Title: Evolution of Systems for Exchange
1What Characteristic Define an Animal?
- Eukaryotic cells
- Multicellular
- Ingestive Heterotroph
2- How did the animal kingdom evolve?
- Oldest fossils are 700 million years old
- Animals probably evolved from an ancestor of a
colonial choanoflagellate - protist
- One hypothesis for the origin of animals
3Major Trends in Animal Evolution
- Development of Tissue Layers
- Patterns of Body Symmetry
- Development of a Body Cavity
- Body Segmentation
- Specialization
4Development of Tissue Layers
- Most animals have tissues that arise from three
embryologic tissues layers - Ectoderm produce skin and nervous system
- Endoderm produces GI tract
- Mesoderm produces muscle, skeleton and most
organs
5Patterns of Body Symmetry
- Asymmetrical
- Bilateral symmetry
- Radial symmetry
6Development of a Body Cavity
- Allows independent movement of body wall
- Cushions internal organs
- Provides a hydrostatic skeleton
- Increases flexibility and mobility
Protostomes mesoderm forms from mass of cells
between endoderm and ectoderm
Deuterostomes mesoderm forms as outpocketing of
gastrulation cavity
Visualizing Protostome Deuterostome Development
7Body Segmentation
- Most animals have segmented bodies
- Segmentation increases body flexibility and
mobility
8Evolution of Systems for Exchange with the
Environment
- The maintenance of constant conditions in the
internal environment is called homeostasis.
Homeostasis is an essential feature of complex
animals. - Animals have evolved variable adaptations to
maintain homeostasis, that depend on their
environment and level of sophistication
9Evolution of Systems
- Every organism must exchange materials energy
with environment, which ultimately occurs at the
cellular level.
- Most animals have organ systems specialized for
exchanging materials, and many have an internal
transport system that conveys fluid
(blood/interstitial fluid) throughout the body.
10Evolution of the Circulatory System
- The bulk transport of fluids throughout the body
connects aqueous environment of body cells to
organs that exchange gases, absorb nutrients, and
dispose of wastes. - For animals with many cell layers, gastrovascular
cavities are insufficient, due to the amount of
transports.
11- Open Circulatory System
- There is no distinction between blood and
interstitial fluid, collectively called
hemolymph. - One or more hearts pump the hemolymph into
interconnected sinuses surrounding the organs,
allowing exchange between hemolymph and body
cells.
- Closed Circulatory System
- Blood is confined to vessels and is distinct from
the interstitial fluid. - One or more hearts pump blood into large vessels
that branch into smaller ones cursing through
organs. - Materials are exchanged by diffusion between the
blood and the interstitial fluid bathing the
cells.
12(No Transcript)
13- Arteries carry Away
- Veins Veturn
- Blood Arrives at Atria
- Blood Vacates Ventricles
- Left oxygenated
- Right deoxygenated
Fig. 42.4
14Evolution of the Nervous System
3 evolutionary trends in nervous system
development 1-bilateral 2-cephalization 3-increas
ed numbers of neurons
15Evolution of Nervous Systems
- The nervous system monitors and controls almost
every organ system through a series of positive
and negative feedback loops.
16Evolution of Respiratory Systems
- Large animals cannot maintain gas exchange by
diffusion across their outer surface. They
developed a variety of respiratory surfaces that
all increase the surface area for exchange, thus
allowing for larger bodies. - A respiratory surface is covered with thin, moist
epithelial cells that allow oxygen and carbon
dioxide to exchange. Those gases can only cross
cell membranes when they are dissolved in water
or an aqueous solution, thus respiratory surfaces
must be moist.
17Evolution of Respiratory Surfaces
- Single-celled organisms exchange gases directly
across cell membrane. However, the slow diffusion
rate of oxygen/carbon dioxide limits size. Simple
animals lack specialized exchange surfaces have
flattened, tubular, or thin shaped body plans - Earthworms have a series of thin-walled blood
vessels known as capillaries. Gas exchange occurs
at capillaries located throughout the body as
well as those in the respiratory surface. - Many terrestrial animals have their respiratory
surfaces inside the body and connected to the
outside by a series of tubes. - Tracheae tubes carry air directly to cells for
exchange. Spiracles openings at surface that
lead to tracheae that branch into smaller tubes.
Body movements or contractions speed up the rate
of diffusion. Does not function well in animals
whose body gt 5 cm. - Amphibians use skin as a respiratory surface.
Frogs eliminate carbon dioxide 2.5 times as fast
through their skin as they do through their
lungs. Eels (a fish) obtain 60 of their O2
through their skin. Humans exchange only 1 of
CO2 through skin. Constraints of water loss
dictate that terrestrial animals must develop
more efficient gas exchange.
18Gills
- Gills greatly increase the surface area for gas
exchange. - Gills typically are convoluted outgrowths
containing blood vessels covered by a thin
epithelial layer. - Gills are very efficient at removing oxygen from
water there is only 1/20 the amount of oxygen
present in water as in the same volume of air.
Water flows over gills in one direction while
blood flows in the opposite direction through
gill capillaries. This countercurrent flow
maximizes oxygen transfer.
19Lungs
- Lungs are ingrowths of the body wall and connect
to the outside by as series of tubes and small
openings. Lung breathing probably evolved about
400 million years ago. Lungs are not entirely the
sole property of vertebrates, some terrestrial
snails have a gas exchange structures similar to
those in frogs.
20Evolution of Excretory System
- Osmoregulation balances the uptake and loss of
water and solutes. - An animal's nitrogenous wastes reflect its
phylogeny and habitat. - Diverse excretory systems are variations on
tubular theme - The nephron is organized for stepwise processing
of blood filtrate. - Hormonal circuits link kidney function, water
balance, and blood pressure.
21Evolution of Digestive System
- Diffusion?ingestion?gastrovascular cavity?1 way
digestive system.
22Evolution of Digestive System
- Diffusion?ingestion?gastrovascular cavity?1
opening digestive system.
23Evolution of Digestive System
24Resources
- Architecture of Animals
- Milestones of Life
- External Environment I