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Animal Evolution

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Title: Animal Evolution


1
Animal Evolution
2
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3
Poriferasponges
  • 5,000 living sponge species
  • Three Main Groups
  • hexactineuida (glass sponges)
  • demospangia
  • calcarea (calcareous sponges)
  • no coelom, organs, or skeleton
  • no urinary, cardiovascular, respiratory or
    nervous system
  • cellular grade of organization

4
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Among the oldest known fossils
  • began in late Precambrian
  • developed from first multi-cellular organism

5
Tissues
  • Two layers of cells
  • layers are separated by gelatinous region called
    mesohyl
  • Spongocoel
  • the central cavity
  • internal water chambers
  • water flows in and out of the osculum
  • coanocytes are flagellated, collar cells
  • these line the spongocoel
  • help propel water through cell

6
Reproduction
  • Reproduce sexually or asexually
  • Hermaphrodites
  • this means they are male and female
  • produce both eggs and sperm
  • gametes arise from choanocytes or amoebocytes
  • eggs reside in the mesohyl, while sperm cells are
    carried out of the sponge by water current
  • fertilization occurs in the mesohyl
  • zygotes develop into flagellated, swimming larvae
  • in asexual reproduction buds are produced
  • are often packets of several cells inside a
    protective coating called gemmule

7
Locomotion
  • No muscles

8
Digestion
  • No mouths
  • carnivores
  • archaiout, cells ingest and

    digest food
  • suspension feeders
  • filter feeders
  • they collect bacteria
    taken from
    the water
  • tiny pores in outer walls
  • these draw water
  • called ostia
  • cells in sponge walls filter water
  • water is pumped through the body and out larger
    opening (oscula)
  • flow of water is unidirectional
  • driven by beating of flagella which line the
    surface of chambers and are connected by a series
    of canals

9
Cnidariacorals, jellyfish, hydra
  • Four Main Classes
  • Anthozoa (corals, anemones, sea pens, sea fans,
    sea anemones)
  • Cubozoa (box jellies)
  • Hydrozoa (diverse group of siphonophores,
    hydroids, five corals, medusae, obella)
  • Scyphozoa (true jellyfish, jellies, sea wasps,
    sea nettles)
  • do not have a cardiovascular system

10
Evolutionary Time Frame
Cnidaria first appeared during the Pre-Cambrian
era
  • Corals - first appeared in Vendian
  • few fossils in Cambrian period, but identifiable
    corals began evolutionary radiation in Early
    Ordovician Period
  • wiped out at end of Permian Period
  • mass extinction event in which 95 of all marine
    invertebrate species became extinct
  • scleractinian corals appeared in the middle of
    the Triassic (15 million years later)
  • became dominant hermatypic (reef-building)
    organisms in shallow tropical marine habitats

11
Tissues
  • Simplest organisms at tissue level
  • cells are organized in true tissues
  • two cell layers - outer ectoderm (epidermis) and
    inner endoderm (gastrodermis)
  • Outer Ectoderm
  • contains cnidocysts (stinging cells)
  • Inner Endoderm
  • lines gut (sometimes divided by septa)
  • Mesoglea (between layers)
  • layer of jelly-like substance
  • contains scattered cells and collagen fibers

12
Excretion
  • Cnidarias have one oral opening
  • all secretions, including waste materials, exit
    through this
  • Undigested remains are sent back through the
    anus/mouth

13
Reproduction
  • Alternate between asexual and sexual
  • sexual reproduction includes free-swimming forms
  • formation of gametes in medusae and some polyps
  • asexual budding (polyps)
  • Gonads are the only organs present in the body
    cavity of cnidaria

14
Locomotion
  • Cnidaria move by a decentralized nerve net and
    simple receptors
  • movement is coordinated by the nerve net
  • move freely in water by passive drifting and
    contractions of its bell-shaped body

15
Digestion
  • Cnidaria are carnivores
  • they have tentacles in a ring around their mouth
  • these capture prey and push food into the
    gastrovascular cavity
  • gastrovascular cavity is a sac with a central
    digestive compartment
  • cnidaria have one opening which functions as the
    mouth and anus

16
Respiratory
  • Done by the diffusion of oxygen through their
    tissues

17
Nervous
  • Cnidaria contain muscles and nerves in the
    simplest form
  • Cells of the epidermis and gastrodermis have
    bundles of microfilaments arranged in contractile
    fibers
  • there is no brain, and the nerve net is
    associated with simple sensory receptors that are
    distributed throughout the body

18
Platyhelminthesflat worms
  • Means flat worm
  • thin bodies between dorsal and ventral surfaces
  • Consist of Four Classes
  • Turbellaria (free-living flatworms)
  • Monogenea (monogeneans)
  • Trematoda (trematodes or flukes)
  • Cestoidea (tapeworms)
  • no urinary system

19
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Origin of bilaterians, Precambrian period
  • before Cambrian explosion
  • early origin of coelom hypothesized by trace
    fossils left in Precambrian sediments

20
Tissue
  • Epidermis covers body
  • made up of layers of cells
  • the middle embryonic layer is the mesoderm
  • here occurs the development of complex organs and
    organ systems to true muscle tissue
  • inner layer of cells forms intestine

21
Reproduction
  • Most Reproduce asexually
  • while some do reproduce sexually
  • the parent constricts in the middle
  • each half regenerates its missing end
  • cross-fertilization between individuals

22
Locomotion
  • Glide along a film of mucus, secreted by
    themselves
  • the cilia on the ventral epidermis able them to
    move

23
Digestion
  • Have a gastrovascular cavity with one opening
  • they lack a digestive tract
  • absorb nutrients across the body surface
  • branched gut to transport food

24
Cardiovascular
  • Lack organs for circulation
  • fluid filled spaces aid in transport

25
Respiratory
  • Lack organs for gas exchange
  • internal tissues are near the surface of the skin
  • this is because of their flattened bodies
  • gas and nutrients exchange with environment

26
Nervous
  • Pair of cerebral ganglia
  • longitudinal nerve cords connect to transverse
    nerves

27
Nematodaroundworms
  • Nematoda consist of no distinct classes
  • Nema - thread
  • 90,000 known species
  • do not have a respiratory system

28
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Found as early as the Carboniferous period
  • fossils of nematodes were found in amber, these
    dated back to the Cenozoic era
  • relatives of nematoda date back to Cambrian
  • nematodes remain in the same form since then
  • because nematodes are microscopic, fossils are
    difficult to find
  • they lack hard body parts

29
Tissue Layers
  • Contain internal body cavity
  • pseudoderm
  • lack cilia and well-defined head
  • the epidermis (skin) is composed of a mass of
    cellular material and nuclei, these are not
    separated by membranes
  • a thick outer cuticle which is tough and flexible
    is secreted
  • this cuticle is shed, usually about four times
    before it becomes an adult
  • tough exoskeleton

30
Excretion
  • Some nematodes have specialized cells that
    excrete nitrogenous waste
  • canals are present in others to excrete wastes

31
Reproduction
  • Reproduce sexually with internal fertilization
  • males use copulatory spines to open female
    reproductive tract and inject sperm
  • sperm lack flagellae and move by pseudopodia
  • females are larger than males and deposit about
    100,000 eggs a day

32
Locomotion
  • Muscles are longitudinal and contract producing a
    thrashing motion
  • only bend from side to side
  • muscle cells branch toward nerve
  • the internal pressure is high, this causes the
    body to flex, rather than flatten
  • nematoda have no cilia or flagellae

33
Digestion
  • Have mouth opening into pharynx (throat)
  • food is pulled in and crushed
  • pharynx leads to a long simple gut cavity lacking
    muscles
  • it is then led to the anus at the tip of the body
  • nutrients and wastes are distributed in body
    cavity
  • this is regulated by an excretory canal along
    each side of the body

34
Cardiovascular
  • No cardiovascular system
  • nutrients are transported through the body by
    fluid in the pseudocoelom

35
Nervous
  • Ring of nervous tissue around the pharynx
  • gives rise to two nerves dorsal and ventral
  • nerve cords
  • run the length of the body
  • muscle cells branch toward nerve

36
Molluscasnails, slugs, oysters, clams,
octopuses, squids
  • Over 150,000 known species
  • molluscous are soft bodied
  • protected by a hard shell made of calcium
    carbonate
  • Classes
  • Plolyplacophora (chitons)
  • Gastropoda (snails and slugs)
  • Bivalvia (clams, oysters, bivalves)
  • Cephalopida (squids, octopuses, hautiluses)

37
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Lived in freshwater streams as early as 400
    million years ago
  • developed the ability to be able to live in most
    aquatic environments
  • 300 million years ago

38
Tissue
  • Three main parts
  • Muscular foot (for movement)
  • visceral mass (containing the internal organs)
  • mantle (fold of tissue, drapes over visceral
    mass, secretes shell)
  • houses gills, anus, excretory pores
  • some produce a water filled chamber
  • called a mantle cavity

39
Excretion
  • Excretory organs called nephridia
  • remove metabolic wastes from hemolymph

40
Reproduction
  • Separate sexes with gonads in the visceral mass
  • life-cycle includes ciliated larva (trochophore)

41
Locomotion
  • Muscular foot
  • no bones
  • Outer shell made of calcium carbonate supports
    and protects
  • some also have inner shells for support
  • called cuttlebones in cuttlefish
  • pen in squids

42
Digestion
  • Feed by a strap like rasping organ called the
    radula to scrap food
  • ribbon like, hooked teeth
  • have jaw, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, intestine
    and anus

43
Cardiovascular
  • Open circulatory system
  • no true heart
  • blood is pumped along by vessels and join with
    open sinuses
  • bathes internal organs

44
Respiratory
  • Gills housed in mantle cavity
  • function in gas exchange
  • terrestrial snails lack gills
  • instead, lining of mantle cavity functions as a
    lung
  • exchanges respiratory gases with air

45
Nervous
  • Clams and chitons have no nervous system
  • squid and octopus have most sophisticated nervous
    system of all vertebrates
  • they have large brains and eyes
  • giant axon transmits messages

46
Annelidsearthworms, leeches, marine worms
  • 15,000 species
  • Three classes
  • Oligochaeta (earthworms)
  • Polychaeta (polychaetes)
  • Hirudinea (leeches)
  • Annelids means little rings
  • segmented worms

47
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Originated in Precambrian

48
Tissue
  • Coelom partitioned by septa
  • penetrated by digestive tract, longitudinal blood
    vessels and nerve cords

49
Excretion
  • Metanephridia
  • excretory tubes in each segment
  • ciliated funnels
  • remove waste from blood and coelomic fluid
  • lead to exterior pores, discharges waste
  • nephridia excrete waste
  • these are coiled tubes with expanded funnel shape
    (nephostrome, attached to septum)
  • leads to outside on posterior end

50
Reproduction
  • Cross-fertilization
  • Sperm is stored
  • clitellum secretes a mucous cocoon
  • cocoon picks up eggs and stored sperm
  • some reproduce asexually by fragmentation

51
Locomotion
  • Two types of muscles circulatory and longitude
  • when muscles tighten, others lengthen

52
Digestion
  • Contains specialized regions
  • pharynx
  • esophagus
  • crop
  • gizzard
  • intestine

53
Cardiovascular
  • Closed cardiovascular system
  • has a network of vessels
  • blood and oxygen carrying hemoglobin
  • dorsal and ventral blood vessels
  • main blood vessels
  • blood transported by contractions of the walls of
    the vessels
  • called peristalsis
  • pairs of vessels connect dorsal and ventral
    vessels

54
Respiratory
  • The respiratory organ is the skin
  • epidermis layer is very thin and moist
  • this allows for gas exchange

55
Nervous
  • Cerebral ganglia is located above and in front of
    the pharynx
  • ring of nerves around pharynx connects to
    sub-pharyngeal ganglion
  • nerve cords run posterioly

56
Arthropodscrustaceans, spiders, insects
  • Consist of over one million species
  • arthropod means jointed feet
  • make up over 3/4 of all known living and fossil
    organisms
  • conquered the land, sea and air
  • Classes Triolbita, Chelicerata, Uniramia,
    Diplopoda (millipedes), Chilapoda (centipedes),
    Insecta (insects)
  • do not have a urinary system

57
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Soft-bodied relatives began during the Vendian
  • rapid evolution in Cambrian Period
  • Trilobites (the dominant marine group) began in
    the Paleozoic
  • arachnids moved onto land during Devonian
  • 385 million years ago
  • oldest insect fossil from the Devonian Period
  • 400 million years ago

58
Tissue
  • The cuticle covers the entire body
  • exoskeleton
  • made of tough compounds, chitin and protein
  • outer shell
  • structure against which muscles pull
  • reduces water loss (impermeable to water)
  • protection
  • chitin laid in plates with joints
  • exoskeleton is molted (shed) occasionally
  • leaves temporarily vulnerable
  • legs have two branches (biramous appendages)
  • outer branch are flattened gills
  • inner branch is used for walking, grasping,
    chewing, or reproduction

59
Reproduction
  • Paired reproductive organs (ovaries and testes)
  • dioecious
  • internal fertilization
  • most lay eggs and development proceeds with some
    form of metamorphosis

60
Locomotion
  • Movement of appendages is controlled primarily by
    a complex muscular system
  • muscular system divided into smooth and striated
    components

61
Digestion
  • Mandible or jaws chew food

62
Cardiovascular
  • Open circulatory system
  • fluid called hemolymph is propelled by the heart
    through short arteries and into spaces called
    sinuses surrounding tissues and organs
  • blood flows and bathes tissues and organs
  • dorsal tubular heart is perforated by pores
  • generally lack blood vessels
  • resembles open circulatory system of mollusks,
    but arose independently

63
Respiration
  • Organs specialized for gas exchange
  • allow diffusion of respiratory gases in spite of
    exoskeleton
  • aquatic species
  • gills with thin feathery extensions
  • place extensive surface area in contact with
    surrounding water
  • terrestrial
  • have internal surfaces
  • insects
  • tracheal systems
  • branched air ducts, lead into interior from pores
    in cuticles
  • gas exchange occurs inside book lungs
  • these are stacked plates in internal chambers
  • its extensive surface area is a structural
    adaptation
  • enhances exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide
    between hemolymph and air

64
Nervous
  • Well developed sensory organs, include
  • eyes
  • olfactory receptors for smell
  • antennae for touch and smell
  • sensory organs concentrated at anterior end
  • Three Regions
  • deutocerebrum
  • protocerebrum - receives nerves of eyes and other
    organs
  • tritocerebrum
  • association with neuropils (antennae)
  • nerves innervate mouth parts and anterior
    digestive canals
  • contains annelid-like brain (cerebral ganglion)
  • nerve ring surrounding pharynx connects the brain
    with the pair of ventral nerve cords
  • these cords contain numerous ganglia

65
Echinodermatastarfish, sand dollars, brittle
stars, sea cucumbers, sea urchins
  • Pentameral (fivefold symmetry)
  • rays or arms in fives or multiples of fives
  • echin spiny derma skin
  • suckered tube feet which move and grip
  • Classes
  • Concentricycloidea (sea daisies)
  • Asteroida (starfish, sea stars)
  • Crinoidea (sea lillies, feather stars)
  • Ophiuroidea (brittle or snake stars)
  • Echinoidea (sea urchins, sand dollars)
  • Holothuroidea (sea cucumbers)
  • about 7,000 known species
  • no urinary system
  • poorly developed nervous system

66
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Fossils are not pentameral
  • oldest known Venedian fossil is Arkarua
  • soft bodied with unmineralized plates
  • modern echinodermata (with mineralized skeleton)
    entered the fossil record in early Cambrian
  • Asterozoans date back to Ordivician
  • crineids and blastoids are the later Paleozoic
  • became extinct at the end of the Permian Period

67
Tissue
  • Spacious coeloom
  • open, fluid-filled body cavity
  • large gonads
  • complete gut
  • interlocking calcium carbonate plates and spines
  • enclosed by epidermis (endoskeleton)

68
Reproduction
  • External fertilization
  • egg and sperm are freely discharged into water
  • provide no parental care
  • go through planktonic larval stages before
    settling down
  • separate males and females

69
Locomotion
  • Tube feet
  • extend, grip, contract and release
  • do this over and over again
  • hydrualic water vascular system
  • network of fluid filled canals
  • function in locomotion, feeding and gas exchange

70
Digestion
  • Some turn stomach inside out through the mouth
  • sea urchins scrape algae from rocks with five
    large teeth
  • secrete juices that digest soft body of mollusks
    in its own shell

71
Cardiovascular
  • Does not have a cardiovascular system
  • functions of the cardiovascular system are taken
    over by the water vascular system

72
Respiration
  • No respiratory system
  • once again, functions of the respiratory system
    are done by the water vascular system

73
Chordatavertebrates
  • Includes humans and vertebrates
  • all have the same features at some point in life
  • these features include
  • pharyngeal slits - digestive tube from mouth to
    anus
  • pharynx posterior to mouth, slits
  • dorsal, hollow nerve cord - develops into central
    nervous system brain and spinal cord
  • notochord - longitudinal, flexible rod between
    digestive tube and nerve cord
  • muscular post-anal tail - skeletal elements and
    muscles
  • propulsive force in aquatic species
  • Echinoderms are the closest living relative of
    humans

74
Chordata
  • Vertebrates have the ability to regenerate ATP by
    cellular respiration
  • this is the consumption of oxygen
  • adaptations of vertebrate respiratory and
    circulatory systems support mitochondrion muscle
    cells and active tissues
  • all have a closed circulatory system with
    ventral, chambered heart
  • pumps blood through arteries to microscopic
    vessels called capillaries
  • capillaries branch throughout every tissue in the
    body
  • blood is oxygenated as it passes through
    capillaries in gills or lungs

75
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76
Chondricthyessharks, rays
  • Have cartilaginous skeletons

77
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Appeared 450 million years ago
  • cartilaginous skeleton is a derived
    characteristic
  • ancestors had bony skeletons, cartilaginous
    skeleton characteristic evolved secondarily

78
Tissue
  • Made up of cartilage
  • this has a lower density compared to bones
  • more flexible

79
Excretion
  • Two kidneys
  • hundreds of units of renal corpuscle, deals with
    excess water
  • in renal corpuscles water and dissolved
    substances are squeezed into the end of the
    tubule
  • cells in this tubule allow certain substances to
    pass out and back into capillaries
  • tubules join at the end of the urinary duct
  • carries urine to urinary sinuses
  • urine exits body

80
Reproduction
  • Sexually dimorphic
  • separate females and males
  • fertilization inside female body
  • three ways of reproducing
  • oviparity (female lays eggs)
  • oviviparity (eggs hatch in oviduct of female,
    develops in uterus)
  • viviparity (embryo nourished in placenta)

81
Digestion
  • Jaw and muscles push food down esophagus
  • enters stomach
  • gastric juices produced by microscopic glands
  • then enters intestine
  • digestive juices produced by liver and pancreas
  • absorb nutrients
  • intestines twist around themselves to increase
    surface area
  • rectal gland filters waste and empties into the
    rectum
  • cloaca opens to the outside

82
Locomotion
  • Powerful swimming muscles in caudal (tail) fin
  • propel them forward
  • dorsal fins stabilize
  • pectoral and pelvic fins provide lift in water
  • gains buoyancy by storing large amounts of oil in
    its liver
  • still sinks if it stops swimming

83
Cardiovascular
  • Two chambered heart with one atrium and one
    vesicle
  • not strong enough to get blood to the gills
  • must swim constantly to produce heart contractions

84
Respiratory
  • Gills pull oxygen from the water
  • Ramjet ventilation must occur
  • constant flow of water through the gills
  • Blood is pumped through brachial arteries to
    blood vessels in gills
  • oxygenated blood circulates back through the
    system

85
Nervous
  • Central nervous system with a brain and spinal
    cord
  • brain is simple with three parts
  • forebrain (obtains information from sight and
    smell detectors)
  • midbrain (coordinates sensory information)
  • hindbrain (coordinates basic life functions and
    movement)

86
Osteoicthyesray-finned, lobe-finned, lungfish
  • Bony fishes
  • ossified endoskeleton with hard matrix of calcium
    phosphate
  • skin is covered by flattened, bony scales
  • appeared in the Devonian and Carboniferous Periods

87
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • All bony fishes combined into single vertebrate
    class, osteoichthyes
  • based on cladistics, now recognized in three
    extant classes ray-finned fishes, lobe-finned
    fishes and lungfishes

88
Tissues
  • Have ossified endoskeleton with hard matrix of
    calcium phosphate
  • skin is covered by flat, bony scales

89
Excretion
  • Two small kidneys work to excrete wastes

90
Reproduction
  • Oviparous
  • external fertilization
  • female sheds large numbers of small eggs

91
Locomotion
  • Glands in skin secrete mucus giving sliminess,
    reduces drag during swimming
  • flexible fins steer and propel

92
Digestion
  • Digestive tract includes liver, stomach,
    intestine, anus

93
Cardiovascular
  • Swim bladder
  • air sac
  • helps control buoyancy
  • transfer of gases between swim bladder and blood
  • varies inflation of bladder and adjusts density
    of fish
  • Three chambered heart
  • consists of two atria, one ventricle
  • little mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated
    blood
  • allows animal to control blood flow
  • is able to shunt deoxygenated and oxygenated
    blood to body or lungs

94
Respiratory
  • Draw in water over gills located in chambers
    covered by protective flaps
  • overculum
  • water is drawn in through pharynx and out between
    gills by movement of operculum and contraction of
    muscles surrounding gill chambers
  • many different forms of lung ventilation
  • squamates - axial musculature
  • crocodilians - muscular diaphragm

95
Nervous
  • Two pairs of cranial nerves
  • advanced nervous system
  • compared to amphibians

96
Amphibiasalamanders, frogs, caecilians
  • Orders Urodela (salamanders)
  • Anura (frogs)
  • Apoda (Caecilians)
  • Amphibian means two lives
  • close ties with water, most abundant in damp
    habitats (swamps and rainforests)
  • rely heavily on moist skin

97
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Earliest amphibia found in early Devonian period
  • 363 millions years ago
  • modern amphibia didnt appear until Mesozoic era
  • 248 million years ago

98
Tissue
  • Coelom
  • houses all internal organs

99
Excretion
  • Ureters carry liquid waste to bladder
  • leaves through cloaca and cloacoe vent
  • same way as solid waste

100
Reproduction
  • External fertilization
  • male grasps female and spills sperm over eggs of
    female as she sheds them
  • lay eggs in a moist environment
  • some reproduce on land where eggs are deposited
  • some give live birth
  • most fertilized eggs are deposited in water
  • eggs hatch into larvae

101
Locomotion
  • Salamanders move by side-to-side bending
  • frogs have powerful hind legs

102
Digestion
  • Mouth
  • esophagus (tube to stomach)
  • stomach (food is mixed and partly digested)
  • small intestine (most digestion takes place,
    absorbs nutrients)
  • digestive juices come from liver and pancreas
  • Frogs
  • long sticky tongue, nabs insects
  • attached to front of mouth

103
Cardiovascular
  • Three chambered heart
  • two atria, one ventricle
  • double circulation
  • blood is pumped twice
  • provides blood flow to brain, muscles and other
    organs

104
Respiratory
  • Rely on moist skin
  • network of blood vessels run through skin
  • this carries out gas exchange with environment
  • some lack lungs and breathe through the skin and
    oral cavity

105
Reptiliasnakes, lizards, crocodiles, turtles,
birds
  • Have scales containing the protein keratin
  • this water proofs the skin
  • prevents dehydration in dry air
  • 6,500 species of extinct reptiles
  • Four Groups
  • Testudines (turtles
  • Sphenodontia (tuatara)
  • Squamata ( lizards and snakes)
  • Crocodilia (alligators and crocodiles)

106
Evolutionary Time Line
  • Reptilia were more numerous and diverse during
    the Mesozoic era
  • go as far back as the late Carboniferous Period
  • 350 million years ago
  • the oldest fossils were found in Kansas in the
    late Carboniferous period
  • 300 million years ago
  • ancestors are the Devonian amphibians
  • first major reptilian radiation occurred during
    the dawn of Permian
  • last Paleozoic era
  • gave rise to three main branches Synapsida,
    Aapsida, Diapsida
  • second great radiation by late Triassic
  • 200 millions years ago
  • dinosaurs (land) and pterosaurs (flying reptiles)
  • dinosaurs extinct at the end of Cretaceous
  • last period of Mesozoic
  • turtles appeared during the Mesozoic era and
    havent changed since

107
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108
Excretion
  • Two small kidneys
  • main nitrogenous waste product is uric acid

109
Reproduction
  • Lay shelled amniotic eggs on land
  • fertilization is internal as eggs pass through
    the reproductive tract of the female

110
Locomotion
  • Agile and fast-moving
  • very diverse
  • swim, slither, crawl, run, fly

111
Digestion
  • Dinosaurs
  • Ornithischians are herbivores
  • saurichians are herbivorous and carnivorous
  • birds
  • food isnt chewed in mouth, ground in gizzard
    (digestive organ near stomach)
  • crocodiles and dinosaurs also have gizzards

112
Cardiovascular
  • Closed circulatory system
  • three chambered heart
  • two atria, one ventricle
  • little mixing of oxygenated blood and
    deoxygenated blood in heart
  • blood flow can be altered to shunt deoxygenated
    blood to the body or oxygenated blood to the
    lungs
  • Birds
  • four chambered heart
  • keeps tissues supplied with oxygen and nutrients

113
Respiratory
  • Cannot obtain oxygen through their skin which is
    keratinized and dry
  • Obtain oxygen using lungs
  • many turtles obtain gas exchange through the
    moist surface of their cloaca

114
Nervous
  • Advanced nervous system compared to amphibians
  • consists of 12 cranial nerves

115
Mammalia
  • Characteristics of mammalia
  • Possession of mammary glands
  • produce milk
  • hair
  • endothermic
  • efficient respiratory and circulatory systems
  • live birth
  • Three Major Groups
  • Monotremes (egg-laying mammals)
  • Marsupials (mammals with pouches)
  • Eutherian (placental)

116
Evolutionary Time Frame
  • Evolved from reptilian stock during Mesozoic era,
    even before birds did
  • 180 million years ago
  • became dominant form of life 65 million years ago
  • oldest mammalian fossils date back to 200 million
    years ago (Triassic Period)
  • fossils from Permian and Triassic connect mammals
    with reptilian ancestors
  • Mesozoic mammals were small and probably ate
    insects
  • Great adaptive radiation occurred during the
    Cenozoic era, dawned in the wake of Cretaceous
    extinction

117
Tissue
  • Four types of tissue
  • epithelial
  • covers external surfaces, internal cavities and
    organs
  • connective
  • binds and supports body parts, protects, fills
    spaces, transports materials and stores fat
  • two kinds - loose and dense
  • nerve
  • responds to stimuli and transports impulses from
    one part of the body to another
  • muscle
  • contracts in response to stimulation

118
Excretion
  • Kidney
  • main excretory organ
  • blood enters kidneys through nephrons
  • capillaries and tubules filter blood
  • first water, ions and small organic molecules are
    removed
  • next, water and selected minerals are reabsorbed,
    returned to bloodstream
  • urine is the final product
  • carried out through the ureter
  • stored in bladder
  • exits through urethral opening

119
Reproduction
  • Internal fertilization
  • separate sexes
  • male
  • two testes lie in skin covered sac (scrotum)
  • sperm is produced in testes and deposited in
    female genital tract
  • female
  • two ovaries, produce ova
  • embryos develop inside uterus of female
    reproductive tract
  • placenta (the lining of the mothers uterus and
    extraembryonic membranes)
  • nutrients diffuse into embryos blood
  • Monotremes - platypuses and echidnas
  • only living mammals that lay eggs
  • Marsupials are born early in development
  • they complete embryonic development while nursing
    inside mothers pouch

120
Locomotion
  • Bones
  • axial and appendicular skeleton
  • muscles include
  • diaphragm, separates thoracic cavity from
    abdominal
  • musculation of jaw region and limbs help with
    getting food and movement
  • muscles associated with outer hairy skin allow
    automatic responses and facial expression

121
Digestion
  • Differentiation of teeth for different foods
  • stomachs vary in complexity
  • herbivores have more complex stomachs and produce
    certain bacteria for breaking up cellulose
  • carnivores have relatively simple stomachs

122
Cardiovascular
  • Active metabolism
  • four chambered heart
  • complex way to distribute oxygen, digested food,
    hormones and other chemicals
  • carries away waste products
  • oxygenated blood carried away from heart to body
  • deoxygenated blood pumped back to lung

123
Respiratory
  • Diaphragm ventilates lungs
  • external openings in head region
  • passes through pharynx, trachea, bronchi and into
    lungs
  • lungs are the main organ of gas exchange
  • carbon dioxide and oxygen exchanged
  • deoxygenated blood pumped to lung
  • tiny air sacs
  • location of gas exchange

124
Nervous
  • Larger brains
  • contains two primary parts
  • central nervous system
  • peripheral nervous system
  • mammals have a larger cerebrum
  • many are capable learners
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