Ch 32 introduction to animal diversity
Describe a coelom and explain its role in animal classification
Coeloms are important because they allow for the separation and compartmentalization of different biological functions in the body. Animals lacking coelom have to rely on diffusion to transport important nutrients throughout the body.
Describe why only organisms with indeterminate cleavage can have identical twins
Indeterminate cleavage is cleavage that results in in cells that maintain the ability to develop into a complete organism. IDENTICAL TWINS result from indeterminate cleavage. Determinate cleavage results in cells whose future differentiation pathways are determined at an early developmental stage resulting in specialization. Much higher chance if they are indeterminate b/c the embryos can break off and form genetically identical organisms
Compare and contrast Parazoa and Eumetazoa and give an example of a Parazoan
Parazoa includes porifera, Eumetazoa is everyone else, and means "true tissue"
diploblastic
Phylum Porifera, Cnidaria- blastula forms two groups of cells that give rise to two body layers ectoderm and endoderm
Explain the difference between Radiata and Bilateria and give examples of animals that display these two body plans
Radiata relates to radial symmetry, and Bilateria relates to bilateral symmetry
Describe the major features of body plans
Symmetry- bilateral and radial Body cavity structure- protostomes(determinate cleavage), deuterostomes(indeterminte cleavage) Segmentation- allows specialization External appendages-
Describe how movement relates to animal traits and discuss whether movement is required to be classified as an animal
all animals move to some degree, because they have a nervous system that responds to stimuli, but the movement may be minimal
Identify how an exoskeleton/cuticle categorizes organisms in modern taxonomy
as crustacea or arthropoda, nematoda: because it provides predatorial protection, but doesn't allow for greater growth or support of limbs
Summarize why modern animal classification is different from historic classification
because molecular data provides a more accurate
Identify the relationship between symmetry and cell layers in the embryo
bilateral symmetry yields 3 germ layers, the endo, meso, and ectoderm
triploblastic
chordata, echinodermata, mollusca- the blastula forms three groups of cells that give rise to three layers ectoderm mesoderm endoderm
Describe the differences between triploblastic and diploblastic embryos
diploblastic embryos develop into cnidarians, triploblastics form into bilateral animals
Identify organisms with notochords
found in chordata
Identify how lophophores or trochophore larvae are used to categorize organisms in modern taxonomy
lophphorata- includes all protostomes
List the characteristics shared by most members of the animal kingdom.
multicellularity heterotrophy no cell walls nervous tissue movement sexual reproduction extracellular matrix cell junctions(anchoring, tight, gap) special clusters of HOX genes similar rRNA
Relate the terms protostome and deuterostome to determinate and indeterminate cleavage
protostome yields determinate cleavage and deuterostomes yield indeterminate cleavage
Describe the advantages of segmentation and identify examples of segmentation in organisms
segmentation allows for specialization. muscles, clitellum, head