebocytes. They take up food from water and from choanocytes. secrete tough skeletal fibers within the mesohyl. Fibers are either sharp spicules of calcium carbonate or silica or flexible fibers from a collagen protein called spongin Sponges Cont.. Most sponges are hermaphrodites Some use fragmentation. capable of extensive regeneration Eumetazoa (Radiata) Includes Cnidaria and Ctenophora Cnidarians (hydras, jellies, sea anemones, and coral animals) 10,000 living species, most of which are marine. Gastrovascular cavity 2 variations: the sessile polyp and the floating medusa. Cnidarians Cont.. Cnidarians are carnivores Have cnidocytes for feeding and defense. Cnidae shoot out a thread Cnidae called nematocysts are stinging capsules Muscles and nerves exist in their simplest forms in cnidarians. Know all 3 classes! 3 Classes of Cnidaria Phylum Ctenophora Comb Jellies Ctenophora means “comb-bearer” Have a pair of long retractable tentacles. These tentacles armed with (colloblasts) Bilateria (Protostomia) 2 clades: Lophotrochozoa and Ecdysozoa Lophotrochozoa is made up of 6 phyla: Platyhelminthes, Rotifera, Lophophorates (Bryozoans Phoronida, & Brachiopods), Nemertea, Mollusca, and Annelida Ecdyzoan has 2 phyla: Nematoda and Arthropoda Platyhelminthes Platyhelminthes: Acoelomates with gastrovascular cavities 20,000 species of flatworms living in marine, freshwater, and damp terrestrial habitats many parasitic species, flukes and tapeworms. Size from nearly microscopic to tapeworms over 20 m long Triploblastic Flatworms are divided into four classes: Turbellaria, Monogenia, Trematoda, and Cestoidea Cont… Turbularians: Ex. Planarians, are carnivores or scavengers in unpolluted ponds and streams. lack organs specialized for gas exchange and circulation, wastes are removed by diffusion, move using cilia, has a head with a pair of eyespots to detect light lateral flaps that function mainly for smell, can learn to modify their responses to stimuli, reproduce asexually through regeneration The Monogeneans& Trematodes (class Monogenea) and the trematodes live as parasites in or on other animals. Many have suckers A tough covering protects the parasites. Reproductive organs nearly fill the interior of these worms. The fluke Schistosoma infects 200 million people Class Cestoidea Tapeworms parasitic. The adults live mostly in vertebrates scolex anchor the worm in the digestive tract of the host. A long series of proglottids Ultimate parasite Phylum Rotifera 1,800 species tiny animals (0.05 to 2 mm), most of which live in freshwater have a complete digestive tract pseudocoelom, a body cavity that is not completely lined with mesoderm Phyla Lophophorate includes the Bryozoa, Phoronida, and Brachiopoda. named after a common structure, the lophophore. lophophore circular fold of the body wall bearing ciliated tentacles that surround the mouth. The cilia draw water toward the mouth of these suspension-feeders. Cont… Bryozoans colonial animals Phoronids tube-dwelling marine worms ranging from 1 mm to 50 cm in length. resemble mosses. hard exoskeleton the lophophore extend through pores in the exoskeleton. Almost all the 5,000 species of bryozoans are marine. extend the lophophore from the tube when feeding and pull it back in when threatened, 15 species of phoronids Brachiopods, resemble clams and other bivalve mollusks. All of the 330 extant species of brachiopods are marine, 30,000 species of these brachiopods in the fossil record Phylum Nemertea proboscis worms or ribbon worms bodies much like that of flatworms. length from less than 1 mm to more than 30 m 900 species are marine, but a few species inhabit fresh water or damp soil, some are active swimmers, others burrow into the sand. nemerteans have a complete digestive tract and a closed circulatory system Phylum Mollusca 150,000 known species of diverse forms snails and slugs, oysters and clams, and octopuses and squids Most mollusks are marine, though some inhabit fresh water, and some snails and slugs live on land, mollusks are soft-bodied animals, but many are protected by a hard shell of calcium carbonate Foot, Visceral mass, Mantle Radula General Body Plan 8 classes of Mollusca Only 4 Prominent Phylum Annelida Have segmented bodies. 15,000 species length from less than 1 mm to 3 m Annelids live in the sea, most freshwater habitats, and damp soil. digestive system consists of a pharynx, an esophagus, crop, gizzard, and intestine. Closed circulatory system Metanephridia brainlike pair of cerebral ganglia cross-fertilizing hermaphrodites Cont… Poly-Hir. Ecdysozoa Ecdysis Phylum Nematoda and Phylum Arthropoda. 1. Phylum Nematoda- nonsegmented pseudocoelomates covered by tough cuticles Roundworms are found in most aquatic habitats 90,000 described species 1 mm to more than a meter sheds its old cuticle and secretes a new, larger one have a complete digestive tract and use the fluid in their pseudocoelom to transport nutrients since they lack a circulatory system engage in sexual reproduction. play a major role in decomposition and nutrient recycling. The soil nematode, C. elegans, has become a model organism in developmental biology Nematoda Cont… Over 50 nematode species, including various pinworms and hookworms, parasitize humans Trichinella spiralis Heartworms Arthropods segmented coelomates exoskeletons and jointed appendages estimated at a billion billion (1018) individuals 2 out of every 3 organisms known are arthropods. Arthropods must be regarded as the most successful animal phylum 3 features: body segmentation, a hard exoskeleton, and jointed appendages. Arthropods Cont… Arthropods Cont… exoskeleton made of layers of protein and chitin. molt (ecdysis) have well-developed sense organs, including eyes for vision, olfactory receptors for smell, and antennae for touch and smell Arthropods have an open circulatory system hemolymph fluid is propelled by a heart through short arteries into sinuses (the hemocoel). Variety of specialized organs for gas exchange. Gills – Book Lungs – Trachea trilobites (all extinct) chelicerates (horseshoe crabs, scorpions, ticks, spiders) uniramians (centipedes, millipedes, and insects) crustaceans (crabs, lobsters, shrimps, barnacles, and many others) Major Classes Phylum Trilobita disappeared in the Permian extinctions about 250 million years ago Chelicerates cephalothorax and a posterior abdomen. chelicerae (pincers or fangs). Most marine chelicerates are extinct four marine species, including the horseshoe crab, survive today modern chelicerates are terrestrial and belong to the class Arachnida. Arachnids scorpions, spiders, ticks, and mites six pairs of appendages.four pairs of walking legs pair of pedipalps function in sensing or feeding chelicerae usually function in feeding Spiders inject poison from glands on the chelicerae Spiders Book Lungs gas exchange is carried out by book lungs. extensive surface area, enhancing exchange of gases between the hemolymph and air Uniramians Millipedes (class Diplopoda) 2 pairs of walking legs eat decaying leaves and plant matter Centipedes (class Chilopoda) are terrestrial carnivores. Centipedes have poison claws 1 pair of walking legs. Class Insecta outnumber all other forms of life combined live in almost every terrestrial habitat and in fresh water, and flying insects fill the air 26 orders date back to the Devonian period, 400 million years ago. flight evolved in Carboniferous and Permian periods What came 1st pollinating insects or flowers??? Flight is one key to the great success of insects Flight—The Insects Triumph escape many predators, find food and mates, and disperse to new habitats. Wings are extensions of the cuticle and are not true appendages. So HOW DID THEY EVOLVE??? Absorb heat, glide, gills, swimming For sure did something before flight!!! Crustaceans 40,000 species of crustaceans most marine and freshwater environments lobsters, crabs, crayfish, shrimp, and barnacles, multiple appendages extensively specialized. crayfish have 19 pairs of appendages, adapted to a variety of tasks. separate sexes Isopods, with about 10,000 species, are one of the largest groups of crustaceans. Most are small marine species. They also include the land-dwelling pill bugs Cont… Copepods (Krill) Decapods, including lobsters, crayfish, crabs, and shrimp, are among the largest crustaceans. Metamorphosis Incomplete metamorphosis Complete metamorphosis. Insect Impact Insects are important natural and agricultural pollinators. carriers for many diseases, including malaria and African sleeping sickness. Insects compete with humans for food Food for many organisms Billions of dollars each year are spent by farmers on pesticides to minimize their losses to insects. Deuterostomia Made of 2 phyla: Echinodermata and Chordata we belong to chordata. share the deuterostome characteristics of radial cleavage, development of the coelom from the archenteron, and the formation of the anus from the blastopore. These developmental features that define the Deuterostomia are supported by molecular evidence- DNA Phylum Echinodermata Sea stars sessile, or slow-moving animals. water vascular system, a network of hydraulic canals branching into extensions called tube feet. These function in locomotion, feeding, and gas exchange. Reproduce sexually All 7,000 or so species of echinoderms are marine