Title: Lecture 3: Origins of Animals
1Lecture 3 Origins of Animals
- Developmental, molecular and paleontological
perspectives
2What is an animal?
- Multicellular adults, heterotrophic, eukaryotes.
Most feed by ingestion of food into a gut - Cells lack cell walls, adhere by means of
specialised junctions, secrete extra-cellular
matrices using collagen. - Most animals possess specialised cells for
- a) signal transmission - nerves
- b) contraction for movement - muscles
3Animal Life History
- Typically a small flagellated sperm fertilises a
larger egg to form a diploid zygote. - Zygote undergoes cleavage.
- Formation of a blastula
- Blastula undergoes gastrulation during which
embryonic tissue layers form - Many animals have distinct larval stage
4Figure 32.1 Early embryonic development (Layer 1)
5Figure 32.1 Early embryonic development (Layer 2)
6Figure 32.1 Early embryonic development (Layer 3)
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8Figure 32.2 A choanoflagellate colony
9Figure 32.3 One hypothesis for the origin of
animals from a flagellated protist
10Figure 32.4 A traditional view of animal
diversity based on body-plan grades
11First major split
- Parazoans (no true tissues) versus
- eumetazoa (all other animals)
12Second major split
- Radial versus bilateral symmetry
- Cnidaria (jellyfish and anemones) and Ctenophora
(comb jellies) versus rest of animals - Bilateral symmetry associated with cephalisation
(development of a head) - Some bilateral animals have acquired radial
symmetry (e.g., some echinoderms)
13Figure 32.5 Body symmetry
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15Third split body cavities
- Acoelomate (no cavity)
- Pseudocoelomate (partially lined with mesoderm)
- Coelomate (cavity completely lined with mesoderm)
16Fourth splitProtostomes vs. Deuterostomes
- Different type of cleavage
- Different origin of coelom
- Different fate of blastophore (becomes either
mouth or anus)
17Figure 32.4 A traditional view of animal
diversity based on body-plan grades
18Figure 32.8 Animal phylogeny based on sequencing
of SSU-rRNA
19Lophophorate animals
Bryozoans, brachiopods, and phoronids Mouth
surrounded by hollow tentacles (lophophore)
20Figure 32.9 A trochophore larva
Larva found in molluscs and annelid worms
21Figure 32.10 Ecdysis
Arthropods and nematodes peridically shed their
cuticle.
22Figure 32.12 Comparing the molecular based and
grade-based trees of animal phylogeny
23Why are animals so successful and so complex?
24What genes can tell us
- Sequence comparison tells us about evolutionary
relationships - Can also tell us about homology and development
- Question what does genomics tell us about animal
evolution?
25HOX genes
Regulate development of segmentation in animals
26Gene and genome duplications
27The Cambrian ExplosionMyth or reality?
28Cambrian Explosion
- Nearly all major animal phyla appear in Cambrian
rocks (545 to 525 million years ago) - Many weird and wonderful creatures appear
suddenly in the fossil record - Question Is the fossil record giving us a
faithful picture of what happened.
29First appearance of animals in the fossil record
30 Nemiana gt Sea anemonea? Algal?
lt Spriggina Annelid Worm? Arthropod?
Cyclomedusa gt Benthic Polyp 1-5 mm in diameter
31lt Dickinsonia Annelid Worm? Cnidarian?
Charnia gt Sea pen- up to 1m in length
32Burgess Shale and the Cambrian Explosion
- British Colombia, Canada
- Discovered in 1909 by Charles Walcott
- Deep water deposit
- Around 515 million years (10 million years after
Cambrian explosion)
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35Stephen J. GouldWonderful Life
- Major body plans laid down very quickly
- Much more diversity in Cambrian than we see today
- Survival of a subset of phyla, due to luck more
than anything else
36Did the Cambrian explosion really happen?
"Cambrian explosion" model
Molecular data
Today
Molluscs
Annelids
Arthropods
Echinoderms
Jawless fish
Gnathostomata
Molluscs
Annelids
Arthropods
Echinoderms
Jawless fish
Gnathostomata
500 Myr
1000 Myr
1500 Myr
37Fossil record by itself
A
B
C
0
10
Millions of years
20
at face value, group is about 10 Myr old
38Fossils molecular data
A
B
C
A
B
C
0
0
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
calibration
molecular divergence
1 per 10 million years
39A
B
C
Extrapolation
0
10
20
Millions of years
If rate of molecular evolution has been constant,
then group is about 40 Myr old
30
40
40Phylogenetic Fuse
- Molecular dating suggests origins prior to
diversification.
Cambrian phylogenetic fuse Cooper Fortey 1998
TREE
41Summary
- Major divisions of animals defined by fundamental
body plans - Molecular data challenges some traditional views
about relationships - Much debate about when animals first evolved
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