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ANIMAL KINGDOM

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Title: ANIMAL KINGDOM


1
ANIMAL KINGDOM
2
Main Characteristics
  • Multicellular eukaryotes
  • Heterotrophs
  • Specialized cells most have tissues
  • Response to stimuli by nervous and muscular
    tissue
  • Most capable of locomotion few sessile
  • Most diploid and reproduce sexually

3
Animals live in diverse habitats
  • Marine
  • Origin of animal life
  • Provides buouyancy
  • Body fluids isotonic to environment
  • Plankton, nekton, sessile
  • Freshwater
  • Requires osmoregulation
  • More challenging than marine food, oxygen,
    sunlight, temperature

4
  • Terrestrial avoid dessication
  • Body covering to reduce evaporation
  • Respiratory organs deep in body cavity
  • Reproduction
  • Return to water
  • Internal fertilization
  • Eggs with coverings
  • Means of thermoregulation

5
Evolution of Animals
  • All animals have a common protist ancestor
    choanoflagellate
  • Cells of colony became specialized
  • Division of labor resulted in single organism
  • Diversity results from changes in development
    that lead to changes in body plans
  • Hox genes control early development

6
Animals can be Classified According to Body
Symmetry
  • Asymmetry
  • no regular arrangement
  • Radial symmetry
  • similar structures arranged around central axis
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • can only be divided through one plane (midline)
  • get roughly left and right halves

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Cephalization
  • Found in bilaterally symmetrical organisms
  • Concentration of sensory structures in a head
  • Nerve cells concentrate in head ? brain
  • Nerve cord extends toward rear
  • Bilateral symmetry and cephalization are
    adaptations to locomotion

9
Embryonic Development
  • Zygote formed through fertilization
  • Undergoes cleavage series of mitotic division
  • Develops into blastula hollow ball of cells
  • Undergoes gastrulation formation of specific
    layers of tissue called germ layers

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2 Types of Cleavage Patterns
  • Radial
  • Parallel or right angles to axis
  • Fate of cell comes later
  • Indeterminate
  • Spiral
  • Diagonal to axis
  • Fate of cell fixed early
  • Determinate

12
Germ Layers
  • Form in all animals except sponges
  • 3 layers
  • Ectoderm outer layer
  • Endoderm inner layer
  • Mesoderm middle layer

DIPLOBLASTIC
TRIPLOBLASTIC
13
Overview of Animal types
  • Sponges loose arrangement of different types of
    cells do not have tissues
  • Diploblastic
  • Cnidarians and Ctenophores
  • Only have 2 germ layers endo and ectoderm
  • Triploblastic
  • Have 3rd germ layer - mesoderm

14
Body Cavity
  • Triploblastic organisms further grouped base on
    presence and type of coelom fluid-filled cavity
    between digestive tract and body wall

15
Body Cavity Classification
  • Acoelomates
  • Solid body no cavity
  • Flatworms and ribbon worms

16
  • Pseudocoelomates
  • Have a body cavity but it is not completely lined
    with mesoderm
  • Nematodes and rotifers
  • Coelomates
  • Tube-within-a-tube body plan
  • Coelom completely lined with mesoderm
  • Comparison

17
2 main groups of bilateral animals
  • During gastrulation, group of cells move in
    forming sac embryonic gut
  • If blastopore becomes mouth organism is a
    protostome
  • If blastopores becomes anus - deuterostome

18
Protostomes vs. Deuterostomes
  • PROTOSTOMES
  • Flatworms, annelids, arthropods, mollusks
  • SPIRAL CLEAVAGE
  • Developmental fate of embryo fixed early
    determinate
  • DEUTEROSTOMES
  • Echinoderms and chordates
  • RADIAL CLEAVAGE
  • Fate of embryo occurs later indeterminate

19

Fig. 29-7, p. 627
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