Animal Biology - Uriel Buitrago
Types of Connective Tissue
- Loose Connective - Dense Connective - Cartilage - Bone - Blood - Lymph - Interstitial Fluid
Types of Simple Epithelium
- Simple Squamous - Simple Cuboidal - Simple Columnar - Pseudostratified Columnar
Striated Muscle Types
- skeletal - cardiac
Process of a developing sea urchin
1- zygote 2- two cell stage 3- eight cell stage 4- blastula 5- gastrulation 6- organ formation 7- larval body begins to form 8- free-swimming feeding larva 9- larva begins metamorphosis 10- crawling sea urchin
Protostomia
A clade in which cleavage is determinate, the mouth is derived at or near the blastopore, and a coelom (when present) is formed by proliferation of mesodermal bands that later split (schizocoel). Phyla within the clade are divided between two subgroups: lophotrochozoan and ectozoan. Lophotrochozoans, exemplified by annelids and mollusks, share spiral cleavage and derive the mesoderm from a particular blastomere (called 4d). Ectozoans (arthropods and related taxa) have a unique cleavage patterns and do not form mesoderm from the 4d cell. Contrasts with Deuterostomia
Trochophore
A free-swimming ciliated marine larva characteristic of most mollusks and certain ectoprocts, brachiopods, and marine worms; an ovoid or pyriform body with a preoral circlet of cilia and sometimes a secondary circlet behind the mouth
Tissue
An aggregation of cells and cell products organized to perform a common function
Primitive
Animal that originated many years ago
Coelomate
Animals that possess a coelom; also called eucoelomate
Derived
Came later through evolution
Blastocoel
Cavity of the blastula
Epithelium
Cellular tissue covering a free surface or lining a tube or cavity
Gastrocoel
Embryonic cavity forming in gastrulation that becomes the adult gut; also called an archenteron
Gastrula
Embryonic stage, usually cap- or sac-shaped, with walls of two layers of cells surrounding a cavity (archenteron) with one opening (blastopore)
Ectoderm
Outer layer of cells of an early embryo; one of the germ layers, also sometimes used to include tissues derived from ectoderm
Regulative Development
Progressive determination and restriction of initially totipotent embryonic material
Histology
Study of the microscopic anatomy of tissues
Lophophore
Tentacle-bearing ridge or arm within which is an extension of the coelomic cavity in lophophorate animals (ectoprocts, brachiopods, and phoronids)
Animal Architecture
The animals layout and structure of the body
Coelom
The body cavity in triploblastic animals, lived with mesodermal peritoneum
Matrix
The extracellular substance of a tissue, or that part of a tissue into which an organ or process is set
Lymph
The interstitial (intercellular) fluid in the body; also, the fluid in the lymphatic space
Ground Substance
The matrix in which connective tissue fibers are embedded
Collagen
Tough, fibrous protein occurring in vertebrates as the chief constituent of collagenous connective tissue; also occurs in invertebrates - for example, the cuticle of nematodes
Cartilage
Translucent elastic tissue that forms most of the skeleton of embryos, very young vertebrates, and adult cartilaginous fishes, such as sharks and rays; in adult amniotes, much of it is converted into bone
Spiral Cleavage
Type of early embryonic cleavage in which cleavage planes are diagonal to the polar axis, and unequal cells are produced by the alternate clockwise and counterclockwise cleavage bound the axis of polarity
Sarcoplasm
Unspecialized cytoplasm of muscle
Schizocoel
a coelom formed by the splitting embryonic mesoderm
Deuterostomia
a group of higher phyla in which cleavage is intermediate and ancestrally radial. The endomesoderm is enterocoelous, and the mouth is derived away from the blastopore. Includes Echinodermata, Chordata, and Hemichordate; contrasts with Protostomia
Extracellular Matrix (ECM)
a layer composed of proteoglycans, linking proteins, and fibrous proteins, such as collagen; the layer is secreted by cells and has structural and functional roles (eg. cell orientation, adhesion, communication, filtering of materials); the matrix is sometimes called a basal lamina or a basal membrane
Neurons
a nerve cell
Cleavage
an orderly sequence of cell divisions where the zygote divides into two cells, the two cells divide to make four cells, the four make eight cells, and so on until there are hundreds of cells in an embryo
What is the importance of the evolution of bilateral symmetry
animals have head, brain, and locomotion
Inter-
between cells *intercellular
3 types of symmetry
bilateral, radial, spherical
Meiosis
cell division followed by reproductive cells (reproduction)
Myofibrils
contractile filament within muscle or muscle fiber
Symmetry
correspondence of size and shape of parts on opposite sides of a median plane
Segmentation
division of the body into discrete segments or metameres; also called metamerism
Blastula
early embryological state of many animals; consists of a hollow mass of cells
Mosaic development
embryonic development characterized by independent differentiation of each part of the embryo; cytoplasmic specification
Radial Cleavage
embryotic development in which early cleavage planes are symmetrical to the polar axis, each blastomere of one tier lying directly above the corresponding blastomere of the next layer
Segment Specific genes equal
homeotic genes
Parenchyma
in simpler animals, a spongy mass of vacuolated mesenchyme cells filling spaces between viscera, muscles or epithelia; in some, the cells are cell bodies of muscle cells. Also, the specialized tissue of an organ as distinguished from the supporting connective tissue.
Endoderm
innermost germ layer of an embryo, forming the primitive gut; also may refer to tissues derived from endoderm
Asymmetrical
no plane through which they can be divided into symmetrical halves
Mitosis
one cell divides and produces two daughter cells (growth)
Extra-
outside of cells *extracellular
Induction
reasoning from the particular to the general; deriving a general statement (hypothesis) based on individual observations. In embryology, the alteration of cell fates caused by interaction with neighboring cells
Hox genes
specify each segment's identity *mammals have four clusters (each on different chromosomes) with 9-11 hox genes
Organization of life
subatomic particles, atoms, molecules, organelles, cell, tissue, organ, organ system, organism, population, community, ecosystem, biosphere
Stroma
supporting connective tissue framework of an animal organ; filmy framework of red blood corpuscles and certain cells Supports the parenchyma
Mesoderm
the third germ layer, formed in the gastrula between the ectoderm and endoderm; gives rise to connective tissues, muscle, urinogenital and vascular systems and peritoneum
Neuroglia
tissue supporting and filling the spaces between the nerve cells of the central nervous system
Enterocoel
type of coelom formed by the outpouching of a mesodermal sac from endoderm of the primitive gut
Intra-
within cells *intracellular
Acoelomate
without a coelom, as in flatworms and proboscis worms