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Download Animals 26-1PPT - holyoke
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Kingdom Animalia Animals are: Multicellular, with tissues and organ systems that perform specialized functions Eukaryotic, with no cell walls Heterotrophic Mobile at some point in their life-cycle Animal Groups Animals are placed into one of two informal groups for classification purposes: 1. Invertebrates- 95% of animal species are invertebrates, animals that do not have a backbone. Everything from insects to squid. 2. Vertebrates- 5% of animals species, including mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish. What Animals Do Eat: Animals find and eat their food. They can be carnivorous, herbivorous, omnivorous (both) or parasitic. Animals can also be filter-feeders and detrivores (eat dead things.) Respiration: Animals take in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide. Circulation: Most animals have a circulatory system to move materials within their bodies. What Animals Do Excretion: Most animals have systems to get waste products like ammonia out of their bodies. Response: Nervous systems within animals allow them to respond to events in their environment. Movement: Most animals are motile, and have muscles that contract, allowing them to move. Reproduction: Most reproduction is sexual with the fusion of haploid gametes, although asexual reproduction occurs in many invertebrates. Animal Development (p. 661) All reproduce sexually, some also reproduce asexually. All animal cells originally come from a zygote. The first cell divisions of the zygote are called cleavages. Several cleavages result in the production of a small, hollow ball of cells called a blastula As the cells continue to divide, they push into the interior The developing organism becomes a gastrula Development cont… The gastrula has an opening called the blastopore Because each cleavage results in smaller and smaller cells, the gastrula is usually about the same size as the original zygote. During later development of the gastrula, the cells undergo differentiation. Protostome vs. Deuterosome Protostome – mouth formed from blastopore *Mostly invertebrates Deuterostome – anus is formed from the blastopore and the mouth is formed second. *Echinoderms & all vertebrates Body Cavities Coelom – lies between the digestive tract and the body wall Important because it provides space in which internal organs can be suspended Provide room for internal organs (growth) Some cavities have fluids that are involved in circulation, feeding & excretion. Body Symmetry The bodies of most animals show some kind of symmetry Organisms that lack symmetry are called asymmetrical Spatial Relationships of Bilateral Symmetry Front of an animal = anterior Opposite of the head, or hind end = posterior Underside = ventral Opposite of the ventral surface (or back) = dorsal Medial = toward the midline Lateral = away from the midline (sides) Cephalization Most animals with bilateral symmetry It is a concentration of sense organs and nerve cells at the front of the body. Allows animals to respond to stimuli in a more advanced way than simple animals WRAP UP! Video (14 mins)…and video quiz Guided Reading Packet 26-1