DFF lecture 5
what are the 3 major animal clades
-lophotrochozoans -ecdysozoans -deuterostomes
what are mammals
amniotes that have hair and produce milk, mammary glands, sweat glands, 4 chambered heart, teeth varied
what are the most primitive tetrapods
amphibians - frogs (no tail as adults), caecilians (limbs lost), moist skin, require water for eggs (no shell), wet habitats
what is a blastula
an animal embryo at the early stage of development when it is a hollow ball of cells
what is a gastrula
an embryo at the stage following the blastula, when it is a hollow cup-shaped structure having three layers of cells
what are deuterostomes?
animals that develop the anus before the mouth; chordates and echinoderms
what are protostomes
animals that develop the mouth before the anus; arthropods and mollusks
what are diploblastic animals
animals that have 2 body layers; distinct organ system; central gastrovascular cavity; non-centralized nerve net; aquatic body supported by water
which animal phylum is the most successful
arthropods, most species-rich
what are ecdysozoans
arthropods, nematodes; shed exoskeleton to grow
what are tardigrades
arthropods; microscopic, when environmental conditions become unsuitable they pull in their limbs and head; allows them to withstand extreme temperatures
what are nematodes
arthropods; roundworms; no segmentation; can act as scavengers, predators, or parasites
advanced animals have...
bilateral symmetry
what are lophotrochozoans
bryozoans, molluscs, annelids; common larval form, feeding apparatus
what are jawed fishes
cartilaginous fish: sharks, rays; bony fish (ray-finned), lobe-fins
sponges inner surface is made up of
choanocytes; flagella beat to draw water through pores to central cavity
what is an example of a diploblastic animal
comb jellies, jelly fish, corals (ctenophores, cnidarians)
what species are considered arthropods
crustaceans (lobster), hexapods (grasshopper), myriapods (millipede), chelicerates (horshoe crab, spiders)
what is the endoderm
innermost germ layer
what are vertebrate innovations
internal skeleton, bone, jointed fins, nares, terrestrial limbs, amniotic eggs (dry conditions)
what are sponges
invertebrate animals that usually have no body symmetry, tissues, or organs
most animals are...
invertebrates
what are examples of chordates
lancets, tunicates, vertebrates
what are bryozoans
lophotrochozoans; colonial
what are rotifers
lophotrochozoans; have a ciliated corona- sweeps food into mouth; some species - only females
what are molluscs
lophotrochozoans; have a foot for locomotion; internal organs; mantle (secretes shell) -gastropods (snail) -bivalves (clams) -cephalopods (octopus)
what are flatworms
lophotrochozoans; simple bodies, most are internal parasites
what are annelids
lophotrochozoans; worms
earliest and simplest animals are...
marine
what type of symmetry do echinoderms have?
most are radially symmetric as adults; larvae are bilaterally symmetric; move and feed using tube feet
what are arthropods
phylum that is part of invertebrates that have an exoskeleton (external skeleton), a segmented body, and jointed appendages
what are types of mammals
prototherians (lay eggs) marsupials (newborns move to pouch) eutherians (more developed at birth)
simpler animals have...
radial symmetry
what are reptiles
scaly animals; turtles, tuataras, squamates (snakes, lizards), crocodilians, dinosaurs
what do simpler ecdysozoans do to grow
shed their exoskeleton
what is central gastrovascular cavity
single opening is both mouth and anus; tentacles trap prey and sweep into mouth
what are characteristics of lophotrochozoans
have a lophophore (feeding structure) and a trochophore (free-living larval stage)
what is a triploblast
3 germ layers; has an endoderm, ectoderm and mesoderm
what are characteristics of chordates?
dorsal, hollow nerve cord; a notochord; a tail that extends beyond the anus; and pharyngeal pouches
what are deuterostomes
echinoderms, hemichordates, vertebrates; mouth forms second
what is an animal
eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic organism that obtains nutrients by ingesting food; motility attained through muscles, nerves, skeleton
what are amniotes
tetrapods that have a terrestrially adapted egg; reptiles and mammals
what is the ectoderm
the germ layer covering the embryo's surface
animals are monophyletic which means
they descended from a common evolutionary ancestor; thought to resemble colonial choanoflagellates