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Published byFrancine Norton Modified over 8 years ago
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Heterotrophs Kingdom animalia Multicellular Eukaryotic Cells lack cell walls
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Animals contain tissues -> group of cells that perform a similar function Epithelial – cover body structures (skin, lining of lungs) Muscular – moving parts of animals’ bodies Connective – support an animal’s body & connect its parts (bone, blood) Nervous – carry information throughout body
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Invertebrates: Do not have a backbone or vertebral column 95 % of animals Include sea stars, worms, jellyfishes, insects Vertebrates: Do have a backbone or vertebral column 5 % of animals Include fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals
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Physiology – study of functions of organisms Anatomy – structure of organisms allows animals to carry out physiological processes Homeostasis – maintenance of stable internal environments feedback inhibition – product or result of process stops or limits process
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Feeding – most animals ingest (eat) food Herbivores, carnivores, filter feeders, symbiosis Respiration – all animals take in oxygen and give off carbon dioxide Circulation – movement of materials around within their bodies (diffusion in small animals, circulatory systems in larger animals)
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Excretion – removal of metabolic wastes (primary waste -> ammonia) Response – nervous system -> responds to stimuli & processes information for response Movement – muscles allow animals to move (motile) and also to function even if sessile Reproduction – sexual (two organisms, haploid gametes) & asexual (one organism, genetically identical)
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Complex organisms tend to have: High levels of cell specialization -> cells carry out different (specialized)functions Due to chemical makeup & structure of cells Levels of Organization Groups of specialized cells form tissues -> tissues form organs -> organs make up organ systems
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Early Development Animals that reproduce sexually begin life as a zygote (fertilized egg) -> zygote undergoes a series of divisions to form blastula (hollow ball of cells)
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The blastula folds in on itself, forming a single opening called a blastopore. The blastopore leads into a central tube that runs the length of the developing embryo. This tube becomes the digestive tract and is formed in one of two ways.
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Protostome - animal whose mouth is formed from the blastopore. (most invertebrates) Deuterostome - animal whose anus (opening through which waste leaves digestive tract) is formed from the blastopore.
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During early development, the cells of most animal embryos differentiate into three layers called germ layers. Endoderm - innermost germ layer, develops into linings of the digestive tract and much of the respiratory system. Mesoderm - middle layer, develops into muscles and much of the circulatory, reproductive, and excretory organ systems Ectoderm - outermost layer, develops into the sense organs, nerves, and the outer layer of the skin.
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Body Symmetry – all animals exhibit body symmetry in structure (except sponges) Radial Symmetry - any number of imaginary planes can be drawn through the center, each dividing the body into equal halves. bilateral symmetry - only one imaginary plane can divide the body into two equal halves—left and right.
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Sea anemones Sea stars Jellyfish
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Anterior – front end Posterior – back end Dorsal – upper side Ventral – lower side
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Bilateral symmetry allows for segmentation, in which the body is constructed of many repeated and similar parts, or segments. The combination of bilateral symmetry and segmentation is found in two successful animal groups—arthropods and vertebrates.
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Cephalization – concentration of sense organs and nerve cells at the front end of the body Animals with bilateral symmetry usually move with the anterior end forward, so this end comes in contact with new parts of the environment first. As sense organs have evolved, they have tended to gather at the anterior end, as have nerve cells that process information and “decide” what the animal should do.
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Body Cavity Formation Most animals have a body cavity, a fluid- filled space between the digestive tract and body wall. A body cavity provides a space in which internal organs can be suspended so that they are not pressed on by muscles or twisted out of shape by body movements.
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