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Published byBarry Doyle Modified over 9 years ago
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Kingdom Animalia
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Review! ► Kingdom ► Phylum ► Class ► Order ► Family ► Genus ► Species
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Review… Scientific Names ► The scientific name of an organism is made up of both its Genus and species name E.g. Homo sapiens
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Evolutionary relationships ► A cladogram or phylogenetic tree ► shows how closely related organisms are ► Closer together = more closely related!
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A Cladogram for Invertebrates Protista Porifera Cnidaria Platyhelmintes (Worms) Mollusca Arthropoda Echinodermata Urochordata Chordata
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First Life! ► Simple, unicellular organisms in the ocean. ► 2.5 billion years ago ► Carried out all life functions: eating, respiring, eliminating waste and reproduction.
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Multicellular Life ► The first multicellular life, also in the oceans, began 600 million years ago ► How did it happen?
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► Possibility 1: ► Unicellular protists lived together in a group ► They continued to stay together
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► Possibility 2: ► During reproduction, the two cells did not separate completely ► They stayed living together
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► Possibility 3: ► Protists with more than one nucleus started to have parts that did different jobs ► What do you think? How did multicellular life begin?
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Level of Organization ► Multicellular organisms have specialized cells ► Cell – level Each cell works on its own ► Tissue – level Cells work together to do a job ► Organ – level Tissues work together to do a job
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3 Kinds of Symmetry 3 Kinds of Symmetry 1. No symmetry Just a lump of stuff 2. Radial symmetry In a circle Can cut it any way through the center and have two equal halves 3. Bilateral symmetry Two sides Can only cut it in the middle to have two equal halves
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► What are the simplest animals? Invertebrates = Animals without a spine Vertebrates = Animals with a spine ► Which ones are invertebrates?
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Invertebrates…
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► These are the main things you need to know about each animal we study: Body symmetry Level of organization (cell, tissue or organ) Nervous system How it eats / excretes Reproduction methods Defenses Examples of animals Special features Try it for a mammal…
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Phylum Porifera The Sponges
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Characteristics ► Symmetry: None ► Level of organization: cell (no tissues or organs) No nervous system No coordination between cells
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Water flow in a sponge Water flows in the ostia (pores) in the side of a sponge through a porocyte and exits through the osculum at the top of the sponge.
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► Inside the sponge choanocytes (collar cells) with flagella move the water through the sponge
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► Mobility: Sessile – they do not move ► Feeding: Suspension feeding ► Food floating in water comes in ► Individual cells engulf the food ► Excretion: Wastes diffuse out of cells and exit through the osculum ► Reproduction: Budding (asexual) Eggs / Sperm in the water (sexual)
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► Support: Sponges have a hard “skeleton” made of spongin and spicules
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► Natural bath sponges are just the leftover spongin without cells
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► Defenses: Sponges produce bad-tasting chemicals Spicules can be hard spines that make the sponge difficult to eat (e.g. glass sponges)
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► Cool facts! Some sponges can be put through a blender, squeezed through cloth, and then will reform a sponge if put together afterwards They have amazing powers of regeneration
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Sponge slideshow
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Diver with a basket sponge
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Barrel sponge – a good hiding spot!
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Many ostia and oscula
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Evolutionary Relationships ► Sponges are related to Protists ► Choanocytes (collar cells) that move water through the body of a sponge look like an ancient protist! Which possibility on the beginning of multicellular life do you think is correct now?
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