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Download 25.1 Animal Origins
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25.1 Animal Origins What is an animal? • Multicelled, • • • • heterotroph Most motile Reproduce sexually Unwalled Most have tissue and organs Evolutionary Tree Tissues Key innovation in complexity: • Ability to interact in functional units Epithelium • Sheet like array • Functions: absorption, • • secretion, sensory 1st epidermis 2nd gastrodermis cont. Connective tissue • All contain • Most have a matrix in which living cells and protein fibers (collagen) exist Embryo forming – 2 primary tissue layers • Outer ectoderm • Inner endoderm • mesoderm Body Size How to deal with increasing constraints of SA-V ratios of cells? • Pseudopds and microvilli in single cell species • Simple animals are sheets/ribbons • circulatory system in large animals Where did it all start? Colonial Theory • 1st animals evolved • from tiny colony of flagellated, amoeba like cells Choanoflagellates Share common ancestor with sponges 25.2 Basic Body Plans Body Symmetry • Polarity – front to • back axis, with anterior and posterior ends Radial – organized around main axis, water • Bilateral – right and left halves along a main axis Cephalization – distinct head region Gut and Body Cavity Incomplete gut • Sac-like • One opening • 1st to evolve Complete gut • Tubular • 2 openings • Mouth (specialized feeding structures) to anus Formation of Complete Gut Protostomes • 1st opening • becomes mouth Flatworms, mollusks, annelids, roundworms, arthropods Deuterostomes • 1st opening • becomes anus Echinoderms, chordates epidermis No coelom (acoelomate animals) gut cavity organs packed between gut and body wall None – flatworms, few invertebrates • Tissue and organs fill region between gut and body wall Fig. 25-6a, p.406 gut cavity epidermis Pseudocoel (pseudocoelomate animals) unlined body cavity around gut Pseudocoel – roundworms • In some protostomes coelom is reduced/lost Fig. 25-6b, p.406 gut cavity epidermis Coelom (coelomate animals) peritoneum body cavity with lining that holds internal organs in place Fig. 25-6c, p.406 Repeating Units Favors regional specialization in structure and function Segmentation – annelids, arthropods, vertebrates • Divide into a series of functionally connected units along main body axis Phylum Examples Evolutionary Milestone Porifera sponges multicellularity Cnidaria jellyfish, hydra, coral tissues Platyhelminthes flatworms bilateral symmetry Nematoda roundworms pseudocoelom Mollusca clams, squids, snails coelom Annalida earthworms, leeches segmentation Arthropoda insects, spiders, crustaceans jointed appendages Echinodermata starfish deuterostomes Chordata vertebrates notochord