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Biodiversity Lecture 6

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They have cell membranes, as do all living organisms, but ... Example: Nematode (roundworms) Coelomates 'True Coelom' Have a body cavity within the mesoderm ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biodiversity Lecture 6


1
BiodiversityLecture 6
  • Animals
  • Multicellular Heterotrophic Eukaryotes

2
What Characterizes an Animal?
  • They are multicellular heterotrophic eukaryotes
  • They must take organic molecules into their body
    through ingestion (eating)
  • Lack cell walls
  • They have cell membranes, as do all living
    organisms, but have no other structure external
    to the cell membrane.
  • Have muscle and nervous tissue
  • Diploid stage of life cycle is dominant

3
Origin of Animals
  • First Appearance of an animal
  • About 700 million years ago
  • It is believed that an ancestral protist acquired
    multicellularity. This would have been considered
    the first animal
  • Animals have been evolving ever since this time
  • Four major branch points have occurred during the
    evolution of animals.

4
Animal Evolution Branch Point 1
  • Branch Point 1
  • Eumetazoans separate from Parazoans
  • Parazoans Animals without true tissues
  • Para Beside
  • Zoa Animals
  • Dont look like animals, hence their name,
    beside the animals . They are given their own
    special subkingdom Parazoa
  • One Phylum Porifera (pore bearers), the Sponges
  • Eumetazoans Animals with true tissues
  • Eu Good
  • Meta After
  • Eumetazoan Good after animals
  • A Subkingdom within the animal kingdom- the
    good animals- that came after the first
    animals (proto- zoans)
  • Includes all animals except sponges

5
Animal Evolution Branch Point 2
  • Branch Point 2
  • Bilaterally symmetrical animals (Bilateria)
    separate from radially symmetrical animals
    (Radiata)
  • Radiata Radially symmetrical
  • Animals that can be divided multiple times
    through a central axis creating multiple mirror
    images.
  • Have a top and bottom but no left nor right, no
    head nor tail.
  • Example Phylum CnidariaJelly fish sea
    anemones
  • Bilateria Bilaterally symmetrical
  • Animals that can only be cut in one plane to
    create a mirror image.
  • Have top (dorsal), bottom (ventral), head
    (anterior), tail (posterior), right side, left
    side.
  • Cephalization Concentration of nervous tissue in
    the head region begins to happen- origin of the
    brain

6
Animal Evolution Branch Point 2
  • Second major distinction between Radiata and
    Bilateria are the number of tissue layers (AKA
    Germ Layers)
  • Radiata
  • Diploblastic
  • Diplo Two
  • Blast Bud, sprout, germ
  • have two tissue layers (germ layers)
  • Ectoderm Outer skin
  • Endoderm Inner skin
  • Bilateria
  • Triploblastic have three tissue layers (germ
    layers)
  • Ectoderm Outer skin
  • Mesoderm Middle skin
  • Endoderm Inner skin

7
Animal Evolution Importance of the Coelom
  • How are all the bilaterally symmetrical animals
    distinguished from one another?
  • By the presence or absence of a particular body
    cavity called the coelom (pronounced sea-loam)
  • It is a body cavity found within the mesoderm
  • It splits the mesoderm
  • Bilateria are in one of three categories
    depending on types of body cavities
  • Acoelomates
  • Psuedocoelomates
  • Coelomates

8
Animal Evolution Branch Point 3
  • Acoelomates
  • No coelom
  • Have solid bodies with no body cavities
  • Note The digestive tract is not a body cavity
  • Example Flatworms
  • Pseudocoelomates
  • False coelom
  • Have a body cavity between the mesoderm and
    endoderm.
  • Example Nematode (roundworms)
  • Coelomates
  • True Coelom
  • Have a body cavity within the mesoderm
  • Example All other animals- annelids (segmented
    worms), etc.

9
Animal Evolution Branch Point 4
  • Final major branch point in animal evolution
  • Coelomates are divided into two categories
  • Protostomes
  • Deuterostomes
  • The division into these two categories is based
    on three events that occur during the early
    embryological development of these animals. It is
    important to note that you would never be able to
    place these animals into these two categories
    based on the way they look as adults. The
    embryologist is the scientist who is primarily
    responsible for categorizing these animals. Here
    are the three things they look for. . .
  • The cleavage pattern of the zygote
  • Cleavage Cell division without growth during
    early embryonic development that converts the
    zygote (fertilized egg) into a ball of cells.
  • How the coelom forms
  • The fate of the blastopore
  • Blastopore An opening into the archenteron that
    appears during early embryonic development. It
    will eventually become either the mouth or the
    anus of the animal.

10
Animal Evolution Branch Point 4- Cleavage
  • Cleavage
  • Spiral and Determinate
  • Seen in Protostomes
  • New cells sit in grooves of cells beneath them
    (see picture)
  • Each cell has a predetermined fate hence the
    term determinate
  • Each cell will become a specific type of tissue.
  • Radial and Indeterminate
  • Seen in Deuterostomes
  • New cells sit on top of cells beneath them (see
    picture)
  • Each cell could potentially become a complete
    embryo, its fate is not yet determined, hence
    the term indeterminate

11
Animal Evolution Branch Point 4- Coelom
Formation
  • Coelom Formation
  • Schizocoelous
  • Seen in Protostomes
  • Schizo to split (like schizophrenia- split
    personality)
  • Coelous Refers to the coelom
  • Coelom forms by the splitting of the mesoderm
  • Enterocoelous
  • Seen in Deuterostomes
  • Entero Intestine
  • Coelom forms by the budding of the archenteron
    (primitive intestine)
  • Arch Old
  • Archenteron Old intestine

12
Animal Evolution Branch Point 4-Blastopore Fate
  • Fate of the Blastopore
  • When the archenteron forms an opening called the
    blastopore is created. In protostomes (as seen in
    the left diagram above), the mouth develops from
    this blastopore and the anus develops secondarily
    somewhere else. This is why protostomes were
    named as such
  • Proto First
  • Stome Mouth
  • In deuterostomes the mouth is formed from the
    secondary opening and the blastopore forms the
    anus, hence the name, deuterostomes
  • Deutero second

13
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