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Published byBrice Matthews Modified over 9 years ago
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Echinoderms & Early Chordates Second major branch of animal evolution Present in Cambrian period *Crinoids (sea lilies) dominant at end of Paleozoic Deuterostomes *During development, mouth develops second *Coelomate
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Embryological development Protostome – blastopore becomes mouth Deuterostome – blastopore becomes anus gastrulation in sea urchin
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Echinoderm “pluteus” larvae sea lily sea starsea urchin brittle starsea cucumber
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Echinoderm diversity (also sea cucumbers)
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Echinoderm characteristics adults have secondary radial symmetry spiny “skin” (calcium plates below skin) water vascular system *movement *circulation complete gut entirely marine *only phylum
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Lower Chordates Phylum Chordata includes us Several subphyla are invertebrate (i.e. lack a skeleton) *Urochordates *Cephalochordates
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Chordate characteristics notochord – at least in embryo dorsal, hollow nerve cord pharynx (feeding “basket”) - at least in embryo segmented musculature post-anal tail - at least in embryo
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Nervous system development
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Urochordates “tail chordates” *notochord only in tail sea squirts larval stage has chordate characteristics adult loses them and becomes a sessil, filter feeder adult larva
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Cephalochordates “head chordates” *notochord extends into head lancelets adults have chordate characters filter feeders
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Burgess Shale fauna Pikaia gracilens *earliest known primitive chordate *about 40 mm in length and swam above the sea-floor *only 60 specimens have been found to date. 1 cm Pikaia animation
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