Animal Evolution. I. Animal traits A. Heterotrophic B. Mobile C. Lack cell walls D. Possess nerve and striated muscle.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AN INTRODUCTION TO ANIMAL DIVERSITY
Advertisements

ANIMAL DIVERSITY. YOU MUST KNOW… THE CHARACTERISTICS OF ANIMALS THE STAGES OF ANIMAL DEVELOPMENT HOW TO SORT THE ANIMAL PHYLA BASED ON SYMMETRY, DEVLOPMENT.
Infer How is the embryology of echinoderms similar to that of vertebrates? What might this similarity indicate about their evolutionary relationship.
ANIMAL DIVERSITY.
Animal Evolution Chpt. 32. Multicellular Multicellular Heterotrophic digest within body.
Chap 32 Animal Evolution. ( 1) Animals are multicellular, heterotrophic eukaryotes. –They must take in preformed organic molecules through ingestion,
Chapter 32 Reading Quiz From which kingdom did animals most likely evolve? What is the only group of animals that do not possess “true tissues”? A sea.
Introduction to Animals. Characteristics Multicellular Organization Multicellular Organization Heterotrophic Heterotrophic Sexual reproduction and development.
The animal kingdom extends far beyond humans and other animals we may encounter 1.3 million living species of animals have been identified There are exceptions.
1 Overview of Animal Diversity Chapter General Features of Animals Heterotrophs Multicellular Able to move from place to place Diverse in form and.
Introduction to Kingdom Animalia
Introduction to Animals
Chapter 32 – Animal Diversity
Introduction to Animals. To be an animal means 1.Multicellular – humans have ~ trillion cells 2.Ingestive heterotroph 3.Lacking a cell wall 4.Specialization.
Animals = invertebrates and vertebrates (95% of all animals are invertebrates)
Kingdom Animalia Chapter 20. Kingdom Animalia Overview ◦ Heterotrophic, acquire food by ingestion ◦ Locomotion by means of muscles ◦ Multicellular, high.
ANIMAL KINGDOM. Main Characteristics Multicellular eukaryotes Heterotrophs Specialized cells; most have tissues Response to stimuli by nervous and muscular.
CHARACTERISTICS OF ANIMALS: WELCOME TO YOUR KINGDOM! Adapted from Kim Foglia - April 2015.
An Introduction to Animal Diversity Chapter 32. Characteristics of Animals Multi-cellular Heterotrophic eukaryotes - ingestion Lack cell walls – collagen.
Chapter 32. Characteristics that Define Animals Nutritional modes Ingest organic molecules and digest them via enzymes Cell structure and specialization.
The Parazoa which lack true tissues and the Eumetazoa which have true tissues. –The parazoans, phylum Porifera or sponges, represent an early branch of.
LECTURE PRESENTATIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert.
Objective: Intro to Animal Diversity. Heterotrophs that ingest food Multicellular with structural proteins Develop from embryonic layers Animal Characteristics.
Animal Evolution. The Basics  Animals = multicellular, heterotrophic  Life history: – Sexual w/ flagellated sperm/nonmotile egg –Development: cleavage,
Chapter 32 An Introduction to Animal Diversity. Overview: Welcome to Your Kingdom The animal kingdom extends far beyond humans and other animals we may.
ANIMAL KINGDOM. MAIN CHARACTERISTICS Multicellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophs Specialized cells; most have tissues Response to stimuli by nervous and muscular.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Animal Form and Function Chapter 32. What you need to know! The characteristics of animals. The stages of animal development How to sort the animal phyla.
Introduction to Animal Diversity Packet #76 Chapter #32.
The Animal Kingdom. Anatomical Positions ANTERIOR POSTERIOR DORSAL VENTRAL.
Intro to Animal Diversity Chapter 32. Slide 2 of 17 Animalia – General Notes  1.3 million species  300K plant species  1.5 million fungi  >10 million.
Chapter 32-34: Animal Diversity Objectives 1.Define common characteristics amongst all animals 2.Animals can be characterized by “body plans” 3.Molecular.
Chapter 32 Animal Classification. Characteristics of Animals Multicellular, heterotrophic eukaryotes Lack cell walls (held by collagen in ECM), have tight.
Introduction To Animal Evolution
LiLiving ThingsLiLiving Things Living Things. A newer system recognizes two basically distinctive groups of prokaryotes –The domain Bacteria –The domain.
An Introduction to Animal Diversity  What Is an Animal?  An Overview of Animal Phylogeny and Diversity  The Origins of Animal Diversity.
Chapter 32 Introduction to Animal Diversity. Animal Characteristics 1.) All are heterotrophs & must ingest food to digest it. 2.) All eukaryotic and multicellular.
Ch 32 Animal Kingdom Evo/Devo Body Plans evodevo.
An Introduction to Animal Diversity
Chapter 32 n Introduction to Animal Evolution. Def: animal (n) Unique characteristics: n Heterotrophic eukaryotes; ingestion n Lack cell walls; collagen.
Chapter 32 ~ n Chapter 32 ~ Introduction to Animal Evolution.
Chapter 32 Introduction to Animal Evolution. I. What is an animal? A. Structure, nutrition, and life history define animals 1. Animals are multicellular,
Introduction to Animal Evolution Ch. 32 AP Biology Ms. Haut.
Chapter 32 Introduction to Animal Evolution Our changing view of biological diversity.
The Animal Kingdom. Anatomical Positions ANTERIOR POSTERIOR DORSAL VENTRAL.
The Origin of Animal Diversity. What is an animal? Animals are: Multicellular Heterotrophic Eukaryotic Animals store energy as glycogen (not starch, as.
Overview: Welcome to Your Kingdom
An Introduction to Animal Diversity
Chapter 32: An Overview of Animal Diversity
Introduction to Animals
Introduction to Animal Evolution
Multicellular eukaryotes Heterotrophy by ingestion
INTRODUCTION TO ANIMAL EVOLUTION
Animals AP Biology - Chapter 32.
Lecture #14 Date ______ Chapter 32 ~ Introduction to Animal Evolution.
Animal Diversity.
Introduction to Animal Diversity
An introduction to animal diversity
Intro to Animal Diversity
Introduction to Animal Diversity !
Introduction to Animal Evolution
Chapter 32 ~ Chapter 32 ~ Introduction to Animal Evolution.
An Introduction to Animal Diversity
Animals! Introduction.
Introduction to Animal Evolution
INTRODUCTION TO ANIMAL EVOLUTION AND DIVERSITY
Introduction to Animals
The Origin of Animal Diversity
Animal Evolution.
Presentation transcript:

Animal Evolution

I. Animal traits A. Heterotrophic B. Mobile C. Lack cell walls D. Possess nerve and striated muscle

D. Reproduces sexually 1. Diploid generation dominant 2. Often has larval form 3. Displays metamorphosis

E. Common embryology 1. cleavage 2. blastula 3. gastrulation 4. germ layers

F. Homeotic genes 1. genes that control development 2. control placement and location of appendages

Mutations in homeotic genes can cause huge changes in a single generation

II. Monophyletic origin A. Colonial choanocyte B. Flagella with microvilli collar around the flagella C. No division of labor

D. Possible mode of evolution

III. Grades of Evolutionary Tree

A. Major branches of the phylogenetic tree are called grades 1. The grade is like a fork in the road that represents a major anatomical change that opens up new possibilties 2. Once a lineage begins down a grade, it once was thought of as an irreversible path-male passing down a road 3. Now with new tools of discovery-DNA sequencing some of older pathways are now being reconsidered 4. We will stay with the older story for the time being

B. First bifurcation-cellular vs. tissue specialization 1. sponges possess cellular specialization but not true tissues 2. sponges are referred to as parametazoans-kind of animal-like 3. second branch represents eumetazoans-true animals 4. the eumetazoans possess two qualities that are more animal-like than the sponges – a. true tissue level specializations – b. symmetry

C. Types of symmetry-radial vs. bilateral 1. definitions 2. body planes 3. dorsal vs. ventral 4. cephalad vs. caudad 5. anterior vs. posterior

6. Radial symmetry a. no cephalization b. adapted for sessile existence c. either drifts or stays attached to a surface d. nothing sneaks up on it e. these organisms are diploblastic

7. Bilateral symmetry a. in addition to a top and a bottom-dorsal and ventral surface b. there is an anterior and a posterior end of the animal c. cephalization d. there is also a longitudinal nerve cord that runs toward the posterior end of the animal e. these animals concentrate their sense organs at the end of the animal that meets the world f. tend to be active and highly mobil g. triploblastic

D. Development of a coelom 1. definition 2. functions

3. Flatworms (platyhelminthes) are acoelomate

4. Roundworms have a pseudocoelom

5. Higher bilateria have a true coelom

E. Protostome vs. deuterostome lineages 1. protostomes- molluscs, annelids, and the arthropods 2. deuterostomes- echinoderms and chordates

Early animal development terms Cleavage

Blastula

Gastrulation

3. Differences between the two a. cleavage b. coelom formation c. fate of blastopore