Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Introduction to the Animal Kingdom

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Introduction to the Animal Kingdom"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to the Animal Kingdom

2 Characteristics of Animals:
Heterotrophic Eukaryotic Multicellular Lack cell walls 95% = invertebrates (no backbone) 5% = vertebrates (have a backbone)

3 7 Common Animal Functions
Feeding: Herbivore = eats plants Carnivore = eats animals Omnivore = eats plants and animals Detritivore = feed on decaying organic material Filter Feeders = aquatic animals that strain food from water Parasite = lives in or on another organism (symbiotic relationship)

4 2. Respiration: Take in O2 and give off CO2 Lungs, gills, through skin, simple diffusion

5 3. Circulation: Very small animals rely on diffusion Larger animals have circulatory system

6 4. Excretion: Removal of Wastes - Primary waste product is ammonia (could be urea, uric acid, or amino acid. Diffusion - Sponges, Cnideria, and Echinoderms. Flame cells - Flat worms Canals and Tubes - Round worms Nephridia - Annelids Malphigian Tubules - Arthropods Green glands – Prawns Kidneys - Vertebrates 

7 Excretory Organs Nephridia – Segmented Worms Flame Cells - Flatworms
Canals and Tubes – Round Worms Kidneys - Vertebrates Malphigian Tubules – Arthropods/Insects

8 5. Response: Animals respond to their environment using: Receptor cells = sound, light, external stimuli Nerve cells => nervous system 6. Movement: * Most but not all animals move

9 7.  Reproduce:  Most reproduce sexually = genetic diversity
Many invertebrates can also reproduce asexually to increase their numbers rapidly

10 Animal Body Plans: Symmetrical – sides or sections look the same (mirror images) Asymmetry - no pattern (corals, sponges) Radial Symmetry - shaped like a wheel (starfish, hydra, jellyfish) Bilateral Symmetry -  has a right and left side that Can be cut equally in 1/2 (humans, insects, cats, etc.)

11 Identify the Symmetry BILATERAL ASYMETRICAL BILATERAL RADIAL RADIAL

12 Cephalization - an anterior concentration of sense organs (to have a head)
*The more complex the animals becomes the more pronounced their cephalization Octopus – member of the class Cephalopoda (head-foot)

13 Body Sides anterior - toward the head posterior - toward the tail
dorsal - back side ventral - belly side

14 Segmentation - "advanced" animals have body segments, and specialization of tissue (even humans are segmented, look at the ribs and spine)

15 Animal Development Animals begin as a zygote (fertilized egg)

16 The cells in the zygote divide to form the BLASTULA - a hollow ball of cells

17 The blastula pinches inward to form three cell layers called GERM LAYERS

18 This pinched in area becomes a mouth in some animals (Protostomes) and an anus in other animals (Deuterostomes). Mollusks, Annelids, Arthropods Echinoderms and Chordates

19 Major Animal Kingdom Phyla
Phylum Porifera – sponges (simple animals with no symmetry) Phylum Cnidaria – sea anemones, jellyfish, hydra (animals with stinging cells and radial symmentry)

20 Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms
Free-living Planarian Parasitic Tapeworm

21 Phylum Nematoda – roundworms
Phylum Annelida – segmented worms

22 Phylum Mollusca – clams, squid, snails (animals with a shell – the squid’s “shell” or pen is internal.

23 Phylum Arthropoda – crustaceans, insects, spiders
This is the largest phylum in the animal kingdom and contains the most number of species

24 Phylum Echinodermata - starfish

25 Phylum Chordata – includes all vertebrates (animals with a stiff vertebral column with a nerve cord above)

26 Shape of Life Videos Origins (Sponges) or Life on the Move (Cnideria) or The First Hunter (Platyhelminthes) or Marine Arthropods: A Successful Design or The Conquerors (Arthropods) or Survival Game (Molluscs) or Ultimate Animal (Echinoderms) or Explosion of Life (Annelids) or Bones, Brawn, and Brains (Chordates) or


Download ppt "Introduction to the Animal Kingdom"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google