Title: Animal Evolution
1Animal Evolution
2I. Animal traits
- A. Heterotrophic
- B. Mobile
- C. Lack cell walls
- D. Possess nerve and striated muscle
3D. Reproduces sexually
- 1. Diploid generation dominant
- 2. Often has larval form
- 3. Displays metamorphosis
4E. Common embryology
- 1. cleavage
- 2. blastula
- 3. gastrulation
- 4. germ layers
5F. Homeotic genes
- 1. genes that control development
- 2. control placement and location of appendages
6Mutations in homeotic genes can cause huge
changes in a single generation
7II. Monophyletic origin
- A. Colonial choanocyte
- B. Flagella with microvilli collar around the
flagella - C. No division of labor
8D. Possible mode of evolution
9III. Grades of Evolutionary Tree
10A. Major branches of the phylogenetic tree are
called grades
- 1. The grade is like a fork in the road that
represents a major anatomical change that opens
up new possibilties - 2. Once a lineage begins down a grade, it once
was thought of as an irreversible path-male
passing down a road - 3. Now with new tools of discovery-DNA
sequencing some of older pathways are now being
reconsidered - 4. We will stay with the older story for the
time being
11B. First bifurcation-cellular vs. tissue
specialization
- 1. sponges possess cellular specialization but
not true tissues - 2. sponges are referred to as parametazoans-kind
of animal-like - 3. second branch represents eumetazoans-true
animals - 4. the eumetazoans possess two qualities that
are more animal-like than the sponges - a. true tissue level specializations
- b. symmetry
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13C. Types of symmetry-radial vs. bilateral
- 1. definitions
- 2. body planes
- 3. dorsal vs. ventral
- 4. cephalad vs. caudad
- 5. anterior vs. posterior
146. Radial symmetry
- a. no cephalization
- b. adapted for sessile existence
- c. either drifts or stays attached to a surface
- d. nothing sneaks up on it
- e. these organisms are diploblastic
157. Bilateral symmetry
- a. in addition to a top and a bottom-dorsal and
ventral surface - b. there is an anterior and a posterior end of
the animal - c. cephalization
- d. there is also a longitudinal nerve cord that
runs toward the posterior end of the animal - e. these animals concentrate their sense organs
at the end of the animal that meets the world - f. tend to be active and highly mobil
- g. triploblastic
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17D. Development of a coelom
- 1. definition
- 2. functions
183. Flatworms (platyhelminthes) are acoelomate
194. Roundworms have a pseudocoelom
205. Higher bilateria have a true coelom
21E. Protostome vs. deuterostome lineages
- 1. protostomes-molluscs, annelids, and the
arthropods - 2. deuterostomes-echinoderms and chordates
22Early animal development terms
23Blastula
24Gastrulation
253. Differences between the two
- a. cleavage
- b. coelom formation
- c. fate of blastopore