Title: Kingdom Animalia
1Kingdom Animalia
2Whats an Animal?
- Eukaryotic multicellular heterotrophs without
cells walls. - This includes a HUGE number of organisms you may
not think of as animals (over 1 million species!) - The largest group of animals are the insects, and
there may be 1 million species of beetles alone
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6Kingdom AnimaliaPhylum Porifera the sponges
7Phylum Porifera
- Sessile filter feeders (living water filters)
- No true tissues or organs.
- No body symmetry
- Spicules composed of minerals, and/or the protein
spongin provide skeletal support. - Most are Monoecious (produce male and female
gametes in one individual)
8(No Transcript)
9(No Transcript)
10Phylum Cnidaria(jellyfish, anemones, corals)
11PHYLUM CNIDARIA
- cnide means nettle or stinger- most of the 9000
species have stinging nematocysts. - found primarily in the sea, except for a few
freshwater jellyfish - Radial symmetry (5-fold)
- Two tissue layers (diploblastic)
- Two body plans polyp (sessile) and medusa
(motile)
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14(No Transcript)
15Phylum Platyhelminthes
16Phylum Platyhelminthes
- The flatworms
- They are triploblastic and have bilateral
symmetry - no body cavity (acoelomate)
- These animals are the first to exhibit a head.
- Many flatworms are parasites of chordates (fish,
reptiles, mammals, etc..) These are the tapeworms
and flukes
17Phylum Nematoda The Roundworms
18Phylum Nematoda
- Bilateral symmetry and some head development.
- Cylindrical and smooth bodies with a
pseudocoelom. - Many are also parasites of vertebrates.
19Phylum Molluscaclams, mussels, snails, slugs,
octopuses, squid
20Mollusc features
- Most have obvious heads and clear bilateral
symmetry and a true coelom. - Contains the most intelligent (by far) group of
invertebrates- the cephalopods octopuses,
squids, and cuttlefishes - Most have a shell, mantle and foot
- Most numerous group are the gastropods- the
snails and slugs
21Phylum AnnelidaThe segmented worms
22Annelid Features
- Earths most advanced worms 15,000 species
- All have a body cavity like yours
- Segmentation means that parts like hearts and
muscle groups repeat in series down the body. - Most have hairs
- Similar nervous system to insects
- Heads highly specialized
23Phylum Echinodermata(starfish, brittlestars, sea
urchins, sand dollars, etc.)
24Phylum Echinodermata
- Name means spiny skin
- Spiky marine animals , 7000 species
- Diverged from same line of animals that produced
chordates - Modern echinoderms are mainly motile
- All are triploblastic
- radial symmetry
25(No Transcript)
26The ArthropodsCrabs, shrimp, insects, spiders,
ticks, copepods, etc
27Phylum Arthropoda
- More animals belong to this group than to all
others combined. 900,000 known. - Well-developed organ systems, and segmented as
in annelids - Exoskeleton jointed at body segments and limbs
- Appendages paired and diverse for a huge variety
of functions.
28The Chordates(vertebrates and their relatives)
29Phylum Chordata
- Our phylum, along with fishes, amphibians,
reptiles, mammals and birds. - Vertebrate Chordates have
- Bilateral symmetry and a coelom
- A backbone of vertebrae
- Skeletons of internal bone or cartilage
- Large brains and a dorsal nerve cord
- Tetrapod vertebrates (reptiles, mammals and
birds) have - Amniotic eggs or the mammal equivalent
- Dry skin with scales, hair or feathers
- Limbs for walking on land