introduction to animals introduction to animals – ch. 32
TRANSCRIPT
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Introduction to animals
Introduction to Animals – Ch.
32
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The Nature of AnimalsSection 32.1
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Classification:●95-98% of animals are invertebrates
●Without a backbone●2-5% of animals are vertebrates
●With a backbone
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AnimalTraits
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Characteristics:
All animals are:1. Multicellular2. Eukaryotic3. Ingestive heterotrophs4. Lacking in cell walls5. Sexually reproductive6. Able to move
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1. Multicellular Organization●Cell specialization: the
evolutionary adaptation of a cell for a particular function
●Tissue: group of similar cells that perform a common function
●Cell junctions: connections between cells that hold them together as a unit
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Atom
Molecule or
compound
Organelle
CELLLevels of Organization
TissueOrga
nOrga
n syste
m
Organism
Life begins
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2. Eukaryotic cells
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3. Ingestive Heterotrophy●Getting complex organic
compounds (carbon) from sources other than the sun
●Ingestion: taking in food usually in the form of an other organism
●Digestion: the body’s process of extracting organic molecules from food
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Lions Feeding (Ingestion)
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4. Lack of cell walls
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5. Sexual Reproduction & Development●Hermaphrodites: producing both eggs
and sperm●Examples: worms & sponges●Most do NOT fertilize own eggs
●Why not?
●Zygote: diploid cell that results from the fusion of two haploid gametes●Undergoes differentiation (cells
becoming specialized to perform a specific function)
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Mating and
Mating Behaviors
Beetles Mating
Male
Female
Young
Courtship
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Leeches Exchange Sperm During Mating
Mating
leech
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Parthenogenesis:●Females of some animals produce
eggs, but the eggs develop without being fertilized!●New offspring will be all female
●Example animals: some fishes, several kinds of insects, and a few species of frogs and lizards
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Parthenogenesis in the Komodo Dragon
Video!
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6. Movement●Sessile: attached & non-moving
●sponges●Sedentary: move very little
●clam●Motile: animals that can move
●humans
●Ability to move depends upon interaction between nervous tissue and muscle tissues●Neurons: cells of nervous tissue
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SESSILE SEDENTARY
MOTILE
SpongeChiton
Cheetah
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Origin of Animals:●Animals came about in the water
●Evolved from colonial protists:●Each organism had its own function (for the
colony) much like each cell of the animal body has its own function (for the organism)
Video
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Body Structure:●Symmetry is the
arrangement of body parts around a central plane or axis
●Asymmetry occurs when the body can’t be divided into similar sections● sponges
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Radial symmetry●when body parts are arranged
around a central point ●like spokes on a wheel ●echinoderms
●Most animals are sessile (attached) or sedentary (move very little)
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Bilateral symmetry●when animals can be divided into
equal halves along a single plane●right and left sides that are mirror images of each other
●are usually motile
●Show cephalization●concentration of sensory organs on the head (anterior) end
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What type of symmetry is this?
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Segmentation●When an animal body is composed of a series
of repeating similar units●Example: earthworm (annelid)
●Segments may look different & have different functions●Example: insects & crustaceans (arthropods)
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Anatomical Terms:Dorsal: back surface of animal
Ventral: underside of animalAnterior: front end of animalPosterior: rear end of animalLateral: sides of animalMedial: along midline of animal
Proximal: near toDistal: away from
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Label the parts: