Transcript Document
Overview of Animal Diversity
Chapter 31
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General Features of Animals
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Heterotrophs
Multicellular
Able to move from place to place
Diverse in form and habitat
Sexual reproduction
Characteristic embryonic development
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Diverse Kingdom
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Traditional classification of animals
– multicellular animals, metazoans,
traditionally divided into 35 distinct phyla
First branch - tissues
Parazoa lack definite symmetry and do
not possess tissues or organs.
Eumetazoa have definite shape and
symmetry and usually have organs and
organ systems.
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Traditional Classification of Animals
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Second branch - symmetry
– Eumetazoan branch has two principles
branches.
Radiata - radial symmetry
Bilateria - bilateral symmetry
– Further branches were assigned by
comparing key shared features of the body
plan.
body cavity
coelom
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Broad Groupings of Kingdom Animalia
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Key Transitions in Body Plan
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Evolution of tissues
– first key transition in animal body plan
Evolution of bilateral symmetry
– radial symmetry - regular arrangement of
parts around central axis
– bilateral symmetry - right and left halves
form mirror images
dorsal vs. ventral
anterior vs. posterior
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Radial and Bilateral Symmetry
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Bilateral Symmetry
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Bilaterally symmetrical eumetazoans produce
three germ layers.
– ectoderm
– endoderm
– mesoderm
Much of the nervous system is in the form of
major longitudinal nerve cords.
– ultimately led to evolution of definite head
cephalization
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Three Body Plans
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Key Transitions in Body Plan
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Evolution of a body cavity
– Presence of a body cavity allows digestive
tract to be larger and longer.
storage of undigested food
more complete digestion
more space for gonads to expand
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Key Transitions in Body Plan
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Kinds of body cavities
– acoelomates - no body cavity
– pseudocoelomates - possess pseudocoel
– coelomates - possess coelom
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Coelomates
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Coelom poses circulation problem
– solved by circulatory system
open circulatory system
Blood passes from vessels into
sinuses, mixes with body fluid, and
reenters vessels in another location.
closed circulatory system
Blood is physically separated from
other body fluids and can be separately
controlled.
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Key Transitions in Body Plan
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Advantages of a coelom
Allows contact between mesoderm and
endoderm, so that primary induction can
occur during development.
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Key Transitions in Body Plan
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Evolution of deuterostome development
– mitotic egg division leads to blastula
indents to form blastopore, opening to the
archenteron
Bilaterians can be divided into protostomes
(mouth-first) and deuterstomes (mouthsecond).
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Protostome and Deuterostome Differences
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Cleavage
– spiral
– radial
Fate of embryonic cells
– determinate - predetermined fate
– indeterminate - identical daughter cells
Fate of blastopore
– mouth or anus develops near blastopore
Formation of coelom
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Embryonic Development
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Key Transitions in Body Plan
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Evolution of segmentation
– advantages
Each segment may go on to develop a
more or less complete set of adult organs.
Locomotion is far more effective when
individual segments can move
independently due to flexibility of
movement.
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Animal Classification is Being Reevaluated
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New look at metazoan family tree
– New taxonomical comparisons using
molecular data have come to new,
different conclusions.
hint that key morphological characters
used in traditional classification are not
necessarily conservative
– Molecular systematics uses unique
sequences within certain genes to identify
clusters of related groups.
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Roots of the Animal Family Tree
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Origins of metazoans
– Most taxonomists agree the animal
kingdom is monophyletic.
Three prominent hypotheses exist for
origin from single-celled protists.
multinucleate hypothesis
colonial flagellate hypothesis
polyphyletic origin hypothesis
– debate over cause of Cambrian explosion
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