Transcript Slide 1
Deutrostomia
Available at http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/Eco_people/Presentations/
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
This phylum includes the vertebrates, the hagfish, the tunicates,
lancelets and maybe a few extinct groups
World wide distribution in aquatic and terrestrial habitats
The most important characteristics that make a chordate a
chordate are a notochord, and visceral clefts and arches
The earliest chordate found so far are from the Cambrian around
525 Myo
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA: UROCHORDATA
These are the tunicate animals
World wide distribution in aquatic and terrestrial habitats
The larval stage has a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord and
pharyngeal slits and arches
Adults are mostly sessile filter feeders that use a mucous food
trap to feed
There are at least four clades one of which is discussed below
although new evidence suggests that Ascidiacea is an artificial
group
Clade one- the Styelid and pyurid ascidians
Clade two - molgulid ascidians
Clade three - phlebobranch and thaliaceans
Clade four - the larvaceans
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA: UROCHORDATA
CLASS ASCIDIACEA
World wide distribution in aquatic and
terrestrial habitats
E.g. Pyura is a solitary tunicate each animal
is an independent unit
Each individual animal is enclosed in a thick
protective test which is attached to the
substrate by a holdfast
Water is drawn in through the buccal cavity
and filtered by the pharynx, and passes out
through the atrial siphon
The larva is free swimming and similar to
amphioxus.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA: CEPHALOCHORDATA
Branchiostoma (amphioxus) is a small
fish-like marine animal (70 mm in length)
occurs in tropical and temperate waters
normally found partly buried in sand
free swimming
possess a pronounced notochord
have major blood vessels that are similar to that of a fish
have multiple gill slits and a pharynx that is highly specialized for
filtering.
no lateral paired fins has a dorsal fin that extends the entire length
of the body, a caudal fin and a ventral fin
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA: CEPHALOCHORDATA
The body walls are divided into V shaped muscle segments called
myotomes
Contraction of the myotomes produces lateral body movements
necessary for swimming
The protruding mouth is surrounded by an oral hood from which
project ciliated oral tentacles (cirri)
The anus opens on the left side of the body near to the base of the
caudal fin
The skeletal system is composed of a well developed notochord
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA: CEPHALOCHORDATA
Amphioxus food consists of minute organisms that are filter fed
into the mouth by water currents produced by the cilia on the gills
The digestive system consists of a mouth, a pharynx, a stomach,
and a straight intestine which leads to the anus.
The circulatory system is similar to that of a fish
Respiration occurs in the pharynx which is attached dorsally and
hangs in to a cavity called the atrium which is lined with
ectodermal epithelium
The exchange of respiratory gases occurs through the gill slits
The excretory system is composed of simple nephridia that are
situated dorsally-laterally
The nervous system consists of a central nerve cord that runs
dorsal to the digestive tract and resting on the notochord
Sense organs include:
1) Olfactory pit
2) Epidermal sensory cells on the oral and velar tentacles
3) Rows of simple eyes (1 ganglion and 1 pigment cell)
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA: CEPHALOCHORDATA
The sexes are separate
The reproductive system is composed of paired gonads that
project into the atrium
Fertilization is external
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
UNRANKED: CRANIATA
Includes all animals with a skull
The animals within the craniata fall
into two major clades
the Hyperotreti (hagfish)
Vertebrata (lampreys and
vertebrates)
SUBPHYLA: HYPEROTRETI,
(HAGFISH)
Sister group to the lamprey and
vertebrates
20 known species in four genera
Live in the cold northern and
southern marine waters of the world
Look a bit like eels in shape
They are jawless parasitic or
predatory.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
SUBPHYLA:
VERTEBRATA
This group ranges from
Lampreys to humans.
Now most of the
vertebrate have jaws but
around 400 million years
ago most vertebrates
were jawless fish (the
ostracoderms)
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
UNRANKED: HYPEROARTIA, (LAMPREYS)
External Features
Body cylindrical with a laterally compressed
tail possessing a caudal fin
The skin is without scales, but has an
epidermal gland which produces the slimy
secretions
There is a row of sensory pits forming a
lateral line.
The mouth consists of suctorial disc, a mouth
that is held open by a ring of cartilage,
bordered by sensory papillae and horny
“teeth” like structures
From the mouth protrudes a piston-like
tongue.
There is a pair of eyes
A single nasal opening
seven gill slits
anus is on the ventral surface just behind the
urogenital opening
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
UNRANKED: HYPEROARTIA, (LAMPREYS)
Skeletal System
A notochord persists throughout
The axial skeleton is composed of small cartilaginous neural
arches, with the head supported and protected by a cartilage
skull
Muscular System
Short segmented muscles which appear to have a “Z” shape
in side view.
Alternate contractions produce rhythmic lateral movement of
the flanks which propel the animal forward
Radial muscles surround the mouth and retractor muscles
occur in the tongue.
Digestive System
Oral disc and its horny teeth attach the Lamprey to other fish.
The tongue rasps into the flesh of the fish using its retractor
muscles. The digestive system consists of an oesophagus, a
ventral pharynx, no differentiated stomach, a long strait
intestine which has internal spirally arranged folds (typhlosole)
which increases surface area for absorption. The digestive
system terminates in an anus. A Liver is present in association
with the digestive system.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
UNRANKED: HYPEROARTIA, (LAMPREYS)
Circulatory System
Consists of heart, arteries, veins and lymphatic sinuses. The
heart lies in the pericardial cavity and consists of an atrium
which receives blood and ventricle which pumps blood.
Respiratory System
Seven pairs of gill pouches which open internally into the
pharynx and externally via the gill slits. There are numerous
gill filaments supplied with capillaries. Gaseous exchange
occurs as water passes through the gill pouches. Water is
drawn into the gill pouch through the gill slits (an adaptation
to a parasitic life requiring that the mouth be attached to a
host). The Larval Lamprey (called an amnocoete) is not
parasitic, and water passes through the mouth and over the
gills (the pattern that occurs in bony fish).opening.
Excretory System
Linked with the reproductive system (urogenital system). The
kidneys lie along the dorsal wall of the body. Urine passes via
a urinary duct into the genital sinus which opens to the
exterior via a urogenital opening.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
UNRANKED: HYPEROARTIA, (LAMPREYS)
Nervous System
The brain is primitive, dominated by forebrain with a large pair of
olfactory lobes. The cerebral hemispheres are attached to a
diencephalon, and there is a ventrally attached broad infundibulun
and above it a pineal structure. The midbrain possesses a large
pair of optic lobes, and the hind brain has rudimentary cerebellum.
There are ten pairs of cranial nerves.
Sense Organs
The olfactory sac is contained in the nasal capsule and is
connected to the outside through the single nasal opening
occurring on the dorsal surface. There is a balancing organ which
lies in the auditory capsule and consists of two semicircular canals.
The eyes are primitive, yet allow good vision. Posterior to the nasal
opening is the pineal eye with a lens and a pigmented retina. The
pigments of the eye vary with the Lamprey switching from
Rhodopsin under marine conditions to Porphyropsin under
freshwater conditions. Lampreys are also able to produce electrical
fields.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
UNRANKED: HYPEROARTIA, (LAMPREYS)
Reproduction
The sexes are separate, with the gonad being protandric, that is
first producing male gametes and then female gametes within the
same individual. A single large long gonad fills the abdominal cavity.
There are no genital ducts, with egg or sperm being discharged
into abdominal cavity and passes through paired genital pores into
the urogenital sinus and the passes outside the body external
fertilization takes place. Spawning always occurs in freshwater,
with a female lamprey producing up to 100,000 eggs. After
spawning the female Lampreys die. The eggs hatch into a larva
called the amnocoete and remain in this condition for 3 to 12 years.
The Larva obtains its food through inspiration of water and using
mucous to entangle the food and pass it to the small intestine (in a
very similar fashion to that of amphioxus). The amnocoete larva
undergoes metamorphosis to become an adult Lamprey and the
returns to the sea. The lamprey differs from the hagfish which has
a mouth that is surrounded by sensory tentacles and also has a
varying number of gill pouches (five to fifteen
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
INFRAPHYLUM: GNATHOSTOMATA (JAWED VERTEBRATES)
These animals make up the majority of the vertebrates from the
middle Devonian up until now.
The Gnathostomes are split into two extant clades,
the Chondrichthyes and the
Osteichthyes
as well as two extinct clades
the Placodermi and
the Acanthodii.
They differ from other animals by having jaws.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: PLACODERMI
These are Large, heavily armoured fish
possessing jaws, and were possibly the first
vertebrates to possess them (this may,
however, be in dispute).
Most placoderms were predatory fish and
some reached 10 metres in length.
The most characteristic feature is the heavy
armour plates on the outside,
The placoderms were far removed from the
main evolutionary line of the vertebrates.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous
fish)
Currently the most primitive vertebrates.
Divided into two clades, Elasmobranchii and
Holocephali
They possess
Complete and separate vertebrates
Movable jaws
Paired appendages
They are less advanced than the bony fish
(Class Osteichthyes) because
Skeleton is made only of cartilage
Placoid scales only
Separate gill clefts
Possesses a pair of spiracles connected to
the pharynx
Has no swim bladder
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
An example is the dog fish (Squalus)
whose eternal features include
Blunt pointed head
Trunk spindle shaped
Two separate median dorsal fins
A median caudal fin
Two pairs of lateral fins (pectoral and pelvic)
Mature males have a clasper on their pelvic fins
Anal fin
Head
Two nostrils
Lateral eyes without eyelids
Five oval gill slits open anteriorly to each pectoral fin
Spiracle (gill cleft) opens behind each eye
Body covering diagonal rows of minute placoid scales
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Skeleton
Cartilage reinforced with limy deposits
Axial skeletons: skull/vertebral column, with each vertebra having a
spool shaped centrum, concaved at both ends, a neural arch
housing the nerve cord. The notochord persists in spaces between
the vertebrae.
The skull is composed of a cranium housing the brain, possesses
paired capsules for olfactory, optic and auditory organs. The
visceral skeleton consists of jaws, the hyoid arch and five pairs of
branchial arches supporting the gill region.
The appendicular skeleton includes a V – shaped pectoral girdle
supporting the pectoral fins, a flatter pelvic girdle with fins and a
smaller jointed cartilage which provides internal support for the
lateral fins.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Muscular System
Body and tail muscles segmented
Digestive System
Mouth
Teeth
Flat tongue
On the sides of the wide pharynx are
openings leading to separate gill slits and
spiracles.
Short oesophagus
J shaped stomach
Intestine follows and is connected to a cloaca
and anus.
Liver
Pancreas
Stomach, intestine, and other internal organs
lie in the large body cavity or coelom.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Digestive System
It is lined with a smooth membrane: the peritoneum
and this covers the organs
The peritoneum is supported from the mid dorsal wall
of the coelom by thin mesenteries
The transverse septum separates coelom from the
cavity containing the heart
Circulatory System
The heart consists of a thin-walled dorsal sinus
venosa that receives blood, followed by the atrium,
then the thick walled ventricle and the conus
arteriosus.
Blood passes anteriorly into the ventral aorta where
five pairs of afferent branchial arteries distribute to the
capillaries in the gills for aeration, four pairs of efferent
branchial arteries collect blood into the dorsal aorta
which extends along mid-dorsal wall of the coelom.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Circulatory System
Principal arteries are:
Paired external/internal carotids -. Head
Paired subclavians -. pectoral fins
Coelic -. stomach, liver, intestine
Anterior mesenteric -. spleen and posterior intestine
Posterior mesenteric -, to rectal gland
Renal and gonadic -. to kidneys/reproductive organs
Paired iliacs -. pelvic fins
Principal veins are:
Paired renal portal kidneys
Paired postcardinal paralleling the kidneys
Paired Lateral abdominal veins either side of the body
cavity
Jugular and anterior cardinal veins (sinuses) return blood from
the head region
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Respiratory System
By opening and closing the mouth, sharks draw in
water and pass it out through the gill slits and
spiracles.
The gills are composed of many parallel, slender filaments that contain
capillaries.
Blood from the ventral aorta passes through these capillaries,
discharges carbon dioxide and absorbs oxygen dissolved in water, then
continues in the dorsal aorta.
Excretory System
The two slender kidneys lie immediately above the coelom on either
side of the dorsal aorta.
Urine from each kidney is collected in a series of segmental tubules
that join a longitudinal duct, the ureter, leading posteriorly; the two
ureters empty through a single urogenital papilla, located dorsally in the
cloaca.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Sense organs
Two nostrils (olfactory sacs)
Pharynx: scattered taste buds
Eyes: moved by three pairs of muscles attaching
the eyeball to its socket and are without lids. Retina composed of rods
only; therefore no colour vision is possible.
“Ear” Organ of balance. Three semi-circular canals
Lateral line - A fine groove along each side of the line trunk and line tail.
Contains a slender canal with many small openings to the surface.
Within the canal are sensory hairs connecting to a branch of the tenth
cranial nerve. They respond to low frequency pressure stimuli in the
surrounding water. On the head are other sensory canals opening by
senses pores; each pore leads to a small chamber (Ampulla of
Lorenzini) containing an electroreceptor with sensory hairs connecting
to nerve fibres.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Nervous System
More advanced than the lamprey.
Forebrain
Two olfactory sacs
Large olfactory tracts olfactory lobe
Paired cerebral hemispheres on the
diencephalons
Dorsal pineal body
Ventral infundibulun and hypophysis
Midbrain
Two rounded lobes dorsally situated
Hindbrain
Large median dorsal cerebellum over the open topped medulla oblongata
Eleven cranial nerves (one to ten plus zero)
Spinal nerve protected by vertebrae
Paired spinal nerves to each body segment
Sympathetic nervous system: series of ganglia, roughly segmental above
the post cardinal veins.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Reproductive System
Sexes are separate
Male sperm develops in long testes from each testis
vasa deferens runs posteriorly on the ventral surface
of the kidney and empties into the urogenital papilla.
At mating claspers are placed close together, and
they are inserted into the cloacae of the females.
Seminal fluid flows down the canal formed by the
adjacent clasper grooves.
Females have two large ovaries, two oviducts extend
the length of the body cavity, their anterior ends join
in a single large funnel through which the eggs enter.
The forward part of the each duct is dilated as a shell
gland, and in ovoviviparous species, like the dog fish
the posterior part is enlarged as an “uterus” to
contain the young during development. The oviducts
open separately into the cloaca.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Classification of Chondrichthyes
SUBCLASS ELASMOBRANCHII
upper jaws are not fused to their skulls
anal and urogenital openings are the same
have many sharp and replaceable teeth.
SUPER ORDER: BATOIDEA (rays and skates)
“Bottom living forms” flattened dorsoventrally,
pectoral fins enlarged and locomotion is achieved through
undulations,
lost the caudal fins;
no lateral thrashing of the tail.
Mouth on bottom.
Water brought in via spiracles on dorsal surface (behind the eyes)
ORDER: RAYIFORMES (common rays and skates)
These are the true rays and skates and have flat bodies with a
cartilaginous skeleton.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Classification of Chondrichthyes
ORDER: PRISTIFORMES (saw fish)
These have a long snout with teeth like projections and no swim
bladder
ORDER: TORPEDINIFORMES (electric rays)
capable of producing an electric discharge used to hunt prey
SUPER ORDER: SELACHIMORPHA (sharks)
This group contains the hand size pigmy shark right up to the 12 m
whale shark
ORDER: HEXANCHIFORMES (6/7 gilled sharks)
These are the most primitive types of shark. There are five species
living today. They have only one dorsal fin and no nictitating
membrane
ORDER:SQUALIFORMES (2 dorsal finned sharks e.g. dogfish)
There are about 80 species in this clade. They have two dorsal fins,
no anal fin and no nictitating membrane.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Classification of Chondrichthyes
ORDER: PRISTIOPHORIFORMES (saw sharks)
one family and two genera
all have a long snout with tooth like projections
ORDER: SQUATINIFORMES (angel sharks)
one family,16 species
look like rays and skates with a flattened body.
ORDER: HETERODONTIFORMES (bullhead/ horn sharks)
These are primitive modern sharks.
nine species, one genus
all small (50-150 cm) bottom feeders.
ORDER: ORECTOLOBIFORMES (carpet sharks e.g. whale and
nurse sharks)
32 species including the Whale and nurse shark.
They have two dorsal fins and many have barbells.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilaginous fish)
Classification of Chondrichthyes
ORDER: CARCHARHINIFORMES (ground sharks/ blue/ tiger/
bull)
over 270 species
have a nictitating membrane
two dorsal fins, an anal fin and five gill slits.
ORDER: LAMNIFORMES (mackerel sharks/ goblin and
basking sharks)
two dorsal fins, an anal fin and five gill slits without a nictitating
membrane.
SUBCLASS HOLOCEPHALI
Shark-like but with crushing tooth plates.
Most forms are extinct.
ORDER CHIMAERIDA Chimaeras or ratfish,
Flap of skin covering the separate branchial slits
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: ACANTHODII
May have been the earliest gnathostomes
They were small fish which superficially resembled sharks.
Typified by the genus Climatius
Although Climatius represents a primitive ancestral form the
acanthodians diversified in the same ways that the bony fish have;
namely long slender eel - like forms to deep-bodied fast swimming
forms.
Acanthodian were most abundant in the Devonian and were extinct
by the end of the Palaeozoic
The phylogenetic relationship of these fish to the other jawed
fishes is unclear.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
OSTEICHTHYES (BONY FISH)
Characteristics
Skin with many mucous glands,
usually with embedded bony
dermal scales
Median and paired fins are present
No limbs
Mouth usually terminal and possessing teeth
Jaws well developed and articulated to the skull
Eyes are usually well developed possessing rods and cones (the latter
for colour vision) and not possessing eyelids.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
OSTEICHTHYES (BONY FISH)
Characteristics
Skeleton
chiefly of bone (cartilage in
primitive sturgeons).
Vertebrae are many and distinct;
tail usually homocercal
Heart is two chambered (one atrium and one ventricle).
Respiration
by pairs of gills on bony gill arches contained within a common
chamber on each side of the pharynx
covered by a bony operculum.
Usually possess a swim bladder which sometimes has a duct
connecting to the pharynx.
Cranial nerves zero to ten are present.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
OSTEICHTHYES (BONY FISH)
Characteristics
Body temperature dependent on environment and behaviour
Gonads typically paired;
usually oviparous
fertilization usually external
Eggs are usually minute but can be large
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: ACTINOPTERYGII
Currently the most numerous group of vertebrates
characterized by
ganoid scales.
large eyes
good olfactory senses
lateral line system.
Evolutionary History of the Actinopterygians
Isolated scales were found in the late Silurian,
the first body fossils were found in the Middle Devonian.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: ACTINOPTERYGII
early fish
small
heavy scales
complex, fully ossified skulls
Tooth bearing bones characterize the upper and lower jaws.
eyes extremely large
the mouths were long.
heterocercal tail
a single dorsal fin
an anal fin
Pectoral and pelvic fins were widely separated.
vertebrae incompletely ossified and the notochord very
conspicuous.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: ACTINOPTERYGII
CLADISTIA (polypteriformes, reedfishes)
Sister group of recent actinopterygii
CHONDROSTEI (sturgeons, paddlefish)
abundant in the Palaeozoic
generally small fish with uptilted (heterocercal) tails and scales
covered with ganine
E.g. Sturgeon fish (Acipenser) 16 species
generally lost their ganoid scales
The skeleton is mostly cartilaginous.
E.g Paddle fish
lost most of their ganoid scales
jaws have degenerated
tend to scavenge with their mouths open.
PHYLUM: CHORDATA
CLASS: ACTINOPTERYGII
LEPISOSTEIFORMES (gars)
fast swimming fish
have elongated jaws
HALECOSTOMI (bowfins and teleosts)
E.g. Bowfin (Amia),
scales have lost their ganoid covering.
Originated in the middle to late Mesozoic.
pectoral fins are positioned high up on the lateral surfaces
pelvic fins are positioned far forward.