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Page 1: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33Deuterostome Animals

Page 2: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33 Deuterostome Animals

• 33.1 What is a Deuterostome?

• 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates?

• 33.3 What New Features Evolved in the Chordates?

• 33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

• 33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Page 3: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

VERTEBRATES!There are some VERY cool pics and stories in Ch 33, but all you really need to focus on is the Mammal Section.

Page 4: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.3 What New Features Evolved in the Chordates?

Vertebrates: a jointed, dorsal vertebral column replaces the notochord during early development.

Vertebrates have radiated in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats.

Page 5: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.12 Chondrichthyans

Page 6: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.13 Diverse Ray-Finned Fishes (Part 1)

Page 7: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.13 Diverse Ray-Finned Fishes (Part 2)

Page 8: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.14 The Closest Relatives of Tetrapods (A)The Coelacalnth...was thought to be extinct!!!

Page 9: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.14 The Closest Relatives of Tetrapods (B) lungfish

Page 10: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.14 The Closest Relatives of Tetrapods (C)

Page 11: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.15 In and Out of the Water

Page 12: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.16 Diversity among the Amphibians

Page 13: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.17 An Egg for Dry Places

Page 14: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.19 Reptilian Diversity (A)

Page 15: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.19 Reptilian Diversity (B)

Page 16: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.19 Reptilian Diversity (C, D)

Page 17: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.20 Archosaurs (A)

Page 18: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.20 Archosaurs (B)

Page 19: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.21 Mesozoic Bird Fossils

Page 20: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.22 A Major Evolutionary Breakthrough

Page 21: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.23 Diversity among the Birds (Part 1)

Page 22: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.23 Diversity among the Birds (Part 2)

Page 23: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

MAMMALS!!!

Page 24: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

Small mammals coexisted with dinosaurs for millions of years.

Mammals increased in size and number after the extinction of dinosaurs.

Page 25: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

Characteristics of mammals:

• Sweat glands

• Mammary glands

• Hair

• Four-chambered heart—completely separates oxygenated from deoxygenated blood

Page 26: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

Just FYI, don’t need to know:

Mammal eggs are fertilized internally; embryos undergo development in uterus

Hair is greatly reduced in the cetaceans (whales and dolphins) and humans.

Cetaceans have a layer of fat for insulation; humans learned to use clothing.

Page 27: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

Just FYI

Living mammals (5,000 species) in two major groups:

• Prototherians: duck-billed platypus and echidnas—lack a placenta, lay eggs, and have sprawling legs.

• Therians—all other mammals.

Page 28: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.24 Prototherians

Page 29: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

FYI

Therian clade has two subdivisions:

• Marsupials: carry and feed young in a ventral pouch. Young are born early, and crawl into pouch for further development. Most species are in Australia and South America.

• Eutherians—placental mammals. Young are more developed at birth.

Page 30: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.25 Marsupials

Page 31: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Table 33.1 Major Groups of Living Eutherian Mammals (Part 1)

Page 32: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Table 33.1 Major Groups of Living Eutherian Mammals (Part 2)

Page 33: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

FYI

Eutherians are extremely varied.

Extinction of non-avian dinosaurs allowed radiation into a large number of ecological niches.

Some species assumed the role of dominant terrestrial predators.

Page 34: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.26 Diversity among the Eutherians (Part 1)

Page 35: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.26 Diversity among the Eutherians (Part 2)

Page 36: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

FYI

Herbivores have influenced evolution of plant spines, tough leaves, toxic compounds, and difficult-to-eat growth.

Herbivores in turn evolved adaptations to the teeth and digestive systems; an example of coevolution.

Large size evolved in several herbivorous lineages.

Page 37: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.4 How Did Vertebrates Colonize the Land?

FYI

Several eutherian lineages returned to aquatic habitats.

Cetaceans evolved from artiodactyl ancestors.

Limbs became modified as flippers.

Page 38: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Eutherian primates radiated from a small, arboreal, insectivorous mammal.

Grasping limbs and opposable digits were a major adaptation to arboreal life.

Two main clades:

prosimians and anthropoids.

Page 39: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.27 A Current Phylogenetic Tree of the Primates

Page 40: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

FYI

Prosimians (lemurs, pottos, and lorises) are now restricted to Africa, Madagascar, and tropical Asia.

Mainland prosimians are arboreal and nocturnal.

On Madagascar, there was a radiation of lemurs. Some are terrestrial and diurnal.

Page 41: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.28 A Prosimian

Page 42: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

FYI

Anthropoids (tarsiers, Old World monkeys, New World monkeys, apes, and humans).

All New World monkeys are arboreal, many have prehensile tails.

Some Old World monkeys are arboreal, others are terrestrial; none of them have prehensile tails.

Page 43: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.29 Monkeys

Page 44: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

FYI

Lineage leading to modern apes split from Old World monkeys about 35 million years ago.

Asian apes—gibbons and orangutans—descended from two of the ape lineages.

Page 45: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.30 Apes (Part 1)

Page 46: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.30 Apes (Part 2)

Page 47: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Need To Know the Rest of the Chapter!

Lineage split leading to chimpanzees and hominid clade occurred about 6 million years ago.

Earliest protohominids (Ardipithecines) were bipedal.

Forelimbs free, to manipulate and carry objects.

Eyes elevated to look for prey.

Bipedal locomotion more energetically economical.

Page 48: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Australopithecines descended from Ardipithecines.

most complete skeleton found to date is “Lucy” (Australopithecus afarensis), in Ethiopia; about 3.5my old.

Page 49: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Two types of Australopithicines lived in eastern Africa about 4–5 million years ago: Paranthropus and A. afarensis.

A. afarensis probably gave rise to genus Homo.

Page 50: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

Figure 33.31 A Current Phylogenetic Tree of Homo sapiens and Our Close Extinct Relatives

Page 51: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Homo erectus used tools and fire for cooking.

Survived in Eurasia until about 250mya. Fossils of a H. erectus descendent found (Indonesian island) 2004.

These H. floresiensis fossils were only 18,000 years old.

Page 52: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

In lineage leading to Homo sapiens, brain size increased rapidly while jaw muscles decreased in size.

Enlargement of brain relative to body size was probably favored by increasingly complex social life.

Features that increased communication between individuals would have been favored.

Page 53: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Several Homo species existed in the mid-Pleistocene; all hunted large mammals.

Rituals and a concept of life after death emerged: CULTURAL EVOLUTION!

Homo neanderthalensis was widespread in Europe and Asia. They may have been exterminated by H. sapiens known as Cro-Magnons.

Page 54: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Cro-Magnons used sophisticated tools and created remarkable cave paintings.

They spread across Asia and reached North America about 20,000 years ago, quickly spreading through the Americas.

Page 55: 33 Deuterostome Animals. 33 Deuterostome Animals 33.1 What is a Deuterostome? 33.2 What Are the Major Groups of Echinoderms and Hemichordates? 33.3 What

33.5 What Traits Characterize the Primates?

Our ancestors developed large brains, complex behaviors, and language.

Complex cultures developed in which knowledge and traditions are passed from one generation to the next.

Facilitated development of agriculture and pastoralism. This led to sedentary lives, cities, and occupational specialization.