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Animal Kingdom Notes

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Title: Animal Kingdom Notes


1
Animal Kingdom Notes
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Porifera
  • Common Name Sponges
  • Symmetry Asymmetrical
  • Habitat Mostly salt water, some fresh
    Reproduction Hermaphroditic,
  • Asexual or sexual
  • Sponges are sessile- they stay in one place for
    most of their lives

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  • Sponges are made mostly of proteins called
    spongin and spicules. Spongin is soft, spicules
    are sharp, and hard.
  • Sponges filter feed. Collar cells wave their
    flagella and cause water , food, and other
    nutrients to flow in.

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Cnidaria
  • Common Name Jellyfish, Hydras, sea anemones,
    corals
  • Symmetry Radial
  • Habitat Mostly salt water, some fresh
  • Reproduction Sexual Reproduction and asexual
  • Cnidarians have stinging cells in their tentacles
    called cnidocytes. 2-way gut. GROSS

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  • 2 body forms Medusa and polyp
  • Cnidocytes

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Platyhelminthes
  • Common Name Flatworms
  • Symmetry Bilateral
  • 3 main types Planarians, Flukes, Tapeworms
  • 2-way gut. Gross.

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Planaria
  • Free-living, dont depend on
  • animals for food or habitat.
  • Reproduce asexually. It can be cut in half and
    each half grows into a new worm.

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Flukes
  • All are parasites with a life cycle that requires
    multiple hosts. Reproduce Sexually
  • Female and male mate, female lays eggs inside a
    host. Eggs leave host in urine or feces, then end
    up in water. Snails in the water get infected.
    Eggs hatch from snail and the worms burrow into a
    new host, like a human foot.
  • Can infect the blood, lungs, liver, eyes, and
    other organs of its host.

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Tapeworms
  • Parasites. Has a head with hooks that attach to
    the animals insides. Doesnt have a mouth or
    digestive system. It just absorbs nutrients from
    its host.
  • Grows by making new segments behind the head.
    Each segment carries sperm and eggs. Eggs
    fertilize and the segment breaks off, goes out of
    the intestines, and gets eaten by a new host.

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Nematoda
  • Common Name Roundworms Symmetry
    Bilateral Habitat Soil, plants, water,
    animals
  • Over half a million species exist. Some are
    parasites, but most are free-living. Reproduce
    Sexually. Have two body openings, a mouth and
    anus. 1-way gut!
  • C. Elegans important for genetic research!

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  • Cause heartworm in dogs, trichinosis in humans
  • Damage crops around the worlds.
  • Feed on termites, fleas, ants, beetles, other
    insects
  • Help enrich the soil.

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Annelida (Segmented Worms)
  • Common Name Earthworms, leeches, marine worms
  • Symmetry Bilateral Habitat Soil, water
  • 1-way gut, but also many more organ systems!
    Muscles, digestive system, excretory system,
    circulatory system, respiratory system, nervous
    system, reproductive system.
  • Help enrich soil with their POOP. Leeches used in
    surgery to avoid blood clots. Marine worms are a
    base of the food chain.

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TODAY.
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Mollusca
  • Common Name Mollusks (Latin for Soft)
  • Symmetry Bilateral
  • Habitat water, and moist land environments
  • 3 types Gastropods, Bivalves, Cephalopods
  • Common traits- a tongue-like organ called a
    radula with rows of teeth for scraping food, a
    muscular organ for movement called a foot, an
    open circulatory system, gills, and a mantle
    (outer covering)

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Gastropod
  • Stomach foot
  • Snails, slugs, conchs, whelks, abalones.
  • Usually have one large shell

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Bivalves
  • Have 2 shells on a single hinged joint. Powerful
    muscles pull the shells closed.
  • Scallops, clams, oysters

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Cephalopods
  • Head Foot
  • Intelligent, complex mollusks that have a Head,
    a foot divided into many tentacles, and a
    well-developed nervous system. Have a Closed
    circulatory system.
  • Squid, Octopus, Cuttlefish

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Here come the Arthropods!
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Arthropoda
  • Common Name Arthropods
  • Symmetry Bilateral
  • Habitat EVERYWHERE.
  • Reproduction PROLIFIC. That means A lot.

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Arthropod means jointed foot
  • Have jointed appendages, like legs, wings,
    antennae, claws, pincers.
  • Have segmented bodies
  • Have a hard outer covering called an exoskeleton

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Insects
  • Have a clear head, thorax, and abdomen
  • More insects exist than any other animal group
  • Head has sensory organs, compound or simple eyes,
    and complex mouthparts.
  • The thorax has 3 pairs of legs attached and
    sometimes wings
  • Abdomen is where reproductive structures are
    found. Spiracles are openings that allows oxygen
    to reach different cells.

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  • Insects go through metamorphosis. Complete
    metamorphosis is where the start out as eggs,
    then larva, then pupa, then the adult form.
  • Incomplete metamorphosis is when they hatch from
    eggs into a nymph, a miniature adult version, and
    molt several times until completely adult sized.

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  • Insects succeed because they have tough, flexible
    exoskeletons
  • They have short lives and can evolve quickly
  • They Reproduce A LOT
  • Since theyre small, they can live in a wide
    variety of places, and avoid enemies
  • Camouflage also helps!

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Arachnids
  • Mites, Spiders, scorpions
  • Have two body regions cephalothorax and abdomen.
    All have 4 pairs of legs, no antennae
  • Scorpions have poisonous stingers and pincers
  • Spiders release enzymes into their food and suck
    out the liquids.

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Centipedes and Millipedes
  • Centipedes are poisonous and are carnivorous
  • Millipedes are herbivorous
  • Centipedes have one pair of legs per body segment
  • Millipedes have two pairs of legs per body
    segment

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Crustaceans
  • Crabs, crayfish, lobster, barnacles, rolly-polly
    bugs, water fleas
  • Have 1-2 pairs of antennae and mandibles used to
    crush food
  • Most live in water, but some live on land
  • Have 5 pairs of legs. The first pair is claws
  • Have 5 pairs of swimmerets on the abdomen.

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Echinodermata (Spiny Skin)
  • Common Name Sea Stars, brittle stars, sea
    urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers
  • Symmetry Radial
  • Habitat Oceans
  • Have no brain/head, just a ring of nerves
  • Water vascular system helps them move by sucking
    water in and expelling it out.

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  • Sea Stars can regenerate arms

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Chordata
  • Common Name
  • Symmetry
  • Habitat
  • Reproduction

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