Title: Kingdom Animalia
1Kingdom Animalia
2- What characteristics define an animal?
3 Characteristics
- Multicellular
- Eukaryotic with no cell walls
- Heterotrophs (consumers)
4 Characteristics
- Have a nervous system to respond to their
environment - Locomotion relates to ability to obtain food
- Most animals develop from a zygote
-
5Reproduction
- Fertilization occurs when the sperm penetrates
the egg to form a fertilized egg cell called the
zygote.
6- Asexual reproduction means that a single parent
produces offspring that are genetically identical
to itself.
7Early Development
- The zygote undergoes mitosis and a series of cell
divisions to form new cells.
- The cells continue to divide, forming a
fluid-filled ball of cells called the blastula.
- The blastula continues to undergo cell division
as some cells move inward to form a gastrula.
Gastrula - A single layer of cells surrounding a
fluid-filled space forming a hollow ball of cells.
8 Developmental Characteristics
- The gastrula is made up of three parts
- Ectoderm, a layer of cells on the outer surface
of the gastrula, grows and divides developing
into skin and nervous tissue. - Endoderm, a layer of cells lining the inner
surface of the gastrula, develops into the lining
of the animals digestive tract. - Mesoderm, made up of two layers of cells lying
between the ectoderm and endoderm, forms muscles,
reproductive organs and circulatory vessels.
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12 Developmental Characteristics
- Animals that develop a mouth from the indented
space in the gastrula are protostomes. - Animals that develop an anus from the opening in
the gastrula are deuterostomes.
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14Evolution of Animal Body Plans
- Anatomical features in animals body plans mark
the branching points on the evolutionary tree.
- Relationships on this tree are inferred by
studying similarities in embryological
development and shared anatomical features.
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16 Body Plans
- Animals that are irregular in shape are
asymmetrical. - Animals that are regular in shape are
symmetrical.
17 Body Plans
- An animal has radial symmetry if it can be
divided along any plane, through a central axis,
into equal halves. - An animal has bilateral symmetry if it can be
divided down its length into similar right and
left halves forming mirror images of each other.
18Which figure has bilateral symmetry? Which has
radial symmetry?
19 Body Plans
- Acoelomates animals have three cell layers with
a digestive tract but no body cavities. - Pseudocoelomates animals with a fluid-filled
body cavity partly lined with mesoderm. - Coelomates animals with a body cavity
completely surrounded by mesoderm.
20Body Cavities
21Body Cavities
22Body Cavities
- Have solid bodies without a fluid-filled body
cavity between the gut and the body wall
23 Protection and Support
- Though not all animals have a skeleton, those
that do can be divided into two groups - Those with an exoskeleton a hard, waxy coating
on the outside of the body that protects internal
organs, provides a framework for support, and a
place for muscle attachment. - Those with an endoskeleton support framework
within the body that protects some organs and a
brace for muscles to pull against.
24Cephalization
- The tendency to concentrate nervous tissue and
sensory organs at the anterior end of the animal
25Invertebrates
- 8 main phyla
- No backbones
- 95 of all animals are in this group
-
26Invertebrate Phylum Porifera
- Sponges
- simplest form of animal life
- live in water
- Do not move around
- no symmetry
- Pores (holes) all over body
- 5000 species
27Invertebrate Phylum Porifera
- Filter Feeders a sponge filters particles of
food from water using collar cells and then pumps
the water out the osculum.
28Invertebrate Phylum Porifera
- Examples Tube Sponge, Glass Sponge, Sea Sponge
29Invertebrate Phylum Cnidaria
- Live in water
- Most have tentacles
- catch food with stinging cells
- gut for digesting
30Invertebrate Phylum Cnidaria
- 2 different shapes
- Medusa - like a jellyfish
- Polyp - like a hydra
31Invertebrate Phylum Cnidaria
- Examples - Jellyfish, Hydra, sea anemones, and
corals
32Invertebrate Phylum Platyhelminthes
- Flatworms
- Flat, ribbon-like body
- Live in water or are parasites
- bilateral symmetry
33Invertebrate Phylum Platyhelminthes
- Examples Planaria
- eyespots detect light
- food and waste go in and out the same opening
34Invertebrate Phylum Platyhelminthes
- Examples Tapeworm
- Parasite that lives in intestines of host
absorbing food -
35Invertebrate Phylum Platyhelminthes
- Examples Fluke
- parasite
- lives inside
- of host
36Invertebrate Phylum Nematoda
- Roundworms
- Round, tubular body
- small or microscopic
- bilateral symmetry
- have both a mouth and anus
- Live in water or are parasites
37Invertebrate Phylum Nematoda
- Examples
- Hookworm
- Trichinella
38Invertebrate Phylum Mollusca
- Soft bodies
- Hard Shells
- Live on land or in water
- have a circulatory system and a complex nervous
system. - Important food source for humans
39Invertebrate Phylum Mollusca
- Class Gastropoda
- snails and slugs
- may have 1 shell
- stomach-footed - move on stomach
40Invertebrate Phylum Mollusca
- Class Bivalves
- 2 shells hinged together
- clams, oysters,
- scallops and mussels
41Invertebrate Phylum Mollusca
- Class Cephalopods
- squids and octopuses
- internal mantel
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43Invertebrate Phylum Annelida
- Segemented worms
- Body divided into segments(sections)
- Live in water or underground
- have a nervous and circulatory system
44Invertebrate Phylum Annelida
- Class Earthworms
- eat soil and breakdown
organic matter, wastes provide nutrients to soil
45Invertebrate Phylum Annelida
46Invertebrate Phylum Annelida
- Class leeches
- parasites that feed on blood of other animals
47Invertebrate Phylum Echinodermata
- Hard, spiny skin
- Live in salt water
- Radial symmetry
- name means spiney skinned
- endoskeleton
48Invertebrate Phylum Echinodermata
- Examples seastar, sea urchin, sand dollar and
sea cucumber
49Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda
- Body divided into sections/segments
- Exoskeleton
- Jointed legs
- well developed nervous system
- largest group of organisms on earth
50Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda
- 3 subphylums
-
- Classified into classes according to the number
of legs, eyes and antennae they have.
51Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda
- Subphylum Chilicerata
- is divided into 3 classes
- Arachnida spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites
- Merostomata horseshoe crabs
- Pycnogonida sea spiders
-
52Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum
Chilicerata
- Class Arachnida
- no antennae
- 4 pairs of legs
- 2 body regions - cephalothorax abdomen
- spiders, scorpions, mites ticks
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54Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum
Chilicerata
- Class Merostomata
- Horseshoe crabs
- Ancient group of species
- Changed little over 350 million years
- Aquatic, mostly found on Atlantic gulf coasts
of United States.
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56Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum
Chilicerata
- Class Pycnogonida
- Sea spider
57Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum -
Crustacea
- 5 Classes
- Aquatic ones have gills
- 2 antennae
- 2 body regions or segmented
- Shrimp, lobsters, crabs, barnacles, isopods
- Many species taste delicious in butter
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59- Subphylum Uniramia 3 classes
- Class Insecta (insects)
- Class Chilopoda (Centipedes)
- Class Diplopoda (Millipedes)
60Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum
Uniramia
- Class Insecta
- antennae
- 3 pairs of legs
- 3 body regions - head, thorax abdomen
- grasshoppers, ants, butterflies, bees
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62Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum
Uniramia
- Class Diplopoda
- Millipedes
- segmented animals
-
- Have 2 pairs of legs per segment
- Primarily herbivores decomposers
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64Invertebrate Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum
Uniramia
- Class Chiopoda
- Centipedes Usually terrestrial carnivores
- Have 1 pair of antennae
- Are often poisonous, using modified front claws
to immobilize prey
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66 Phylum Chordata subphylum Vertebrata
- 5 classes
- Fish
- Mammals
- Reptiles
- Amphibians
- Birds