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Prof. Stuart Bunt

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What pre-adaptations are ... All vertebrate embryos look very similar Primate evolution has been marked by an increase in cerebral volume by a rotation of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prof. Stuart Bunt


1
Evolution of the Brain
Prof. Stuart Bunt
2
Humans are only one animal
  • Much of our knowledge of the development of the
    brain comes from study of other animals
  • Caenorhabditis elegans for cell lineages and
    genetics
  • Drosophila for genetics
  • Xenopus laevis for vertebrate embryology
  • Zebra fish for vertebrate lineages
  • Chick and quail for transplants/lineages
  • Mouse and rat for mammalian development
  • Fish and marsupials for regeneration of the CNS

3
We need to know their taxonomic relationships
  • How closely related are their nervous systems?
  • What characteristics are derived?
  • What characteristics are convergent?
  • What pre-adaptations are required?
  • What restricts nervous system development in
    different phyla?
  • Only evolution can make sense of taxonomic
    relationships
  • Taxonomy is based on presumed evolution

4
Nerve Nets
Even primitive animals can have complex behaviour
5
Hirudinea (Leeches)
With the addition of a gut, cephalization and
segmentation a segmental nerve pattern arises.
6
Interneurons Sensory Cells Added
7
Segmentation Common in Invertebrates
8
(No Transcript)
9
Invertebrate Embryology is Determinate
Individual cells can be identified Cells have
specific lineages Destroy cells, specific parts
of the embryo are missing Vertebrates are
regulative (otherwise in vitro fertilization
would be impossible)
10
Invertebrate embryology is variable and quite
unlike that of vertebrates
11
Cephalopods Have the most complex nervous systems
12
Invertebrate nervous systems are
ventralVertebrate nervous systems are dorsal
Annelids
Amphioxus
13
Vertebrate Nervous Systems are Dorsal
The inverted lobster!
14
Hemichordates are a side issue?
15
We most likely evolved from tunicates
  • Only echinoderms and vertebrates share caudal
    gastrulation
  • Tunicates are sessile filter feeders
  • Their larvae are mobile
  • Some salps are permanently mobile
  • Their tails have somites and a notocord
  • Add a basic neural tube and you end up with
    Amphioxus.

16
All vertebrate embryos look very similar
17
Primate evolution has been marked by an increase
in cerebral volume by a rotation of the foramen
magnum
18
Are Humans Different?
  • Development of language needs many
    preadaptations?
  • Use of hands and tools precede brain development
  • Neanderthals had larger cranial capacity than
    Homo sapiens
  • When did consciousness evolve?
  • Is the brain more than just cells?
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