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A Phylogeny of the Animal Phyla
Porifera No true tissues Cnidaria radial symmetry diploblastic Ctenophora Platyhelminthes Acoelomates Rotifera Pseudocoelomates Nematoda Nemertea Mollusca Protostomes true tissues Annelida Arthropoda Bilateral symmetry triploblastic Bryozoa Lophophorate phyla Body cavity Phoronida Coelomates Brachiopoda Echinodermata Chordata Deuterostomes
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers, sand dollars
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers
Description Echinoderms are • deuterostomes • have a water vascular system • have hardened plates (ossicles) in their epidermis • pentaradial symmetry
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General anatomy of a starfish
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General anatomy of a starfish
Ring canal Anus Cardiac stomach Madreporite Ossicles Stone canal Pyloric stomach Ring canal Radial canal Tube foot Mouth Ampulla
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers
Water vascular system - a closed system of canals that echinoderms use for locomotion
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers
Water vascular system - a closed system of canals that echinoderms use for locomotion
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers
Water vascular system - by using water pressure echinoderms can crawl along by moving individual “tube feet” along their bodies
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers
Water vascular system - by using water pressure echinoderms can crawl along by moving individual “tube feet” along their bodies Ampullar muscles To extend foot Longitudinal muscles 1) Flex ampullar muscle 2) Relax longitudinal muscle 3) Flex circular muscles Circular muscles
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Echinodermata - the starfish, urchins, sea cucumbers
Ossicles
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Echinodermata - Who are they?
Asteroidea - Sea stars (starfish) - active predators, with small ossicles in their epidermis
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Echinodermata - Who are they?
Echinoidea - Sea urchins - grazers, with ossicles fused to form a test
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Echinodermata - Who are they?
Echinoidea - Sand dollars - grazers, with ossicles fused to form a test
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Echinodermata - Who are they?
Holothuroidea - Sea cucumbers - bottom feeders, with very reduced (or absent) ossicles
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Taxa we have looked at so far
Phylum Class Order Porifera Calcarea Demospongia Hexactinellida Platyhelminthes Turbellaria (free-living) Trematoda (flukes) Cestoda (tapeworms) Mollusca Polyplacophora (chitons) Gastropoda (snails,slugs) Bivalvia (clams, oysters) Cephalopoda (octopus, squid) Annelida Oligochaeta (earthworms) Hirudinea (leeches) Polychaeta (marine worms) Arthropoda Chelicerata (spiders, mites, scorpions) Myriapoda (centipedes, millipedes) Uniramia (insects) Crustacea (crayfish, lobsters, crabs, barnacles)
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Taxa we have looked at so far
Phylum Class Order Echinodermata Asteroidea (Sea stars [=starfish]) Echinoidea (sea urchins, sand dollars) Holothuroidea (sea cucumbers
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Diversity of Life - Chordata-
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Chordata - lancets, sea squirts, vertebrates
Description Chordates are deuterostomes, with a dorsal hollow nerve cord, gill slits, a post-anal tail and a notochord
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Chordata - Chordate evolution - Ancestral forms - Lancet
Chordata - Chordate evolution - Ancestral forms - Lancet Worms (Amphioxus) Nerve cord Notochord Myomeres
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Chordata - Chordate evolution - Ancestral forms - Lancet
Chordata - Chordate evolution - Ancestral forms - Lancet Worms (Amphioxus)
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Sea Squirts - Urochordates (Tunicates)
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Sea Squirts - Urochordates (Tunicates)
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Sea Squirts - Urochordates (Tunicates)
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Chordate Phylogeny (so far)
Cephalochordata (Amphioxus) Craniata Urochordata (tunicates)
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Chordata - Chordate Evolution
Chordates acquire over time: A distinct head - Craniates (most are extinct) A backbone Jaws
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Chordata - Chordate Evolution
Today
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Chordata - Chordate evolution - Craniates
One surviving group - hagfish - head but no backbone
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Chordata - Chordate evolution - Craniates
One surviving group - hagfish - Scavengers
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Chordata - Chordate evolution - Vertebrates - craniates with a backbone
Jawless vertebrates - Agnatha - Lamprey
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Chordata - Chordate evolution - Vertebrates - craniates with a backbone
Jawless vertebrates - Agnatha – Lamprey - fish parasites
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From Craniate to Vertebrate
Fibrous sheath Notochord Hagfish Cartilage Lamprey Bone Gnathostomes
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Next time: Fish and more….
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