1 / 42

The Diversity of Life

The Diversity of Life. AMPHIBIANS. EVOLEVED FROM LOBE-FINNED FISHES 3 ORDERS URODELA (with tail) - Salamanders ANURA (without tails) - Frogs/toads APODA (without feet) – look like snakes – (Rare – not many examples). Amphibian Characteristics.

ianthe
Download Presentation

The Diversity of Life

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Diversity of Life

  2. AMPHIBIANS • EVOLEVED FROM LOBE-FINNED FISHES • 3 ORDERS • URODELA (with tail) - Salamanders • ANURA (without tails) - Frogs/toads • APODA (without feet) – look like snakes – (Rare – not many examples)

  3. Amphibian Characteristics • Most undergo metamorphosis (going from aquatic larval stage to terrestrial adult stage) • No scales • Combination of gills, lungs, skin breathing • Most have external fertilization • Eggs without shell

  4. CLASS REPTILIA • Dominated the earth from 300 million to 65 million years ago (the Mesozoic era) • Dinosaur extinction: Asteroid-impact hypothesis • Major characteristics: Amniotic Egg, watertight skin, exothermic

  5. Reptile Orders • Chelonia: Turtles • Crocodilia: Crocodiles and alligators • Squamata: Lizards and snakes

  6. Rattlesnake

  7. Reptile Interesting Facts • Autotomy: ability of some snakes to detach tail, which continues to move, in order to distract predators • Pythons and Boa Constrictors have small nubs that are believed to be vestigial legs • Snakes can swallow objects larger than their head because they have a flexible skull

  8. CLASS AVESCHARACTERISTICS • FEATHERS • WINGS • RIGID FLIGHT SKELETON • AIR SACS • ENDOTHERMIC (104-106F) • BEAK / NO TEETH • OVIPARITY (Lay amniotic eggs)

  9. ARCHAEOPTERYX

  10. Wing Development • Tree Hypothesis: Flight began with organisms jumping from trees and gliding • Net Hypothesis: Wings initially served as nets for capturing insects • Heat hypothesis: feathers developed as an adaptation in heat regulation

  11. DIGESTIVE SYSTEM • CROP – enlarged part of esophagus, moistens food • GIZZARD – Second part of the stomach which crushes food with help of stones the bird intentionally swallows.

  12. ORNITHOLOGISTS Biologists who study birds

  13. Interesting Bird Facts • The largest bird is the Ostrich (9 feet tall and weigh over 300 pounds) • If an average man had a metabolism comparable to that of a hummingbird he would have to eat 285 pounds of hamburger every day to maintain his weight. Hummingbirds can fly backwards

  14. The bones of a pigeon weigh less than its feathers. In 1998, USA hens produced 6.657 billion dozen. The average chicken lays approximately 260 eggs per year 10,000 species of birds divided into 29 orders

  15. New York City has the largest population of peregrine falcons in the world. The nest of a bald eagle can be 12 feet deep,10 feet wide and weigh over a ton. Although domestic turkeys can not fly, wild ones can fly up to 55 miles an hour but only for short distances

  16. CLASS MAMMALIA 4,400 DIFFERENT SPECIES 20 ORDERS

  17. Characteristics • Endothermic • Mammary glands • 4 chambered heart • Hair • Specialized teeth

  18. Endothermy • Regulate own body temperature • In humans = 98.6F = 37C • Opposite of exothermic • Endo= inside / exo = outside • In past called warm-blooded / cold-blooded

  19. Specialized Teeth • Incisors: Chisel-like, used for cutting • Canines: Pointed, used to puncture/tear • Molars: Flat, used for crushing

  20. Four Chambered Heart • More efficient • SEPTUM: Wall that separates left and right side of heart

  21. Mammalian Orders • Monotremata: Lay eggs, only 3 living examples which includes Platypus and Echidna Anteater • Marsupials: live birth but young not fully developed; Opossum, Kangaroo • Rodentia: Largest mammal order (40% of all mammal species) • Chiroptera: Bats

  22. Platypus

  23. Kangaroo

  24. Class Rodentia • Mice, rats, squirrels, chipmunks, hamsters, beaver, porcupines, gerbils, etc…

  25. CHIROPTERA Over 1,000 different species of bats

  26. Carnivora: Dogs, cats, lions, tigers, bears, etc… Primates: 235 living species, which includes Homo sapien Artiodactyla: Mammals with hooves Cetacea and Sirenia: live in ocean; whales, dolphins, and manatees Proboscidea: Asian and African Elephants

  27. Carnivora

  28. Cetacea and Sirenia

  29. Interesting Facts • Cows, sheep, goats, giraffes and others have a four chambered stomach with a RUMEN which contains symbiotic bacteria • Bats are the only mammals that can fly! The smallest bat weighs less than a penny! • The Amur tiger is the largest cat in the world. From head to tail, it can grow up to thirteen feet long

  30. Cheetahs are the fastest land animals on earth. Cats can see up to six times better than humans in dim light A lion’s roar can be heard up to five miles away!

  31. There are over 40 species of kangaroos. The smaller kangaroos are called wallabies. A male kangaroo is called a boomer, a female kangaroo a flyer, and a baby kangaroo a joey. The name kangaroo came from the Aborigines through a mistake. An early European explorer asked an Aborigine what these strange hopping animals were, and the Aborigine replied kangaroo, meaning "I don't understand." The explorer thought he was naming the animal.

  32. Primates • Large brain • Color Vision • Communication • Opposable thumb • Infant Care • Social organization

  33. Hominids • Australopithecus • Homo habilis • Homo erectus • Homo sapien

  34. Genus Australopithecus • First human ancestor to live on the ground and walk on two legs • As evidenced by the Laetoli footprints • Ape-like jaw • Small brain • Short stature • Found only in South and East Africa

  35. The Australopithecines • A. anamesis 4 MYA • A. afarensis 3.2 MYA “Lucy” • A. africanus 2.5 MYA • A. robustus 2 MYA • A. boisei 2 MYA

  36. Homo habilis “The Tool Man” • Approx. 2.5 MYA • Brain ½ size of modern human • First to make and use stone tools and weapons

  37. Homo erectus “The Upright Man” • Direct ancestor of modern humans • Widespread in Africa and Asia by 1 MYA • Evidence of use of shelter and fire

  38. Homo sapiens “The Wise Man” • Most likely evolved from H. erectus as early as 400,000 years ago • Greatly increased brain size • Consisted of 2 groups • Neanderthal • Cro-Magnon/modern H. sapiens

  39. Neanderthals • Found in Neander Valley in Germany • Fossils found throughout Europe, Middle East, and Asia from 150,000-30,000 years ago • Large bodies and brains • Evidenced painting, religion, complex social structure • “Cave man”

  40. Cro Magnons and Fully Modern Humans • First early modern H. sapiens appear about 130,000 years ago • Thinner bones, smaller jaws, higher skull with little or no brow ridge, and larger brains • Cave art shows complex religion and culture • Lived alongside Neanderthal for several thousand years, but eventually out-competed them

More Related