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The Animal Kingdom: The Deuterostomes

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1 The Animal Kingdom: The Deuterostomes
Chapter 30 The Animal Kingdom: The Deuterostomes

2 Main branches of deuterostomes
Echinoderms Hemichordates (marine deuterostomes with three-part body, including proboscis, collar, trunk) Acorn worms Chordates

3 Characteristics of echinoderms
Spiny “skin” Water vascular system Tube feet Endoskeleton Larvae Bilateral symmetry Adults Pentaradial symmetry

4 Class Crinoidea Oral surface is turned upward
Some crinoids are sessile Class includes Sea lilies Feather stars

5 Crinoidea: feather star

6 Class Asteroidea Central disk with five or more arms
Tube feet for location Members are sea stars

7 Class Ophiuroidea Longer, more slender arms than members of Asteroidea
Arms are used for locomotion No suckers on tube feet Members are brittle stars

8 Ophiuroidea: daisy brittle star

9 Class Echinoidea No arms Solid shell Covered with spines Members are
Sea urchins Sand dollars

10 Echinoidea: sand dollar

11 Class Holothuroidea Mouth is surrounded by a circle of modified tube feet that serve as tentacles Members are sea cucumbers

12 Holothuroidea: sea cucumber

13 Phylum Chordata At some time in their life cycle, all chordates have
Notochord Dorsal, tubular nerve chord Pharyngeal slits Postanal tail

14 Generalized chordate body plan

15 Subphyla of phylum Chordata
Urochordata Cephalochordata Vertebrata

16 Invertebrate chordates
Tunicates (subphylum Urochordata) Are suspension-feeding marine animals with tunics Larvae have typical chordate characteristics and are free-swimming

17 Tunicates (subphylum Urochordata), cont.
Adults of most groups are sessile suspension feeders

18 Tunicate body plan: lateral view of an adult tunicate

19 Tunicate body plan: internal structure of a larval tunicate (lateral view)

20 Invertebrate chordates
Lancelets (subphylum Cephalochordata) Small Segmented Fishlike Exhibit chordate characteristics

21 Cephalochordate body plan: lancelet

22 Evolution of chordates
Tunicates were probably first to evolve Subphyla Cephalochordata and Vertebrata considered sister taxa by some Common ancestor probably resembled tunicate larva

23 Evolutionary relationships of vertebrates

24 Shared derived characters of vertebrates
Verytebral column Cranium Neural crest cells Pronounced cephalization Muscles attached to endoskeleton

25 Major groups of jawless fishes
Ostracoderms (extinct) Agnathans Hagfishes (class Cephalaspidomorphi) Lamprey (class Myxini) or Craniates Vertebrates Hagfishes (systematist designation referring to invertebrate character of hagfishes)

26 Three lampreys attached to a carp
Suction-cup mouth of adult lamprey

27 Evolution of jawed fishes and amphibians
Class Chondrichthyes Jaws Two pairs of fins Placoid scales

28 Structure of a placoid scale

29 Class Chondrichthyes, cont.
Sharks Many species ovoviparous Some species oviparous Few species vivaparous Rays Skates Oviparous

30 Internal structure of a shark

31 Bony fishes Class Actinopterygii Class Actinistia Class Dipnoi
Ray-finned fishes Class Actinistia Coelacanths Class Dipnoi Lungfishes

32 Perch, a representative bony fish

33 During the Devonian, bony fishes gave rise to
Actinopterygii Lungs modified as a swim bladder Evolved into modern bony fishes Sarcopterygii evolved into Lungfishes Coelacanths

34 Sarcopterygii, cont. Coelacanths and lungfishes apparently preadapted for life on land Lungfish may have given rise to tetrapods First successful tetrapods labyrinthodonts (ancestors of frogs and salamanders)

35 Diver swimming with coelacanth

36 An artist’s conception of labyrinthodonts

37 Class Amphibia Use moist skin as well as lungs for gas exchange
Three-chambered heart Systemic and pulmonary circulations Most return to water to reproduce

38 Class Amphibia, cont. Salamanders
Frogs (tadpoles undergo metamorphosis) Toads Caecilians

39 Modern reptiles: Chelonia mydas

40 Vertebrate adaptations to terrestrial life
Amniotic egg: amnion forms fluid-filled sac around embryo Body covering that retards water loss Physiological mechanisms to conserve water

41 Modern reptiles: Crocodilia niloticus

42 Class Reptilia is paraphyletic
Dinosaurs Turtles Lizards Snakes Alligators Birds sometimes included

43 Modern reptiles: Basiliscus plumifrons

44 Reptiles Internal fertilization
Most secrete a protective shell around egg Embryo develops protective membranes, including amnion, to retain moisture

45 Reptiles, cont. Dry skin with horny scales Lungs with many changers
Three-chambered heart with some separation of oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor blood

46 Paleontological discovery of feathered dinosaurs
Many biologists consider birds to be feathered dinosaurs; they classify as diapsids Birds Most reptiles

47 Caudipteryx (headless)

48 Reconstruction of Archaeopteryx

49 Birds: adaptations for powered flight
Feathers Wings Light, hollow bones with air spaces Four-chambered heart Very efficient lungs

50 Birds: adaptations for powered flight, cont.
High metabolic rate Constant body temperature Excrete solid metabolic wastes Well-developed nervous system Excellent vision and hearing

51 Mammals Hair Mammary glands Differentiated teeth
Three middle-ear bones Constant body temperature Highly-developed nervous system Muscular diaphragm

52 Convergent evolution in placental and marsupial mammals

53 Monotremes (subclass Holotheria)
Oviparous Duck-billed platypus Spiny anteater

54 Marsupials (subclass Metatheria)
Young are born in an embryonic stage and complete their development in marsupium Kangaroos Opossums

55 Macropius giganteus Macropius giganteus soon after birth

56 Placental mammals (subclass Eutheria)
Placenta permitting development within the uterus Living placental mammals are classified into circa sixteen orders


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