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Starter: On the bottom of page 24 of your lab manual, write the common Kingdom characteristics for the Kingdom Animalia, including: • • • • • Cell Type: Cellular Organization: Mode of Nutrition: Cell Wall: Habitat: Kingdom ANIMALIA Just what is an animal??? Eukaryotic (unlike Bacteria) Multicellular (unlike most Protists) Heterotrophic (unlike Plants) Cells lack cell walls (unlike Fungi) Animals are organized into nine phyla according to: • Level of organization – Cells Tissues Organs Organ Systems • Body symmetry – see next slide – Asymmetry, radial, & bilateral • Cephalization – concentration of sensory tissue at the head • Body cavity formation Symmetry What should YOU know about each phylum??? how they get their food; how they keep from being another organism’s food; & how they reproduce Major characteristics (body plans) Phylum Porifera - sponges Characteristics: • means “pore bearer” • simplest animals • All aquatic Feeding: • filter feeding using protist-like chanocytes in pores Choanocyte Defense Mechanisms: • Spine-like spicules and toxins Locomotion: • Sessile (nonmoving) adults with free-swimming gametes Skeletal System: • Can be hard with spicules or soft with spongin Reproduction: • Reproduce both asexually (budding) and sexually Symmetry: Asymmetrical – no ends or sides Phylum Cnidaria Jellyfish, corals, sea anemone, hydra Characteristics: •First to have tissues •Aquatic habitats Feeding Mechanisms: • Single gastrovascular cavity through which food enters and waste leaves Defense Mechanisms: • Can detect light, gravity, and touch • Stinging cells called cnidocytes are used for defense and food capture Locomotion: • Polyps are sessile • Medusas use jet propulsion Skeletal System (body plan) • Two types of body plan, polyp and medusa Reproduction • Sexual and asexual (budding) reproduction Symmetry: • Radial symmetry PLATYHELMINTHES flatworms: flukes, turbellarians, tapeworms Characteristics • First group with organs • First cephalized group •Free living flatworms (Planaria, e.g.): carnivores with gastrovascular cavity (actively pursue prey with pharynx) •Parasitic flatworms (tapeworms, e.g.): absorb nutrients from host •Defense: detect stimuli with eyespots (sense light) •Locomotion: capable of movement with muscles and cilia Skeletal System (body plan): Acoelomate - solid body construction • There is no fluid-filled cavity (coelom) Reproduction: • Hermaphroditic • both sexes in one worm, two worms line up and exchange sperm Symmetry: • Bilateral Phylum NEMATODA roundworms: hookworms, heartworms, and pinworms Characteristics: • Freeliving and parasitic Feeding Mechanisms: • First group to have a separate mouth and anus • Parasitic, predators, or herbivores Defense Mechanisms: • Sense organs detect chemicals of prey or hosts Locomotion: • Use muscles to move through water or soil Reproduction: • Sexually, separate sexes • Parasitic roundworms usually have more than one host Symmetry: • bilateral Skeletal System (body plan) • Pseudocoelomate - false body cavity • There is a cavity, but it is not lined with mesoderm tissue Phylum ANNELIDA Segmented worms: earthworms, leeches, polychaetes Characteristics: • Segments allow for more complex movement • first group with true organs and systems Feeding: • Can be filter-feeders, predators, or detritovores (feed on decaying materials) Defense: • Well-developed nervous system • eyes Locomotion: • Two types of muscles that work together for movement • Setae on segments (hair-like bristles) Skeletal System (Body Plan): • Coelomate - true body cavity completely lined with mesoderm Phylum Mollusca Class Gastropoda (snails & slugs), Class Bivalvia (clams & scallops), Class Cephalopoda (squids & octopi) Feeding: • Gastropods use a radula to eat algae; Octopi use jaws; Clams, oysters, and scallops are filter-feeders Defense: • Some highly intelligent w/ eyes and tentacles Locomotion: • Cephalopods use jet propulsion Skeletal System: • Foot – flat part of snails or tentacles of cephalopods • Mantle – tissue • Shell – internal or external Reproduction: • Sexually – most release gametes wa Reproduction: • Hermaphroditic or separate sexes • clitellum is used for fertilization Symmetry: • bilateral The ARTHROPODS •“joint-footed” •largest phylum-96% of all animals •73% of these are insects •aquatic and terrestrial • Use specialized mouthparts like pinchers, fangs, jaws specialized according to whether they are Herbivores, Carnivores, or Parasites • Most have sophisticated sense organs, such as taste receptors, for gathering information from the environment. All have a brain. •Three body parts-head, thorax, and abdomen • exoskeleton made of chitin- which they molt/shed as they grow • Sexual reproduction, with separate sexes • Bilateral Symmetry CLASS CRUSTACEA: crabs, crayfish, barnacle • 10 legs/appendages • 2 or 3 body sections • Usually 2 pair antennae CLASS INSECTA • Six legs, 1 pair antenna, 3 body parts CLASS ARACHNIDA: Spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites, daddy longlegs • 8 legs 2 body sections Phylum ECHINODERMATA sea stars, sand dollars, sea biscuits, sea urchins, and sea cucumbers Characteristics: •Spiny skinned animals •Internal skeleton • Only phylum that is entirely marine (salt waterocean) •Often keystone species-removal of them from their environment will cause the ecosystem to crash Feeding: • Use tube feet to obtain food (turns stomach inside out and digests the body of the organism and withdraws the stomach containing food) Defense: • Scattered sensory cells detect light, gravity, and chemicals released by potential prey Locomotion: • Water vascular system to pump water through body to feed and move Reproduction: • sexual (separate sexes) and asexual (regeneration) Symmetry: • 5-part radial symmetry (bilateral as larva) Phylum CHORDATA (that’s us!) All Chordates have: • Dorsal nerve cord • Notochord (becomes backbone) • Post anal tail • Pharyngeal pouches ( become gill slits in fish, but become tonsils, esophagus, inner ear, etc. of humans) Most chordates are Vertebrates (have a backbone) Class Agnatha • Jawless fishes • Ectothermic - body temp dependent on temp of surrounding water • Often are external parasites of other fish • Examples: hagfish and lamprey Class Chondrichthyes • sharks, skates, rays •Cartilaginous skeleton • First group to develop teeth, fins, and scales Class Osteichthyes • “Bony fish” • Examples—bass, trout, flounder Class Amphibia • Amphibia means “two lived”: live in water as juveniles and land as adults (gills turn in to lungs) • jelly-like eggs laid in water • first to have lungs • moist skin—gas exchange through skin and lungs • no teeth or claws • examples: frogs, toads, salamanders Class Reptilia Adapted for dry conditions • Scaly skin, teeth and claws • leathery eggs laid on land • Examples: turtles, alligators, lizards, snakes, and dinosaurs Class Aves • First to be endothermic-able to maintain constant body temperature regardless of surrounding temp. • beak and scaly skin on feet • First 4-chambered heart: allows for more efficient circulation • Adapted for flying • Adaptations for flight 1. Wings 2. Feathers 3. Hollow bones 4. large breastbone for flight muscles Class Mammalia • • • • • Endothermic Covered with hair or fur Mammary glands 4-chambered heart lungs 3 subclasses: 1. Monotremes—egg laying mammals • echidna and duck-billed platypus 2. marsupials • immature young finish development in mother’s pouch called marsupium • Examples: kangaroo and opossum 3. Placental mammals • give birth to live, well-formed young • Nutrients, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and waste exchanged through placenta • Examples: cow, human, elephant, horse