Title: Chapter 31: Animals: Part II
1Chapter 31 Animals Part II
2Echinoderms
- Echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes.
- In deuterostomes, the second embryonic opening
becomes the mouth and a coelom forms by
outpocketing of the primitive gut making these
animals enterocoelomates. - A dipleurula larva is found among some.
3Characteristics of Echinoderms
- Echinoderms are a diverse group of marine
animals there are no terrestrial echinoderms. - They have an endoskeleton consisting of
spine-bearing, calcium-rich plates. - Echinoderms are often radially symmetrical,
although the larva is a free-swimming filter
feeder with bilateral symmetry.
4- Echinoderm Diversity
- Echinoderms include
- Sea lilies (class Crinoidea)
- Sea cucumbers (class Holothuroidea)
- Brittle stars (class Ophiuroidea)
- Sea urchins and sand dollars (class Echinoidea)
- Sea stars (class Asteroidea)
5Echinoderm diversity
6- Sea Stars
- Sea stars are an example of echinoderms and
possess tiny skin gills, a central nerve ring
with branches, and a water vascular system for
locomotion. - Water enters this system through the sieve plate,
passes into a ring canal, then into ampullae, and
into tube feet expansion and contraction of tube
feet move the sea star along. - Each of the five arms contains branches from the
nervous, digestive, and reproductive systems.
7- When a sea star eats a bivalve, it everts its
cardiac stomach into the bivalve and secretes
enzymes partially digested food is taken into
the sea star. - Echinoderms do not have a respiratory,
circulatory, or excretory system. - The water vascular system carries out these
functions. - Sea stars reproduce both sexually, and asexually
by fragmentation.
8Sea star anatomy and behavior
9Chordates
- Chordates (tunicates, lancelets, and
vertebrates) have - a suuporting notochord,
- a dorsal hollow nerve cord,
- pharyngeal pouches, and a
- post-anal tail at one time during their
development.
10Chordate characteristics
11Evolution of Chordates
- The lancelets and tunicates are invertebrate
chordates. - Vertebrates include the fishes, amphibians,
reptiles, birds, and mammals. - Cartilaginous fishes were the first to have jaws
amphibians evolved legs and invaded land. - Reptiles, birds, and mammals have means of
reproduction suitable to land.
12Evolutionary tree of chordates
13Invertebrate Chordates
- Lancelets and tunicates are the invertebrate
chordates. - Lancelets are small animals found in shallow
water along the coasts they filter feed on
microscopic organisms. - Tunicates (sea squirts) live on the ocean floor
and filter water entering the animal through an
incurrent siphon. - Adult tunicates lack chordate characteristics
except gill slits, but adult lancelets retain the
four chordate characteristics.
14Habitat and anatomy of a lancelet, Brachiostoma
15Anatomy of a tunicate, Halocynthia
16Vertebrates
- At some time during their lives, all vertebrates
have the four chordate characteristics. - The notochord is replaced by the vertebral
column this endoskeleton demonstrates
segmentation. - The internal organs are well developed and
cephalization places complex sense organs at the
head.
17- Vertebrates are distinguished in particular by
these features - Living endoskeleton
- Closed circulatory system
- Paired appendages
- Efficient respiration and excretion
- High degree of cephalization
- The evolution of jaws allowed some vertebrates to
take up the predatory way of life.
18Milestones in vertebrate evolution
19Fishes
- Today there are three living classes of fishes
jawless fishes, cartilaginous fishes, and bony
fishes the last two groups have jaws. - Jawless Fishes
- The first vertebrates were jawless fishes, today
represented by hagfishes and lampreys with no
scales or paired fins. - Water moves in and out through gill openings.
20- Cartilaginous Fishes
- The cartilaginous fishes include the sharks, rays
and skates which have skeletons made of
cartilage. - Skates and rays are flat fishes that live partly
buried in the sand and feed on mussels and clams.
- Sharks and rays have a sense of electric currents
in water, a lateral line system, and a keen sense
of smell these attributes help detect prey.
21- Bony Fishes
- Bony fishes have jaws and two pairs of fins and
are the most diverse and numerous of all
vertebrates. - Bony fishes include those that are ray-finned
(most abundant) and a few that are lobe-finned
some of the lobed-finned fishes have lungs and
likely gave rise to amphibians. - A swim bladder may provide buoyancy in ray-finned
fishes.
22- Most fishes today are ray-finned and have these
characteristics - Bony skeleton and scales
- Swim bladder
- Two-chambered heart (one atrium, one ventricle)
- Paired fins
- Jaws
- Gills
23Jawed fishes
24Amphibians
- Amphibians evolved from the lobe-finned fishes
and are tetrapods with two pairs of limbs. - They are represented today by frogs, newts,
toads, and salamanders. - Amphibians usually return to the water to
reproduce and require moist habitats. - Frog tadpoles metamorphose into terrestrial
adults with lungs.
25- These features distinguish amphibians
- Usually tetrapods
- Mostly metamorphosis
- Three-chambered heart (2 atria, one ventricle)
- Usually lungs in adults
- Smooth, moist skin
26Frog metamorphosis
27Reptiles
- Reptiles include the extinct dinosaurs and
todays snakes, lizards, turtles, alligators, and
crocodiles. - Reptiles have well-developed lungs within a rib
cage they are covered with scales that protect
them from desiccation and predators. - Reptiles have internal fertilization and also lay
a shelled egg, which contains extraembryonic
membranes, including an amnion that allows the
embryo to develop on land.
28- Features that distinguish reptiles include
- Usually tetrapods
- Lungs with expandable rib cages
- Shelled, leathery egg
- Dry, scaly skin
- Fishes, amphibians, and reptiles are ectothermic.
- Reptiles try to regulate their body temperature
by moving to a warmer or cooler location as
needed.
29The tongue as a sense organ
30The reptilian egg allows reproduction on land
31Birds
- Birds are characterized by the presence of
feathers, which are modified reptilian scales. - Birds lay hard-shelled eggs rather than the
leathery eggs of reptiles. - Birds are likely closely related to bipedal
dinosaurs, although this is still under study.
32Bird anatomy
33- Anatomy and Physiology of Birds
- Features of birds are related to the ability to
fly. - Bird forelimbs are modified as wings.
- Bones are hollow and laced with air cavities the
sternum has a keel to which flight muscles
attach. - A horny beak replaces teeth.
- Respiration is efficient due to air sacs.
- Birds have a four-chambered heart, and birds are
homeothermic.
34Bird circulatory system
35- Classification of Birds
- The classification of birds is based on beak and
foot types and to some extent on habitat and
behavior. - These features distinguish birds
- Feathers
- Hard-shelled egg
- Four-chambered heart
- Usually wings for flying
- Air sacs
- Homeothermic
36Bird beaks
37Mammals
- Mammals evolved from reptiles and flourished
after the demise of dinosaurs. - Mammals have hair that helps them maintain a
constant body temperature. - Like birds, mammals have a four-chambered heart.
- Internal development in the uterus shelters the
young. - Mammary glands allow mammals to nourish their
young.
38- Monotremes
- Monotremes have a cloaca that is a common area
for feces, excretory wastes, and sex cells. - Monotremes lay hard-shelled amniote eggs.
- Monotremes are represented by the duckbill
platypus and the spiny anteater.
39- Marsupials
- Marsupials have a pouch in which the very
immature newborn matures. - Inside the pouch, the newborns attach to nipples
of mammary glands. - Marsupials are represented by the American
opossum, and various Australian animals such as
koalas and kangaroos.
40Monotremes and marsupials
41- Placental Mammals
- Most mammals are placental mammals, which retain
the offspring inside a uterus until birth
extraembryonic membranes are present, including
the chorion that contributes to the fetal portion
of the placenta. - The classification of these mammals is based on
methods of obtaining food, and mode of locomotion.
42- Mammals are adapted to life on land and can move
rapidly. - The brain is enlarged due to the expansion of the
cerebral hemispheres. - Internal body temperature is constant.
- Mammals have differentiated teeth the specific
size and shape of the teeth may be associated
with whether the animal is a herbivore, a
carnivore, or an omnivore.
43- These features distinguish placental mammals
- Body hair
- Differentiated teeth
- Infant dependency
- Constant internal temperature
- Mammary glands
- Well-developed brain
- Internal development
44Placental mammals
45Primates
- Primates are mammals adapted to living in trees
many have an opposable thumb. - The snout is shortened, enabling stereoscopic
vision, and cone cells give greater visual
acuity. - During the evolution of primates, various groups
diverged in a particular sequence. - Prosimians include lemurs, tarsiers, and lorises
anthropoids include monkeys, apes, and humans.
46- These traits distinguish primates from other
mammals - Opposable thumb (and sometimes great toe)
- Well-developed brain
- Nails (not claws)
- Single birth
- Extended period of parental care
- Emphasis on learned behavior
47Human Evolution
- The primate evolutionary tree shows that all
primates share one common ancestor and that the
other lines of descent diverged from the human
lineage over time. - Humans and apes shared a common ancestor.
- Molecular data indicate we are most closely
related to the African apes, whose ancestry split
from ours about 6 MYA.
48Primate evolutionary tree
49Evolution of Hominids
- To be a hominid, a fossil must have an anatomy
enabling it to stand erect and walk on two feet
(bipedalism). - Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba is a 5.6 to 5.2
million-years-ago (MYA) hominid found in
Ethiopia Ardipithecus ramidus ramidus is a 4.4
MYA hominid and less apelike than the older
fossil.
50- Australopithecines
- Human evolution continued in eastern Africa
around 4 MYA with the evolution of the
australopithecines, a group that is a direct
ancestor to humans. - Raymond Dart discovered Australopithecus
africanus in southern Africa in the 1920s this
fossil was the gracile type dated at 2.8 MYA. - A more robust form, (A. robustus), from 2 to 1.5
MYA, had a brain size of 500cc like A. africanus
these hominids may have been bipedal but still
had longer forelimbs.
51- The most famous australopithecine is Lucy or A.
afarensis (3.18 MYA) unearthed in eastern Africa,
whose brain was small (400 cc) but who walked
bipedally. - Since the australopithecines were apelike above
the waist but humanlike below the waist, it seems
that human characteristics did not all evolve at
once. - This type of evolution of various body parts at
different rates is referred to as mosaic
evolution.
52Australopithecus afarensis
53- Australopithecus afarensis, a gracile type, is
believed to be ancestral to the robust types
found in eastern Africas A. aethiopicus and A.
boisei. - boisei had a powerful upper body and the largest
molars of any hominid. - These robust types died out, and therefore, it is
possible that A. afarensis is ancestral to both
A. africanus and Homo.
54Evolution of Early Homo
- Fossils are assigned to Homo if the brain size is
600 cc or greater, if the jaw and teeth resemble
those of humans, and if tool use is evident. - Homo habilis
- Homo habilis, (handy man) present at about 2 MYA,
is certain to have made crude flake-like stone
tools. - Speech areas of the brain enlarged and
contributed to the beginning of society and
culture.
55Human evolution
56- Homo erectus
- Between 1.9 and 0.3 MYA Homo erectus, with a
brain capacity of 1,000 cc, a striding gate, and
a flatter face, was the first to migrate out of
Africa into Asia and Europe about 1 MYA. - Males were about 6 feet tall and females
approaching 5 feet, much taller than earlier
hominids. - H. erectus was the first hominid to use fire and
tools of this time were advanced axes and
cleavers.
57Homo erectus
58Evolution of Modern Humans
- Two contradicting hypotheses have been suggested
about the origin of modern humans, Homo sapiens,
from H. erectus. - The multiregional continuity hypothesis suggests
that modern humans originated from H. erectus
separately in Asia, Europe, and Africa. - The out-of-Africa hypothesis states that modern
humans originated in Africa and, after migrating
into Europe and Asia, replaced the archaic Homo
species found there.
59Multiregional continuity hypothesis
60Out-of-Africa hypothesis
61- Neanderthals
- The Neanderthals lacked a high forehead and a
significant chin and are classified as Homo
neanderthalensis. - They had massive brow ridges their pubic bone
was long compared to that of modern humans. - Neanderthals had a brain larger than that of
modern humans, and they lived in Europe and Asia
during the last Ice Age. - Neanderthals lived in caves, made stone tools,
and buried their dead with flowers.
62Neanderthals
63- Cro-Magnons
- Cro-Magnons evolved about 100,000 years ago and
were the first humans (Homo sapiens) to have a
thoroughly modern appearance. - They made stone tools, including stones attached
to wooden handles they threw spears, enabling
them to cooperatively hunt larger animals. - The Cro-Magnon culture included art and beautiful
paintings on cave walls.
64Cro-Magnons
65Chapter Summary
- Both echinoderms and chordates are deuterostomes.
- In deuterostomes, the second embryonic opening
becomes the mouth the coelom develops by an
outpocketing from the primitive gut. - Echinoderms develop radial symmetry and have a
unique water vascular system for locomotion.
66- Chordates have a notochord, a dorsal tubular
nerve cord, and a post-anal tail pharyngeal
pouches occur sometime during the life of
chordates, and in vertebrates, the notochord is
replaced by the vertebral column. - There are three groups of fishes.
- One group is jawless, but the cartilaginous and
bony fishes (ray-finned and lobe-finned) have
jaws.
67- Frogs and salamanders are amphibians that evolved
from lobe-finned fishes they have limbs as an
adaptation for locomotion on land. - The shelled egg of reptiles contains
extraembryonic membranes as an adaptation for
reproduction on land. - Both birds with feathers, and mammals with hair
and mammary glands, evolved from reptiles and are
able to maintain a constant body temperature.
68- Primates such as prosimians, monkeys, apes, and
humans are mammals adapted to living in trees. - Human evolution diverged from ape evolution in
Africa about six to seven million years ago. - The australopithecines were the first hominids
and were ancestors to humans.
69- Homo habilis could make tools Homo erectus
migrated out of Africa. - The Neanderthals (H. neanderthalensis) gave
evidence of being culturally advanced, lived in
caves, and hunted large mammals they buried
their dead with flowers. - Cro-Magnons are the oldest fossils to be
designated Homo sapiens they made sophisticated
tools and were accomplished artists and hunters.