the animal kingdom welcome to your kingdom!. where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

72
The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!

Upload: ethel-sheena-mckenzie

Post on 04-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

The Animal Kingdom

Welcome to your kingdom!

Page 2: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed….

Page 3: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

What is an animal?

• Multicellular, eukaryotic heterotrophs

• They lack cell walls: their bodies are held together by other proteins like collagen and cell junctions that hold the cells together to provide an animal strength in form

Page 4: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

• Some animals also have a skeleton:– Exoskeletons (on the outside) made of chitin

(these will need to be shed in order for the animal to grow) ex. Shells of insects, crabs, spiders

– Endoskeletons (on the inside) made of bone

– Hydrostatic skeletons: water or another fluid provides pressure pushing out from the inside of the animal to provide support (like a water balloon)

Page 5: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

• Animals are capable of moving from one place to another– This is made possible by the coordination of

two “new” types of tissue: nerve and muscle

Of course there are some exceptions: sedentary (or sessile) animals have no movement; they remain fixed in one location

Page 6: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

• Most biologists agree that the animal kingdom can be traced back to one common ancestor about 700 million years ago

This ancestor was most likely a protozoan.

One hypothesis suggests that this flagellated protist formed a single layer, hollow ball of cells. Eventually, some of these cells began to specialize creating two or more layers of cells

Page 8: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

The opening to the digestive cavity (the blastopore) becomes the mouth

Page 9: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Animal embryos form layers

• Ectoderm: forms the outer covering and nervous system

• Mesoderm: forms all of the other stuff in between• Endoderm: lines the digestive tract and makes the

accessory organsIf an animal has all three layers:

Triploblastic (3 layers)Only two layers:

Diploblastic (2 layers)

Page 10: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Animal Symmetry

1. Some animals lack symmetry all together

(they are asymmetrical)

Page 11: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Animal Symmetry

2. Others have radial symmetry (like a flower pot)

No matter how you would cut the animal vertically through the body, all of the wedges would appear the same

Page 12: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 13: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Animal Symmetry

3. While others have bilateral symmetry (two-sided symmetry)

Page 14: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Terms associated with bilateral symmetry

• Dorsal• Ventral• Anterior• Posteror

Page 15: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Porifera

The Sponges

Page 16: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Basic body plan of sponges

Only one cell layer; no true tissues

Almost everything is accomplished by diffusion

Page 17: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Glenn and Martha Vargas© 2004 California Academy of Sciences

Page 18: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Vase sponge

Page 19: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Eugene Weber© 2001 California Academy of Sciences

Page 20: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

The Glass Sponge

This is the skeleton only; all of the other cells have disintegrated.

Page 21: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Cnidaria(The Cnidarians)

• Sea Anemones

• Hydra

• Coral

• Jellyfish

Page 22: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Basic Body Plan

• *Two body forms: polyp and medusa

• *Stinging tentacles surround the mouth

• Only two cell layers: epidermis and gastrodermis

• First animals to have a mouth

• Members can reproduce sexually as well as asexually (budding)

Page 23: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 24: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Jellyfish Life Cycle

• Note the change between polyp and medusa

Page 25: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Gerald and Buff Corsi © 1999 California Academy of Sciences

Page 26: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Gerald and Buff Corsi© 2002 California Academy of Sciences

Page 27: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Gerald and Buff Corsi© 2002 California Academy of

Sciences

Page 28: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

© 2003 Dr. Peter Weish

Page 29: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Glenn and Martha Vargas © 2004 California Academy of Sciences

Page 30: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

“Artic Jelly” washed up on shore

Page 31: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Artic Jelly…up close and personal…

Page 32: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

E. Eugenia Patten© 2001 California Academy of Sciences

Page 33: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Dr. Robert Thomas and Margaret Orr© 2004 California Academy of Sciences

Page 34: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Gerald and Buff Corsi© 1999 California Academy of Sciences

Page 35: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Gerald and Buff Corsi© 1999 California Academy of

Sciences

Page 36: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Coral Polyps

Page 37: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Eugene Weber© 2001 California Academy of Sciences

Page 38: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Glenn and Martha Vargas© 2004 California Academy of Sciences

Page 39: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Beatrice F. Howitt© 2002 California Academy of Sciences

Page 40: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Portuguese Man-of-War; a colonial cnidarian

Page 41: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Gerald and Buff Corsi © 1999 California Academy of Sciences

Page 42: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Ctenphora: (“Comb jellies”) Beroe species

Page 43: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 44: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Platyhelminthes(the flatworms)

• Tapeworms

• Flukes

• Planaria

Page 45: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Platyhelminthes: the flatworms Planaria

Page 46: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 47: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 48: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Planaria splitting…

Page 49: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 50: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

General Characteristics of the flatworms

• bilateral symmetry• three cell layers• possess a ganglia (forerunner of a brain)• sensory receptors• pharynx that leads to digestive cavity (but

still no anus)• flame cells help excrete metabolic wastes

(their version of urine)

Page 51: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Planaria body plan

Page 52: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

The Flame Cell

Page 53: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Tapeworms…..

Page 54: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Tapeworm scolex showing hooks and suckers

Page 55: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 56: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Scolex of a rat tapeworm

Page 57: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Proglottids

Page 58: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Pork Tapeworm Life Cycle

Page 59: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Fish Tapeworm Life Cycle

Page 60: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Dog tape worm

Page 61: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Marine flatworm

Page 62: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 63: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

                                                                           

Page 64: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 65: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Nothing beyond this point on the final!!!!

Page 66: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Nematoda (the roundworms)

• Tube-within-a tube body plan

• WOW!!! An anus!!!

• They have a hydrostatic skeleton

• Reproduce only sexually

• Many are parasites

Page 67: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 68: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 69: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…
Page 70: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Phylum Arthropoda

• Bilateral symmetry

• Breath by using gills

• Well developed nervous system

• Most have shells

• All have a mantle: a fleshy fold of tissue that surrounds the internal organs

• Most have a shell

Page 71: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…

Class Gastropoda(the gastropods-snails, slugs)

• Name means “stomach foot”

• Most have one shell (like snails)

• Feed with a radula

Page 72: The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed…