Bio exam 3
when did tetrapods evolve?
365 mya
_______ -most heat gained from external sources (ex: most fish, most non-avian reptiles, most invertebrates) (thermoregulation)
ectothermy
axons
elongate processes, ends divide into mult. synaptic terminals to communicate with other cells at synapses
97% of described animal species are ______
invertebrates
is the study of the biological functions an organism performs
physiology
____:now considered by man to be a subspecies of Homo sapiens- occasionally interbreed with anatomically modern humans until ~20,000 years ago and constitute 1-2% of the genome of anyone whose genetic history isn't limited to sub-Saharan Africa
Neanderthals
______ is toxic, even at low conc.; requires access to lots of water; common in aquatic animals
ammonia
what are the two living groups of bony vertebrates
ray-fined fish & lobe-fins
fins are supported mainly by long, flexible rays, not bone or muscle
ray-finned dish (osteichthyes)
Zebrafish (Danio rerio) is a model organism often used in research; small genome (one of the first vertebrate genomes to be sequences) and a very short generation time (3 months from egg to adults laying eggs) make it useful for experiments (what type of fish?)
ray-finned fish (osteichthyes)
includes nearly all the familiar aquatic fish ~ half of all vertebrates
ray-finned fish (osteichthyes)
these posses swim bladders (gas bladders) homologous to lungs-mostly control buoyancy, but many fish can absorb some oxygen through them
ray-finned fish (osteichthyes)
this is the most diverse group of vertebrates; lots of saltwater species, but much of the diversity lies in geographically-separated freshwater drainages (lots of allopatric speciation). SE US is particularly diverse, with the Etowah River in NW GA containing many more species than the 2 largest rivers in the western US, the Columbia and Colorado rivers combined
ray-finned fish (osteichthyes)
______-an animal that uses internal control mechanisms to regulate internal changes due to the environment: Homeostasis: maintaining a constant internal environment (temp, ion concentration, blood sugar levels) (homeostasis)
regulator
acetylcholine
released by nerves to excite skeletal muscle
each kidney supplied with blood by a _____ artery and drained by a _____ vein
renal
Two distinct regions of the kidney
renal cortex and renal medulla
____ possess scales (or feathers) that create a waterproof barrier, lay shelled eggs on land
reptiles
amniotes have 2 extant clades:
reptiles, mammals
proteins that transport oxygen in the blood
respiratory pigments
pump Na ions out of axon and K ions into the axons, some K channels open for K ions to diffuse out of axon; fewer Na channels are open to allow NA to diffuse in axon. more positive ions outside (+) inside is negatively charged
resting potential
use muscles to expand and contract rib cage area for more efficient air movement in and out of lungs) is called
rib cage ventilation
dorsal
back side
horseshoe crab, scorpions, spiders, ticks, mites are members of the subphylum:
chelicerates
tubeworms have _______ bacteria living in their tissues (use energy from H2S chemical bonds to make carb chains from CO2); help form the base of the food chain in some places at the bottom of the ocean even where there is no light
chemoautotrophic
all animals are ________trophs
chemohetero
fossil human-like apes more closely related to us than _____
chimpanzees
____ & ____ are derived from a common ancestral population with humans ~7 mya and are our closest living nonhuman relatives
chimpanzees, bonobos
stomach secretes _____ acid (ph ~2) and the enzyme ____
hydrochloric, pepsin
most plant proteins are ____ in amino acid makeup
incomplete
____ immunity is present before any exposure to pathogens, nonspecific
innate
chemical messengers that cross the synaptic gaps between neurons
neurotransmitters
_______ breakdown of products and nucleic acids must be removed from the body
nitrogenous
Are fish a monophyletic group?
no paraphyletic
mammals breathe first from ______, air passes through the _____ into the _____,____ and ____, where gas exchange occurs
nostrils, pharynx, trachea, bronchi, alveoli
Some bony "fish" are ________ as we normally think of them (land vertebrates)
not fish
a diet insufficient in essential amino acids causes a form of malnutrition called:
protein deficiency
keratin
protein in scales, feathers, hair, fingernails
means "first mouth;" initial indentation during gastrulation becomes the mouth, anus forms second, after the gastrointestinal tract has grown through to the opposite end of the embryo
protostomes
what two lineages split from bilateral animals
protostomes and deuterostomes
Cells with a common structure and function make up ____ (hierarchical organization of body plans)
tissues (hierarchical organization of body plans)
_____ animals (generally bilaterally symmetric) form a third mesoderm layer in between
tripoblastic
____old, unique lineage now isolated to a few pacific islands (lepidosaur species)
tuataras (lepidosaur species)
some live in deserts, other have returned to the sea (still must lay eggs on land) no teeth
turtles
reptiles includes three extant clades:
turtles, lepidosaurs (tuatara, lizards, snakes), archosaurs (crocodilians & dinosaurs- including birds)
parthenogenesis
unfertilized birth: can be haploid or diploid (frogs, lizards, komodo dragons, hammerhead sharks)
____ is produced in the liver in some animals from ammonia, much less toxic; carried to the kidneys where concentrated and excreted with min. water loss; sharks, amphibians, mammals
urea
more water available = more ______ to be removed; a lot of energy is spent to actively transport nutrients in and out of nephron tubule
urea
___ ____ is largely insoluble in water, can be excreted as a past w very little water loss; reptiles, insects, land molluscs
uric acid
thinner-walled, blood flows back to the heart with help from muscle action, one-way valves. what blood vessel structure?
veins
Which vitamins are fat soluble?
A, D, E, K
how many years have homo erectus has been around
1.9 mya
about how many mammal species?
5,400
posterior
Tail (back)
dopamine
reward, pleasure, addiction
____ are a subphylum of chordata
vertebrates
#____ essential vitamins
13
fish have a __ ______ heart; blood goes to the gills for oxygenation and then on to the rest of the body (single vertebrate circulatory system)
2 chambered
Arthropods includes ____ of all described species of animals; Crustaceans and, especially, insects are huge subgroups
2/3
animals require ____ amino acids (can synthesize about 1/2 as long as diet contains some nitrogen: adult humans need 8 from our diet)
20
Homo sapiens indistinguishable from modern human skeletons first appear in the fossil record about how many years ago
200,000
the first fossils of animals were how many years ago?
560 mya
the origin of animals was probably about how many years ago?
770 mya
fragmentation
A means of asexual reproduction whereby a single parent breaks into parts that regenerate into whole new individuals.
______ is a basal lineage of Bilateria: bilaterally symmetric flattened 'worms' (similar-looking, but not closely related to "flatworms" in Platyhelminthes) that are reminiscent of what the ancestral bilateral animal may have looked like
Acoela
homo erectus spread widely out of Africa into Europe and Asia before the evolution of H.sapiens. H. sapiens evolved in ______ and migrated into Asia/Europe ~70,000 years ago, became second primate lineage (after new world monkeys) to colonize N. & S american ~15,0000 years ago via the Bering Land bridge
Africa
herbivores eat mainly ______trophs
photoauto
whiptail lizards
Are parthenogenetic, used as an example for asexual reproduction go through stages of ovulation and male behavior. first haploid then become diploid
white blood cells called _____ _______ made in bones can design and produce antibodies which bind to a pathogen and target it for destruction
B-cell lymphocytes
humans need greatest amounts of what minerals
Ca, P, S, K, Cl, Na, Mg
sister group to animals are single-celled, sometimes colonial organisms called ____ : nearly identical to some cells in sponges
Choanoglagellates
_____ (lobe-fins) are well represented in the fossil record but were a shocking discovery when living representatives were found at the bottom of the ocean. swim bladders are filled with oil to keep them from floating far from the ocean floor
Coelacanths (lobe-fins, osteichthyes)
Lobe fins include what 3 major groups
Coelacanths, lungfishes, and tetrapods
if ____ are basal animals, it would either mean sponges and Placozoa each lost nervous system and muscle tissue or that ____ evolved its own nervous system ind. from other symmetrical animals (hint: phylum)
Ctenophora
molecular & embryological data support a shared common ancestor for Echinoderms & Chordates- sea urchin sperm/eggs used in studies of fertilization and early embryonic development, radial-like anatomy evolved secondarily from the bilateral symmetry of ancestors (not actually radially symmetric) (hint: what phylum?)
Echinodermata (deuterostomes)
slow-moving marine animals: includes sea stars, brittle stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, spiny skin covers a skeleton of hard calcium carbonate plates (hint: what phylum?)
Echinodermata (deuterostomes)
___ & ____ released separately, and pepsin isn't activated until it enters an acid environment (stomach digestion)
H, Cl
2 major groups of protostomes
Lophotrochozoa and Ecdysozoa
_____ proteins are highly variable and bind to antigens of pathogens inside the cell, present them to T-cells at the cell surface
MHC
snails & slugs, oysters & clams, octopi & squid what phylum?
Mollusca (lophotropchozoa)
Millipedes and centipedes belong to the subphylum
Myriapods
nerve is stimulated, more ___ channels are allowed open
Na
all chordates share a set of 4 derived characters:
Notochord, Dorsal hollow nerve cord, muscular post-anal tail, pharyngeal gill slits
what phylum is flatworms
Platyhelminthes (lophotropchozoa)
_____(tunicates) start out as a 'tadpole' larva with all 4 chordate characteristics, develop into permanently anchored filter feeders like sponges: notochord, tail, and dorsal never chord lost at maturity (simple chordates)
Sea squirts
____ _______ matured in thymus works w MHC proteins to identify cells w pathogens and target for destruction
T-cell lymphocytes
____ immunity: a specific response to pathogen
acquired
if enough Na channels open, Na ions rushes into cell bc of (-) charge and low Na conc. rush of Na cause a change, inside axon=positive, outside axon= negative. this stimulated more Na channels to open further down axon
action potential
Gorilla + Chimpanzees & Bonobos + Humans =
african apes
birds have ___ ____ that function as small "bellows" that keep air flowing through the lungs continuously in one direction - no inefficient mixing of gases like mammals
air sacs
____ are tetrapods that have terrestrially adapted egg- the amniotic egg- which contains specialized membranes that protect the embryo from drying out but allow for exchange
amniotes
_____ produces projections of keratin from skin follicles and breathe by rib cage ventillation
amniotes
____ remain closely tied to water, especially for reproduction-aquatic eggs unprotected from desiccation, aquatic juvenile stages w gills and (usually) terrestrial adults. delayed development of arms/legs in tadpoles is a derived characteristic of amphibians, not ancestral to tetrapods
amphibians
most breathe through their skins and lungs at maturity (using throat muscles to pull and push air in and out of lungs), although many salamanders breathe entirely through their skin
amphibians
~4,800 species of frogs, salamanders, and caecilians (legless _____ that look like snakes or legless lizards: convergent evolution)
amphibians
long-term potentiation
an increase in a synapse's firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation. Believed to be a neural basis for learning and memory. occurs while sleeping
is the study of the biological form of a organism
anatomy
maintenance of an internal temp. within a tolerable range can involve adaptations of _____, ____&_____ (thermoregulation)
anatomy, physiology, behavior
fission and budding
animal splits into two new ones or new individuals grow out of parent's body
carnivores eat
animals
these are multicellular with no cell walls - held together by proteins (collagen, cadherins)
animals
these first fossils at 560 mya, most animal phyla appear during Cambrian explosion
animals
these have a formation of blastula/gastrula (hollow ball of cells that indents to form a cavity)
animals
these ingest food and digest it internally with enzymes
animals
segmented bodies- convergent evolution w arthropods, includes earthworms, leeches, many intertidal saltwater species & tube worms. what phylum?
annelida (lophotropchozoa)
segmented worms what phylum?
annelida (lophotropchozoa)
hormones frequently occur in ____ pairs
antagonistic
Deuterostomes- ____ forms first in development, ___ grows through to the mouth end
anus, gut
what are gibbons, orangutans, gorilla, and chimpanzees & bonobos, and humans called
apes
exchange occurs as substances dissolved in an ______ ______ diffuse and are transported across the cells' plasma membranes
aqueous medium
these have low diversity today; remaining crocodilians are all semi-aquatic predators: alligators, crocodiles, caimans, gharial, and false gharial
archosaurs
thicker walls accommodate high pressure of blood pumped from the heart. what blood vessel structure?
arteries
jointed animals with exoskeletons. what phylum?
arthropoda (Ecdysozoa)
body covered by an external skeleton (exoskeleton) composed of the polysaccharide chitin (same as fungal cell walls) infused with calcium. what phylum?
arthropods (Ecdysozoa)
found in nearly all earth habitats (Crustaceans especially in saltwater and freshwater habitats, insects in terrestrial and freshwater habitats) what phylum?
arthropods (Ecdysozoa)
segmented invertebrates w jointed appendages (crustaceans, chelicerates, myriapods, hexapods, trilobites (extinct)) what phylum?
arthropods (Ecdysozoa)
biting/stinging; mosquitos, deer flies, black flies (gnats, noseeums), stinging wasps, fire ants, bedbugs. economic/agricultural damage; pine bark beetles, termites, bool weevil, corn borers, Japanese beetles, aphids, cockroaches
bad stuff of insects (arthropods, Ecdysozoa)
vectors for disease; malaria, yellow fever, dengue, west nile (mosquitos), chagas (kissing bugs), african sleeping sickness (tsetse fly)
bad stuff of insects (arthropods, Ecdysozoa)
mucus, skin (acidic), exoskeleton in insects
barrier defenses (innate immunity)
bipedalism evolved (before or after?) increased relative brain size
before
Ventral
belly side
____ animals have: dorsal, ventral, anterior, posterior, cephalization
bilateral
hollow cavity during animal embryonic development
blastocoel
hollow ball of cells in early embryonic development
blastula
cocaine and meth ____ the removal of dopamine from synapses
block
most living vertebrates (including humans and other land vertebrates) belong to a clade of jawed vertebrates called Osteichthyes (hint: what type of fish)
bony "fish"
_____:upper and lower shields made of fused vertebrae and ribs, covered with modified scales
boxlike shell (reptiles)
dendrites
branched extensions receive signals from other neurons
what are some basal primates?
bush babies, lorises, tarsiers
very thin walled, facilitate exchange with the interstitial fluid- very branched, blood flow is very slow, pressure is low. what blood vessel structure?
capillaries
_____ fish (sharks, rays) lack fully hardened bones, but share characterisitics with bony vertebrates
cartilaginous
mineralized internal skeleton of calcium-infused cartilage, jaws, two sets of paired appendages (pectoral fins and pelvic fins in locations homologous to our arms and legs) (hint: what type of fish)
cartilaginous fish
____ ____ (blood) is confined to vessels, distinct from the interstitial fluid
circulatory fluid
_______ ______ (hemolymph, blood) bathes the organs directly with no separation from the interstitial fluid
circulatory fluid
blood or hemolymph
circulatory fluid
other cells of body are connected to exchange surfaces by _____ and _____
circulatory, interstitial
seratonin
clam, feelings, well-being; SSRI (most prescribed drug in the world)
annelids, squids & octupuses (cephalopod molluscs) and vertebrates have what type of circulatory system?
closed
more efficient at transporting fluids to cells, can work at higher pressure (and speed) what circulatory system?
closed
stinging cells
cnidocytes
_______- an animal that allows internal conditions to conform to external environmental changes (homeostasis)
conformer
has a web of protein fibers embedded in a liquid, gel, or solid; primarily function to bind and support other tissues (a type of tissue)
connective tissue
includes: cartilage, bone, fat, and blood (a type of tissue)
connective tissue
_____ tissues are sparsely packed cells scattered in an extracellular matrix
connective tissues
glutamate
constantly released in retinal neurons until stimulated by light
neuron cell body
contains nucleus and most organelles
In Australia, marsupials fill all the mammal ecological roles that are filled by placental mammals on other continents. This had lead to lots of ________ between placental mammals and marsupials
convergent evolution
what two extant clades of Archosaurs?
crocodilians, dinosaurs
___ retain many of the primitive archosaur characters (body like a lizard)
crododilians
Crabs, lobsters, shrimp, and barnacles are members of the subphylum:
crustaceans
______ T-cells directly kill the cell
cytotoxic
opiates ____ activity of neurons that normally would be inhibiting dopamine release
decrease
means "second mouth;" initial indentation during gastrulation becomes anus, mouth forms after the gastrointestinal tract have grown through to the other side
deuterostomes
having a distinct mouth often leads to Cephalization:
development of a head
_____ animals like jellyfish have endoderm + ectoderm
diblastic
birds are also called
dinosaurs
diversified into sized from 20+ feet tall (extinct moas) & 2000 lbs (extinct elephant birds, terror birds), to as small as hummingbird (largest extant birds are ostriches at ~8ft, ~200 lbs)
dinosaurs (birds)
falcons, hawks, shrikes, and owls are all unrelated, independently evolved lineages that have reverted back to being carnivores
dinosaurs (birds)
owls have huge eyes and feathery facial discs to funnel sound into their ear holes (beneath eyes). asymmetric placement of earholes means sound reacher one ear a split second before it hits the second, allows an owl to perceive depth perception from sounds and hunt in complete darkness if necessary. they have 2 toes forward and 2 toes backward when gripping instead of 3 toes forward and 1 backward
dinosaurs (birds)
some are primarily oceanic, coming to land only to lay eggs similarly to sea turtles, fastest animal on earth is the Peregrin Falcon (over 200 mph in dives on prey)
dinosaurs (birds)
warm-blooded, - many features of their reptilian anatomy underwent modification during adaptation to flight: hollow bones, no teeth, no bladder, descended from a group of small, feathered carnivorous theropod ____ ~170 mya
dinosaurs (birds)
nicotine directly stimulated the release of ____
dopamine
land animals manage their water budgets by:
drinking and eating most foods, using water generated by aerobic respiration
in the _____, acid chyme mixes with digestive juices from the pancreas, liver & gallbladder
duodenum
molting skin/ exoskeleton; as nematodes and arthropods (and tardigrades) outgrow their hard outer coating, they must shed and replace it what lineage of protostomes?
ecdysozoa (protostomes)
in general, _____ tolerate greater variation in internal temp. than endotherms (thermoregulation)
ectotherms
hormones coordinate slower but longer-acting response to stimuli - what system?
endocrine
_____ will eventually form lining of digestive tract
endoderm
radially symmetric animals (jellyfish) have two tissue layers _____ : gut lining & ____-: outer layer
endoderm, ectoderm
bilaterally symmetric animals have all 3 tissues of ____,____&____
endoderm, mesoderm, ectoderm
_____- warmed mostly by heat generated by metabolism (ex: birds & mammals, a few non-avian reptiles, fish, and many insects) (thermoregulation)
endothermy
______ is more energetically expensive than ectothermy, and the larger an endothermic animal is, the more efficient it is at maintaining temperature (thermoregulation)
endothermy
urea and uric acid require spending _____ and ____ to produce but allow elimination of N waste w far less water loss and toxicity than ammonia
energy, carbon
closely packed sheets of cells called ____ cover the outside of body and line organs and cavities within
epithelia
what are the four main categories of tissue? (hierarchical organization of body plans)
epithelial, connective, muscle, nervous
red blood cells, no nuclei, transport O2 & CO2
erythrocytes
Where is hemoglobin found?
erythrocytes (red blood cells)
what are the three classes of cellular elements?
erythrocytes (red blood cells), leukocytes (white blood cells), platelets
the _______ amino acids must be obtained from food in preassembles form
essential
___ ____ in complex, multicellular organisms connect to the environment via body surface openings
exchange surfaces (internal exchange surfaces)
essential vitamins are grouped into what 2 categories?
fat-soluble, water-soluble
corpus luteum degenerates and ceases hormone production if
fertilization doesn't occur - causing breakdown of uterine lining (period) and allowing for hormone production for maturation of next follicle/egg
kidneys produce urine by refining a ______ derived from body fluids
filtrate
___ refers to almost any cold-blooded aquatic vertebrate lineage, but some lineages of aquatic ____ are more closely related to land vertebrates than they are to other ___ lineages
fish
______ mature and release egg into oviduct
follicles
An adequate diet must satisfy three nutritional needs:
fuel for cellular work, organic raw materials for biosynthesis (carbon skeletons), essential nutrients (substances the animal cannot make for itself)
A central cavity with a single opening in the body of certain animals, including cnidarians and flatworms, that functions in both the digestion and distribution of nutrients.
gastrovascular cavity
earliest animals were probably ____-like with specialized cells for reproduction (gamete production)
gastrula
envagination of blastocoel wall to form the gut cavity where internal digestion will occur
gastrulation
_____ are fast tree-swingers and live in Asia, _____ also love in trees in Asia but are larger, slower, and more closely related to African apes
gibbons, orangutans
outfoldings of tissue specialized for gas exchange
gills
remaining tissue of follicle develops into ______ _____
glandular tissue- important for producing hormones necessary for uterus/egg interaction and temporary stalling maturation of more follicles/eggs
pollinators, honey, beeswax, silk, forensics, invasive species control, research (fruit flies used for genetics/chromosome research), aesthetics (butterflies, fireflies), food for many animals
good stuff of insects (arthropods, Ecdysozoa)
have a head (cranium), no vertebrae (probably a secondary loss to help them knot up to escape predators), slimy
hagfish (chordates, vertebrates)
mammals have ____ for insulation, _____ teeth, and are _____-blooded
hair, differentiated, warm
anterior
head (front)
____ T-cells bring antigen to B-cells for antibody synthesis
helper
binding of O2 to one _______ subunit induces other subunits to bind O2 with more affinity: __ total molecules of O2 per hemoglobin
hemoglobin, 4
insects belong to the subphylum:
hexapods
four most diverse of insects (beetles, moths, & butterflies, flies, ants & wasps) go through a distinct complete metamorphosis from juvenile to adult stages. Early stages are for feeding (caterpillars, maggots), pupal stage is a protective outer skin while the insect undergoes drastic morphological changes, adult stage is primarily for reproduction- no further growth. Any feeding by adult stages, if they feed at all, is strictly for maintaining energy for reproductive activities.
hexapods (arthropods, Ecdysozoa)
growth of humans and their ancestors, any of the new or old primates of the family Hominidae
hominid evolution
what was the second primate lineage to colonize N & S America
homo sapiens
____-chemical signal secreted by endocrine glands into the circulatory system that communicates _____ messages
hormone, regulatory
_____ can have multiple effects with same receptors on diff. cells and diff. receptors on the same cell
hormones
basal primates are nocturnal, tree dwelling, ___-eaters; this indicates the ancestor of all primates shared these characteristics and likely evolved the better binocular vision and gripping hands/thumbs shared by all modern primates due to selection for this lifestyle
insect
a subgroup of arthropoda that contains over half of all described animal species
insects (arthropods, Ecdysozoa)
most orders of insects go through successive nymph stages that more or less look like smaller versions of the adult (sometimes w out wings in winged species) what subgroup
insects (arthropods, Ecdysozoa)
white blood cells like macrophages (eat foreign organisms), Natural Killers cells (kill abnormal cells), insects produce antimicrobial peptides (antibiotics)
internal defenses (innate immunity)
fluid between cells
interstitial fluid
Animals that lack a backbone
invertebrates
also helps transport CO2; CO binds _____, prevents O2 and CO2 transport leading to _____
irreversible, suffocation
what was the first branch of vertebrates?
jawless fish (lineage with no jaws, no paired fins)
____, the excretory organs of vertebrates, functions in water balance, salt regulation, and excretion
kidneys
cartilaginous segments surrounding notochord and arching partly over the nerve cord (simple vertebrae), ____ and hagfish both also have much simpler eyes than other vertebrates, with hagfish eyes reduced to almost nothing
lampreys (chordates, vertebrates)
____ retain the characteristics of the ancestral chordate body plan as adults (simple chordates)
lancelets
______ ____ mostly reabsorbs water, but also holds bacteria that produce vitamin K and biotin (lactose intolerance caused by further digestion)
large intestine
white blood cells, immune system
leukocytes
bile salts produced in the ____ and stores in the ___ ___ acts as emulsifiers to digest lipids
liver, gall bladder
most numerous and diverse reptiles, apart fro birds; a couple venomous species; some have independently lost their legs- convergent evolution with snakes; 2 venomous species (also convergence with multiple snake lineages)
lizards (lepidosaur species)
have muscular pectoral and pelvic fins surrounding rod-shaped bones, includes
lobe-fins (osteichthyes)
____ (lobe-fins) are the closest relatives to land vertebrates (tetrapods) and depend entirely on lungs, not gills for breathing! they also have the largest known genomes! (more DNA per nucleus than any other organism - inlcuding humans)
lungfish (lobe-fins, osteichthyes)
reversibly binds O2; load O2 in ______, unloads it in other _____ where CO2 concentration is high and leads it to slightly higher acidity
lungs, tissues
mammals have these to produce milk for feeding young
mammary glands
opossums, wombat, kangaroo, koala, marsupial moles, sugar gliders, tasmanian devil
marsupial
this mammal lineage is embryo born earl, finishes development within a maternal pouched called a marsupium
marsupials
bilaterally symmetric animals have 3 tissue layers with a ______ layer filling space between the _____ and ______
mesoderm, endoderm, ectoderm
______ are necessary inorganic nutrients usually required in small amounts
minerals
includes lots of food (clams, oysters, calamari, escargo), range of eye complexity (octopi are particularly complex w lenses & retinas convergently evolved in a similar structure as vertebrate eyes), largest invertebrates (giant squid), highly venomous cone snails and blue-ringed octopus can cause human death in minutes. what phylum?
mollusca (lophotropchozoa)
largest marine phylum by species - although some inhabit freshwater, some are terrestrial (some snails & slugs), all are anatomically separated into a head (nerves), foot (locomotion), and mantle (shell). what phylum?
mollusca (lophotropchozoa)
soft bodied animals, generally protected by a hard shell (may be reduced or lost as in slugs, octopi) bivalves (two shells), gastropods (stomach, foot), & cephalopods (head, foot -octopi) what phylum
mollusca (lophotropchozoa)
this mammal lineage retains the primitive egg-laying condition: echidnas and platypus-only in Australia, also no nipples
monotremes
what are the 3 major mammal lineages?
monotremes, marsupials, placental mammals (eutherians)
nitric oxide
most manipulated by humans inducing relaxation of blood vessels during sexual arousal
stomach lining is coated with _____ to prevent gastric juice from destroying stomach cells
mucus
long cells called______ are capable of contracting in response to nerve signals
muscle fibers
many parasites of plants and animals (humans too), Caenorhabditis elegans is an important research organism: 1st animal genome to be completely sequenced, only 1000 cells. what phylum?
nematoda (Ecdysozoa)
roundworms what phylum?
nematoda (Ecdysozoa)
blood is filtered into the tubes of the _____, where they traverse the osmolarity gradient of the cortex and medulla
nephron
______ and associated blood vessels are the functional unit of mammalian kidneys
nephrons
_____ tissues enable rapid cell-to-cell communication over long distances
nerve
high-speed electrical signals along specialized cells (neurons) - what system?
nervous system
____ ____ monkeys are more closely related to apes (including humans) than they are to the monkeys of Central and South America
old world
primates are originally an ____ ____ group (Africa, southern Europe, and Asia) but one lineage did colonize the New world from Africa before humans (new world monkeys)
old world
______ regularly consume both carnivores and photoautotrophs
omnivores
invertebrates -insects & other arthropods, most molluscs have what type of circulatory system?
open
different tissues make up______ which together make up _____ systems (hierarchical organization of body plans) (hint: one word)
organ
_____ produces protein-digesting enzymes (proteases) activated once they enter the duodenum
pancreas
invertebrates are defined by an ancestral characteristic, not a synapomorphy, so they would be a ______ group (some invertebrates are much more closely related to vertebrates than they are to other invertebrates)
paraphyletic
corals have endosymbiotic, photosynthetic chromalveolates from the SAR clade (zoocanthellae) living between their endoderm & ectoderm tissue layers (hint: phylum)
phylum Cnidaira
a single opening to a gastrovascular cavity functions as both mouth and anus (hint: phylum)
phylum Cnidaria
corals provide an environment with more inorganic nutrients and CO2 for the endosymbiont in exchange for sugar (similar to lichens & mycorrhizal fungi) (hint: phylum)
phylum Cnidaria
share a common ancestor with other animals that have tissue, but only have 2 layers (endoderm & ectoderm) that can differentiate into muscle, nerves; more closely related to bilaterally symmetric animals than comb jellies (Ctenophora)
phylum Cnidaria
wide range of sessile (anchored, non-moving) and floating forms: includes jellyfish, anemones, corals, and hydra (hint: phylum)
phylum Cnidaria
have radial symmetry, stinging cells called cnidocytes to capture food (hint: phylum)
phylum Cnidaria (jellyfish)
similar to a big gastrula; recent sequence of a ____ genome indicates they may actually be the basal branch of animals (outside of sponges) (hint: phylum)
phylum Ctenophora
superficially similar to true 'jellyfish' (phylum Cnidaria) and used to be grouped with them, but differ in locomotion by rows of cilia and lack of stinging cells (hint: phylum)
phylum Ctenophora (comb jellies)
very simple pancake-like animals ~1mm that behave like a multicellular amoeba and move with cilia. Probably branched off after Porifera and Ctenophora and are a result of simplification/reduction of an ancestor with tissues (hint: phylum)
phylum Placozoa
filter gallons of water a day through their body cavities to catch food particles (hint: phylum)
phylum Porifera (sponges)
have internal cells (choanocytes) of many species nearly identical in form to Choanoflagelletes (hint: phylum)
phylum Porifera (sponges)
have no specialized tissues (some cells are individually specialized but can shift and change function rather than being part of a permanent tissue type), no symmetry (hint: phylum)
phylum Porifera (sponges)
what is the first-branching lineage of animals
phylum Porifera (sponges)
life habits known as 'moles' and 'shrews' are in multiple _____ lineages as well as marsupials
placental
elephant, armadillo, sloths, rodents, rabbits, carnivores ,bats, shrews (smallest mammal) and whales (largest mammal) all found in one clade
placental (eutherians)
this mammal lineage completes their embryonic development within a uterus, joined to the mother by the placenta
placental (eutherians)
marsupials share a common ancestor with _______ that didn't lay eggs (eggs hatch internally)
placental mammals (eutherians)
cellular elements = 45% of volume, suspended in liquid matrix called:
plasma
water, plasma proteins, blood electrolytes (dissolved ions), transported substances (nutrients, gases, wastes, hormones)
plasma
cell fragments involved in blood clotting during wound healing
platelets
includes some human parasites (tapeworms, liver flukes) what phylum?
platyhelminthes (lophotropchozoa)
simple body plan is prob. similar to Acoela & ancestral bilateral animals, most cells are in close contact with the external environment, facilitating diffusion of nutrients and wastes. what phylum?
platyhelminthes (lophotropchozoa)
what are three phyla of Lophotrochozoa (protostomes)?
platyhelminthes, mollusca, annelida
____ (including humans) are related to rabbits, rodents; lab rats and lab mice are popular as experimental animals because they are the closest living relatives of humans that are small, reproduce quickly (10 week generation time), and most people think of them as pests so they don't mind killing them as much
primates
flat and produce myelin, a lipid-rich medium that doesn't conduct electricity, wrap around axon to insulate and prevent leakage of current bw sections of axon with Na/K channels. current moves quick bw nodes bc insulation - improved neuron efficiency
schwann cells
Where is sperm produced?
seminiferous tubules
amphibians and non-bird reptiles have _____ between circulation for oxygenation and for pumping oxygenated blood to the body, but only a single pump/ventricle takes care of both duties (3 chambers)
separation
mammals and birds have complete _____ into 4 chambers (vertebrate circulatory system)
separation
ancestral mammal was probably ____-like based on the fossil record. all other mammal body forms, from whales to humans ave evolved from a ____ like body plan
shrew
things called _____= small, mouse-like insectivorous mammals with pointy snout exist in all of the lineages except monotremes and Xenarthra
shrews
sperm is what?
simple cells with flagellum, tightly packed mitochondria to power flagellum, a nucleus across acrosome (head) containing enzymes and structures necessary to communicate and fuse with egg
___ & ____ have a direct effect on how an organism exchanges energy and materials with its surroundings
size, shape
what are the 3 types in vertebrates?
skeleton, cardiac, smooth
______ _____ is the longest section of the digestive tract; the major organ of digestion and absorption
small intestine
legless lepidosaurs that evolved from a lizard-like ancestor (lizards are probably paraphyletic unless you include _____); multiple evolutionary origins of highly venomous species
snakes (lepidosaur species)
Phylum Porifera (sponges)often have added structural support and predator defense from silica or calcium carbonate ____
spicules
Phylum Porifera are
sponges
_____ still only have specialized cells with no tissue and no symmetry - ancestral animals may have had symmetry and tissue more like comb jellies than _____
sponges
bilateral symmetry evolved after what two animals
sponges & cnidarians
gastro= _____ cephalo=______ pod=______
stomach, head, foot
internal exchange surfaces: highly folded or branched for increases ___ ____
surface area
_____ is a function of radius or width squared, ____ is a function of radius or width cubed, so diffusion across a membrane can't keep up with volume once a cell reaches a certain size - limits the size of single-celled organisms
surface, volume
_____ are targeted by HIV and lead to susceptibility to rare infections and cancer in people with aids
t-cells
____ are terrestrial lobe-fins (closest living relatives are lungfish)
tetrapods
______have four limbs and hands/feet with digits, ears for detecting airborne sounds, plants, fungi and invertebrate ecosystmes were already in place on land when ____ came ~365 mya
tetrapods
dinosaur diversity is lower than in the past: today only birds remain, but they are still the most diverse ______ lineage with ~10,000 species, about twice as many extant species as mammals
tetrapods
gills- effectiveness of gas exchange is increased by ______ (movement of water across gills) and _______ ____ of blood and water; blood passes the most oxygenated water last b4 continuing to body to max. efficiency and bring blood as close as possible to oxygenation level of water
ventilation, countercurrent flow
name derived from vertebrae, the series of dorsal bony segments, ~64,000 extant species, possess a cranium (skull), and "backbone" (made of cartilage, not bone, in many)
vertebrates
apes have _____ tail that stops growing early in development
vestigal
____ are organic molecules requires in the diet in small amounts
vitamins
what are the primary features that separate humans from other african apes?
we walk upright on 2 legs (bipedal), increased relative skull/brain size, particularly frontal lobe
what mammal lineages have gone back to the ocean? and what one origin of true flight?
whales, dolphins, manatees, seals and bats
Forms an endosymbiotic relationship with corals and performs photosynthesis.
zoocanthellae