Ocean Planet & The Great Migration

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Presentation transcript:

Ocean Planet & The Great Migration Life in the Paleozoic Ocean Planet & The Great Migration

Late Middle Paleozoic Early 543-248 Myr

Vertebrate Evolution From Pikaia to Cheney

Phylum Chordata Including Subphylum Vertebrata Notochord Nerve cord Pharyngeal gill slits Vertebrates Vertebral column replaces notochord & skull encloses brain

Phylogeny Reminder Fish --> Amphibians --> Reptiles --> Mammals

Think in terms of common ancestors and speciation

Fish Phylogeny

Fish: Jawless Fish (Agnatha) Cephalasphid Early Paleozoic ostracoderms. (A) Thelodus, (B) Pteraspis, (C) Jamoytius, and (D) Hemicyclaspis, drawn to the same scale.

Modern Agnatha: Sea Lamprey

Origin of Jaws

Fish: Armored Fish (Placoderms) Dunkleosteus Bothriolepis Extinct

Fish: Armored Fish (Acanthodians) Armor - a form of phosphorus storage? Extinct Acanthodes

Fish: Chondrichthyes (Cartilaginous Fish)

Modern Chondrichthyes (Sharks & Rays)

Fish: Osteichthyes (Bony Fish)

Osteichthyes: Ray Fined Subclass: Actinopterygii Rays

Ray Finned Fish Sturgeon Longnose Gar

Ray Finned Fish: Teleosts Weedy Sea Dragon 96% of today’s fish Zebrafish

Osteichthyes: Lobe Finned Subclass: Sarcopterygii

Lobe Finned Fish Coelacanth

Lobe Finned Fish Lungfish Eusthenopteron

The Great Migration (Silurian/Devonian) Plants, Insects, Vertebrates (Tetrapods)

Amphibians

Amphibians Wood Frog Eggs

Lobe Fins to Amphibians

Acanthostega (Upper Devonian)

Ichthyostega (Upper Devonian)

Advantages to Moving onto Land Lots of light for photosynthesis Easy access to oxygen and carbon dioxide Less competition Rich source of nutrients an (eventually) food Fewer predators

Challenges to Moving onto Land Conserving water - not drying out Obtaining & circulating water, food & gases Overcoming gravity Reproduction Exposure to UV

Vertebrate Solutions Conserving water - not drying out Obtaining & circulating water, food & gases Overcoming gravity Reproduction Exposure to UV Leathery skin & scales 3 or 4 chambered heart Modified skeletal arrangement Internal Fertilization & Amniotic Egg

Amniotic Egg Encloses embryo in water Regulates oxygen.carbon dioxide exchange Amniotic Egg Food Collects wastes = Freedom from Oceans

Permian Reptile Egg

Modern Reptile Skin

The Amniotes Classified based on skull structure Diapsids (Includes lizards, dinosaurs & birds)) The Amniotes Classified based on skull structure Synapsids (Includes mammals) Anapsids (Includes turtles)

Amniote Cladogram About 300 Myr

Anapsids & Diapsids (True Reptiles) Early Permian - Labidosaurus

Anapsids & Diapsids (True Reptiles)

Early Synapsids (Mammal-Like Reptiles)

Pelycosaurs (Sail Fins) Temperature control? Dimetrodon

Therapsids (Permian Synapsids) Dicynodonts Cynodont

More on Synapsid, Mammal, and Reptile Evolution in the Mesozoic…