1 / 18

Chapter 2, Lesson 1 What are invertebrates?

Chapter 2, Lesson 1 What are invertebrates?. Animals have many things in common. They also have many things that are different. These features can be used to classify animals. Symmetry.

aolani
Download Presentation

Chapter 2, Lesson 1 What are invertebrates?

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. Chapter 2, Lesson 1 What are invertebrates? Animals have many things in common. They also have many things that are different. These features can be used to classify animals.

  2. Symmetry • Animals have different body shapes. Most animals have symmetry. Symmetry means that parts of an animal’s body match up. The body parts match up around a midpoint or line. Some animals have no symmetry. We can use symmetry to classify animals. • Sea urchins have symmetry. • Sponge does NOT have symmetry.

  3. Backbone or No Backbone • Some animals have a backbone and others do not. A vertebrate is an animal that has a backbone. An animal without a backbone is an invertebrate. • Most animals are invertebrates. Some invertebrates have a hard outer covering. Others have a skeleton inside their bodies.

  4. Invertebrate Groups • Mollusks • Cnidarians • Sponges • Echinoderms • Flatworms • Roundworms • Segmented worms • Arthropods

  5. Sponge facts • Simplest kind of invertebrate • Most are shaped like a sack with an opening at the top • Live under water • Example: sponge

  6. Cnidarians • Have arm-like parts called tentacles • Stinging cells at the end of each tentacle • Stun prey • Some stay in one place • Others float or swim • Examples: corals, jellyfish

  7. Mollusks • Have a shell • Some have shells inside the body • Most live in water • Some swim • Others stay in one place • Snails and slugs are the only mollusks that live on land • Examples: clams, oysters, octopuses, squid, and snails

  8. Echinoderms • Spiny skin • Have a support structure inside the body called an endoskeleton (means inside the body) • Example: sea urchin

  9. Quick Check • What are two ways we can classify animals? • All mollusks live in water. _________ • A sponge is the simplest kind of invertebrate. __________ • An echinoderm has soft skin. _________ • Cnidarians have tentacles. ___________

  10. What are arthropods? • The largest group of invertebrates is the arthropod group. • Arthropods have legs that bend. Their bodies have sections. • Some breathe with gills and others through tubes. • Every arthropod has an exoskeleton. This is a hard covering on the outside of the body.

  11. Exoskeleton • Keeps the animal safe • Keeps the animal from drying out. • Quick Check • An arthropod has a(n) ________ covering. • The covering is on the ________ of the body. • Examples: lady beetle, praying mantis, moth

  12. More examples of arthropods • Insects- have one pair of antennae, three pairs of legs, one or two pairs of wings, and three body sections. • Arachnids- include spiders, ticks, and scorpions. They have four pairs of legs, two body sections, and fangs.

  13. Examples Continued • Crustaceans- such as crabs and shrimps, have two pairs of antennae and two to three body sections. They can chew • Centipedes and millipedes- Centipedes have one pair of legs on each body section. Millipedes have two pairs of legs on each body section.

  14. How are worms classified? • There are 3 kinds of worms: flatworms, roundworms, and segmented worms.

  15. Flatworms • Simplest worms • Flat bodies • They have a head and a tail • Most do not hurt other living things • Some live inside other animals.

  16. Roundworms • They have thin bodies with pointed ends. • Not as thin as flatworms • Food comes into opening • Waste leaves through another opening. • Most live inside other animals.

  17. Segmented Worms • Bodies are divided into parts, or segments. • The parts are the same, except for the head and tail ends. • Each has an opening for the digestive system. • Most live on land • They do NOT live inside other animals. • Earthworms, sandworms, and leeches are segmented worms.

  18. Quick Check • Write the letter for the fact about each worm. • ______flatworms • ______ segmented worms • ______ roundworms • A. thin bodies with pointed ends • B. do not live in other animals • C. simplest kind of worms

More Related