sponges echinoderms tunicates lancelets fish amphibians reptiles birds mammals cnidarians flatworms...

54
Sponges Echinoderms Tunicate s Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptil es Birds Mammals Cnidarian s Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans Centipedes/ Millipedes Insect s Characteristic Of Animals Arthropods Chordates

Upload: allyson-patrick

Post on 12-Jan-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Sponges

Echinoderms

Tunicates

Lancelets

Fish

Amphibians

Reptiles

BirdsMammals

Cnidarians

Flatworms

Roundworms

Mollusks

Annelids

Arachnids

Crustaceans

Centipedes/ Millipedes

Insects

CharacteristicsOf Animals

Arthropods

Chordates

Page 2: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

The Animal KingdomCharacteristics of Animals

•They are multicellular.•They reproduce either sexually or

asexually.•They have distinct body parts that

do different things.•They can move around.•They cannot make their own food.

Page 3: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Let’s watch Tim and Moby

• http://www.brainpop.com/science/livingsystems/vertebrates/comic/

http://www.brainpop.com/science/livingsystems/invertebrates/

Page 4: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Animal Kingdom• Animals are classified

into the Animal Kingdom.

• Animals are consumers.

• Animals can be grouped as

Invertebrates or vertebrates.

Page 5: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Invertebrate -No backbone

Vertebrates - Backbone present

Page 6: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Vertebrates can be further characterized as endotherms or ectotherms.

• Endotherms-Animal that can produce its own heat and can maintain a constant body temperature.

• Ectotherms-an organism that needs sources of heat outside of itself. (cold blooded)

Page 7: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Animal Kingdom:

Can you classify these animals?

butterfly

hamster mouse spiderhumans

seahorseworm

frog turtle

octopus fishseastar

Page 8: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Animal Kingdom:Answers

VertebratesInvertebrates

Page 9: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Invertebrates• Invertebrates are by far the most numerous

animals on Earth. • Nearly 2 million species have been identified to

date. These 2 million species make up about 98 percent of all the animals identified in the entire animal kingdom.

• The true number of invertebrate species may be as high as 100 million and that the work of identifying and classifying invertebrate life has only just begun.

Page 10: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 11: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

symmetry

• Most animals have symmetry. Let’s look at the different type of symmetry.

• Asymmetry

• Radial

• Bilateral

Page 12: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Bilateral- Two halves of an organism’s body are mirror images of each other.

Page 13: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 14: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Radial symmetry- in which the parts of the body are arranged in a circle around a central point.

Page 15: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 16: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Asymmetry-When you cannot draw straight line to divide its body into two or more equal parts. Its body is not organized around the center.

Page 17: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 18: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 19: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• I am a Nautilus Mollusk. I rest on the ocean floor in the daytime. I swim at night. I eat shrimp and algae.

Giant clam mollusk

Page 20: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

To breathe or not to breathe

Animals have different ways to breathe. We will the two ways that animals breathe:

• Gills

• Lungs

Page 21: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Animals have different methods of locomotion and respiration.

• Gills-breathing organ of fish:the organ that fish and some other water animals use to breathe, consisting of a membrane containing many blood vessels through which oxygen passes.

Page 22: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 23: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Lung-respiratory organ in vertebrates that transfer oxygen into the blood and remove carbon dioxide from it.

Page 24: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 25: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Roll that film!

• http://www.brainpop.com/science/livingsystems/gills/

Page 26: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Let’s move

Animal have different body parts that allows them to move. Let’s learn about some of those ways.

• Tube feet

• Tentacles

• Appendages

Page 27: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Tube feet- radial canals connected to dozens of tiny suckers; used for feeding, moving around, or performing other functions depending on the species.

Page 28: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Starfish - ampullae and tube feet

Page 29: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Tentacles-  a long flexible organ around the mouth or on the head of some animals, especially invertebrates such as squid, used in holding, grasping, feeling, or moving

Page 30: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 31: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Appendage- a body part or organ that projects from the main part of the body, e.g. a tail, wing, or fin.

Page 32: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

1+1=3

• Some animals reproduce asexually, but most reproduce sexually. We will learn the different types of each.

• Budding• Fragmentation• Conjugation• Internal fertilization• External fertilization

Page 33: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Some animals reproduce asexually, but most sexually.

• Budding-a form of asexual reproduction in which an outgrowth of the parent pinches of and eventually separates to form a new individual.

Page 34: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Great shot of asexual budding in a prepared slide of Hydra.

Page 35: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Fragmentation- parts of organism break off and then develop into a new individual that is identical to the original one.

Page 36: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 37: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Conjugation-the simplest form of reproduction, in which two single-celled organisms such as bacteria or protozoans link together, exchange genetic information, and then separate.

Page 38: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 39: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•Internal fertilization- When the eggs of a female is fertilized inside of the female.

Page 40: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 41: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

•External fertilization- When the eggs of the female is fertilized outside of the female body.

Page 42: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Animals may go through a variety of developmental stages.

• Complete metamorphosis-a change that involves the four stages of egg, larva, pupa, and adult in insects such as butterflies, beetles, flies, and bees

Page 43: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 44: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Incomplete metamorphosis- -a change that involves the three stages: egg, nymph and adult.

Page 45: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans
Page 46: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• http://www.brainpop.com/science/livingsystems/metamorphosis/

Page 47: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Larvae-the wingless immature worm-shaped form of many insects that develops into a pupa or chrysalis before becoming an adult insect

Page 48: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Screwworm Fly Larvae

Page 49: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Embryo-animal in initial developmental stage: the developing young of an animal from the earliest stages after conception up to birth or hatching.

Page 50: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Human

mouse

Page 51: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Nymph-the larva of some insects such as mayflies, dragonflies, and grasshoppers that resembles the adult and develops into the adult insect directly, without passing through an intermediate pupa stage.

Page 52: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

• Pupa-developing insect inside cocoon: an insect at the stage between a larva and an adult in complete metamorphosis, during which the insect is in a cocoon or case, stops feeding, and undergoes internal changes.

Page 53: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans

Adult

•The stage after a series of developmental changes.

Page 54: Sponges Echinoderms Tunicates Lancelets Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Cnidarians Flatworms Roundworms Mollusks Annelids Arachnids Crustaceans