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By: Patty Harris W.L. Swain Elementary

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1 By: Patty Harris W.L. Swain Elementary
Invertebrates By: Patty Harris W.L. Swain Elementary

2 Two major classifications of the animal kingdom
Invertebrates – animals without a backbone. Sponges Cnidarians Worms Mollusks Echinoderms Arthropods Vertebrates – animals with a backbone.

3 Symmetry Asymmetry – a body plan that can not be divided into mirror images. Radial symmetry – a body plan in which all body parts of an organism are arranged around a central point. Bilateral symmetry – a body plan in which an organism can be divided along only one place to produce two mirror images.

4 Sponges They are the simplest form of animals.
They are filter feeders. They have an asymmetrical body plan.

5 Cnidarians Soft bodied animals that live in the water.
They have radial symmetry. They have stinger cells. Examples: jellyfish, coral, hydra, sea anemone

6 Worms Three kinds of worms They all have bilateral symmetry.
flat worms (tape worms, flukes) round worms (dog heart worms) segmented worms (earth worms) They all have bilateral symmetry.

7 Mollusks They all have a muscular foot or tentacles.
They have bilateral symmetry. Most have shells The squid and octopus are in this group even though they don’t have shells. Examples: squid, octopus, snails, clams

8 Echinoderms They are bumpy outside. They have radial symmetry.
They have many tube feet. Examples: sea stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers.

9 Arthropods They have a hard outside skeleton called an exoskeleton.
They have bilateral symmetry. They have segmented bodies. They have jointed limbs. Examples: spiders, crabs, insects


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