1 / 41

Animal Kingdom

Animal Kingdom. Features that Animals Share. They are heterotrophs (can not make their own food) Can perform rapid, complex movements Multicellular Sexually reproduce Absence of a cell wall Tissues – specialized function. Most Have Symmetry.

wkeller
Download Presentation

Animal Kingdom

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. Animal Kingdom

  2. Features that Animals Share • They are heterotrophs (can not make their own food) • Can perform rapid, complex movements • Multicellular • Sexually reproduce • Absence of a cell wall • Tissues – specialized function

  3. Most Have Symmetry • Radial symmetry – body parts arranged around a central axis • Bilateral symmetry – body design with distinct right and left halves • Asymmetrical – irregular in shape

  4. Phylum Porifera (Sponges) • Multicellular marine animals • Don’t move (anchored to rocks or the bottom) • Asymetrical symmetry • Internal skeletons of spicules • Pores that water flows through for feeding • Single opening for outgoing water

  5. Phylum Cnidarians • Jellyfish, corals, and sea anemones • Have stinging cells • Marine and freshwater animals • Radial symmetry • Two body forms: polyps and medusa (free swimming) • Two layers of cells that are tissues

  6. Phylum Platyhelminthes • Flatworms • Flat body with single opening • Bilateral symmetry • Many are parasites (live off of another animal) • Tapeworms and flukes

  7. Phylum Nematoda • Roundworms • Tube within a tube body • Two openings (mouth, anus) • Simplest digestive system • Some free living and some parasitic • Hookworms, pinworms, trichinella

  8. Phylum Mollusca • Bilateral symmetry • Three part body plan: • Visceral mass – the organs • Mantle – an outer layer of heavy tissue • Foot – muscle used for locomotion • Organ systems: digestion, excretion, circulation, respiration, and reproduction

  9. Phylum Mollusca • Shell • One – snails • Two – clams • None – slug • Radula – (except bivalves) a rasping tongue-like organ for scraping • Cephalopods – most intelligent of invertabrates

  10. Phylum Mollusca • Snails • Slugs • Octopus • Squid • Clams • Mussels • Oysters

  11. Phylum Annelida • Segmented worms • Fossils found in rock that is 530 million years old • Has digestive, excretory, circulatory, and locomotive organs

  12. Phylum Annelida • Has a primitive brain • Has a nerve cord that runs along the underside • Have bristles called setae to help them move • Earthworms and leeches

  13. Phylum Arthopoda • Jointed appendages • Segmentation • Head with compound eyes • Exoskeleton (outside) • Respiratory structures • Open circulatory system • Some have wings

  14. Phylum Arthopoda • Class Diplopoda – millipedes • Class Chilopoda – centipedes • Class Insects – 3 segments, 3 legs • Grasshopper – chewing/biting mandible • Mosquito – piercing/sucking mandible • Fly – sponging/lapping mandible

  15. Phylum Arthopoda • Class Arachnida – 2 segments, 8 legs • Spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites • Carnivores except for mites • Some are poisonous

  16. Phylum Arthopoda • Subphylum Crustacae – 2 segments, 5 pairs of legs • Molt or shed their exoskeleton to grow • Respiration with gills • Two pairs of antennae • Crabs, lobsters, shrimp, pill bugs

  17. Phylum Echinodermata • Spiny skin • Endoskeleton • Five-part radial symmetry • Water-vascular system • No head or brain • Tube feet • Sea stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers

  18. Phylum Chordata • Notochord that develops along the back of the embryo • Have a single hollow nerve chord down their back • Not all develop into backbones

  19. Vertebrates • Chordates with a backbone • Endoskeleton • Bilateral symmetry • Two pairs of jointed appendages • Complex brains and sense organs • Closed circulatory system with a chambered heart • Organ systems: nervous, circulatory, digestive, respiratory, reproductive, excretory

  20. Vertebrates Classes • Jawless Fish • Cartilaginous Fish • Bony fish • Amphibians • Reptiles • Birds • Mammals

  21. Jawless Fish • Gill slits • Single loop blood cirulation • No jaws • No scales • No paired fins • Cartilage skeleton • Example: Lamprey

  22. Cartilaginous Fish • Has a jaw • Has paired fins • Reinforced cartilage skeleton • Rough tooth-like scales • Gill slits • Examples: sharks and rays

  23. Bony fish • Gill covers • Has a jaw • Has paired fins • Bony skeleton • Lateral line • Swim bladder • Scales • Examples: most fish, 95% of fish

  24. Amphibians • Adapted to land • Legs • Lungs (some skin breathing) • Double loop circulation • Heart to deliver oxygen more efficiently • Need water to reproduce • Eggs are not watertight, no shell • Metamorphosis – tadpole to adult • Ectothermic – body temperatures change • Examples: frogs, toads, salamanders

  25. Reptiles • Adapted to land • Legs have scales, watertight skin • Lungs • Heart to deliver oxygen more efficiently • Eggs have a leathery shell • Ectothermic – body temperatures change • Examples: turtles, lizards

  26. Reptiles • Dinosaurs were reptiles • Four living lines: • Turtles • Snakes and lizards • Crocodiles and alligators • Tuataras

  27. Birds • Largest group of terrestrial vertebrates • Beaks • Wings • Hollow bones • Feathers • Scales on their legs • Endodermic – constant body temperature • Eggs have hard, watertight shells

  28. Birds • Beaks and legs differ according to use: • Birds of prey • Songbirds • Water birds • Flightless birds

  29. Mammals • Hair • Diverse and specialized teeth • Endothermic • Mammary glands • Unborn young nourished by a placenta

  30. Mammals • Reproduce in three ways: • Monotremes – Lay eggs then feed milk • Marsupials – Feed in a pouch • Placental – Unborn young nourished by a placenta

  31. Placental Mammals Orders • Rontentia – mice, guinea pigs • Chiroptera – bats • Insectivora – shrew • Carnivora – flesh-eating • Pinnipedia – marine carnivores • Primate – monkeys and apes

  32. Placental Mammals Orders • Artiodactyla – split hooves • Perissodactyla – odd number of toes, horses • Cetacea – whales and dolphins • Lagomorpha – rabbits • Sirenia – manatees • Probiscidea – elephants

More Related