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

72
The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!

Transcript of The Animal Kingdom Welcome to your kingdom!. Where we’ve been…and where we’re headed….

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….