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DIVERSITY LAB Thank you, Janice, Fall 2008, and Spring 2009 student, for sharing the photos you took with the class. Note: These slides only cover a portion.

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Presentation on theme: "DIVERSITY LAB Thank you, Janice, Fall 2008, and Spring 2009 student, for sharing the photos you took with the class. Note: These slides only cover a portion."— Presentation transcript:

1 DIVERSITY LAB Thank you, Janice, Fall 2008, and Spring 2009 student, for sharing the photos you took with the class. Note: These slides only cover a portion of what we saw in lab. You are responsible for all that was covered in lab. - Dr. Narey

2 The Four Major Plant Divisions Division Bryophyta: the liverworts and mosses Division Pterophyta: the ferns Division Coniferophyta: the cone bearing seed plants, e.g. pine, spruce, fir Division Anthophyta: the flowering plants Includes: Monocots – one cotyledon Dicots – two cotyledons

3 Division Bryophyta mosses shown here

4 Division Pterophyta

5 Division Coniferophyta

6 Division Anthophyta Monocots

7 Division Anthophyta Dicots

8 A Simple Classification Scheme for Animals Major Animal Phyla: Invertebrates Vertebrates (< 3%) 1 3 2

9 The Nine Major Animal Phyla: 95% Invertebrates Phylum Porifera: the sponges Phylum Cnidaria: the hydra, anemones, and jellyfish Phylum Platyhelminthes: the flatworms Phylum Nematoda: the roundworms Phylum Annelida: the segmented worms Phylum Arthropoda: the insects, arachnids, and crustaceans Phylum Mollusca: snails, clams, and squid Phylum Echinodermata: sea stars, sea urchins, and sea cucumber (larva bilateral, adult radial symmetry) Phylum Chordata: the tunicates, lancelets, & vertebrates In red: radially symmetrical

10 Phylum Porifera

11 Phylum Cnidaria

12 Phylum Platyhelminthes flatworms

13 Phylum Nematoda roundworms

14 Phylum Annelida segmented worms

15 Phylum Mollusca

16 Phylum Arthropoda Class Insecta (FYI only)

17 Phylum Arthropoda Class Arachnida (FYI only)

18 Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum Crustacea (FYI only)

19 Phylum Echinodermata Sea stars, sea urchins, brittle stars

20 Phylum Chordata Class Osteichthyes Bony fish

21 Phylum Chordata Class Chondrichthyes Cartilagenous fish, sharks, rays, skates

22 Phylum Chordata Class Amphibia

23 Phylum Chordata Class Reptilia

24 Sinornithosaurus was the fifth and most bird- like feathered dinosaur species ever to be discovered. It lived about 125 million years ago and was a dromaeosaurid. Its discovery strongly suggests that other dromaeosaurids may have also had feathers. Some scientists believe that its discovery is proof that feathers first developed in quick-footed, ground-dwelling dinosaurs, instead of those that lived in trees

25 Phylum Chordata Class Aves

26 Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia


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