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Lecture #14 Phylum Chordata: The vertebrate Phylum
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Phylum Chordata only 45,000 species characteristics: – 1. bilaterally symmetrical – 2. notochord – 3. pharyngeal gill slits – 4. dorsal, hollow nerve cord – 5. post-anal tail – 6. complete digestive system – 7. thyroid gland – 8. ventral, contractile heart Numbers 1 – 5 may be in a unique combination and are found at some stage in development
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Chordate classification characteristics: Notochord? No Echinoderms Notochord? Yes keep evolving Brain? No Urochordate (tunicate) Brain? Yes keep evolving Head/Cranial cavity? No Cephalochordate (lancelet) Cranial cavity? Yes keep evolving Vertebral column? No Hagfish Vertebral column? Yes Lampreys & keep evolving baby!!! Chordates Echinodermata (sister group to chordates) Craniates Vertebral column Head Brain Notochord Ancestral deuterostome Cephalochordata (lancelets) Myxini (hagfishes) Cephalaspidomorphi (lampreys) Urochordata (tunicates)
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Phylum Chordata notochord: – supportive rod that extends most of the animal’s length – extends into the tail – dorsal to the body cavity – flexible to allow for bending but resists compression – composed of large, fluid-filled cells encased in a fairly stiff fibrous tissue – will become the vertebral column in many chordates
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Phylum Chordata dorsal, hollow nerve cord: – runs along the length of the body – dorsal to the notochord – expands anteriorly as the brain – develops from ectoderm – BUT: in most vertebrates – nerve cord is solid and is ventral to the vertebral column
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Phylum Chordata pharyngeal gill slits: – series of openings in the pharyngeal region of the embryo – develop as a series of pouches separated by grooves – in some embryos – grooves develop into slits – used in primitive chordates for filter feeding – in aquatic vertebrates – transformed these slits/pouches into gills – embryonic in terrestrial chordates
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Phylum Chordata SubPhyla: – Urochodata: sea squirts (tunicates) notochord, pharyngeal gill slits, and tail present in free- swimming larvae – Cephalochordata: amphioxus all four chordate traits persist through life – Hyperotreti: hagfishes jawless, no paired appendages – Vertebrata: vertebrates
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Subphylum Cephalochordata known as the lancelets earliest diverging group of chordates get their name (Lancelet) from their blade-like shape embryos develop: a notochord, a dorsal, hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal gill slits and a post-anal tail filter-feeders – cilia draw water into the mouth swim like fishes – chevron shaped muscles on either side of the notochord Pharyngeal slits or clefts Mouth Brain Dorsal, hollow nerve cord Notochord Muscle segments Muscular, post-anal tail Anus
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Subphylum Urochordata tunicates embryonic/larval stage has the characteristics of the chordate larva swims to a new substrate and undergoes metamorphosis – to form the adult tunicate retain the pharyngeal gill slits in the adults water flows in through an incurrent siphon - filtered by a net of mucus on the pharyngeal gill slits Incurrent siphon to mouth Excurrent siphon Pharynx with numerous slits Atrium Tunic Excurrent siphon Anus Intestine Esophagus Stomach
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Craniates chordates with a head head – consists of a brain, surrounded by a skull, and other sensory organs living craniates all share a series of unique characteristics most basic craniate – hagfish https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5PGZRxh AyU
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Vertebrates branching off from the primitive chordates involved innovations in the nervous system and skeleton – vertebraes have a more extensive skull – development of the vertebral column composed of vertebrae most vertebrates – vertebrae enclose a spinal cord (replaces the notochord) – development of fin rays in aquatic vertebrates – development of limbs in terrestrial vertebrates adaptations in respiration and circulation – more efficient gas exchange system – gills are modified in aquatic vertebrates; lungs in the terrestrial vertebrates – more efficient heart – 2 to 4 chambered adaptations in thermal regulation – warm blooded vs. cold blooded adaptations in reproduction – amniotic egg – placental animals
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Vertebrate Taxonomy most basal vertebrate – lamprey – jawless development of jaws marked the evolution of the gnathostomes development of ray-finned fishes development of lobed fins marked the evolution of lobe- finned fishes development of limbs marked the development of amphibians and reptiles development of mammary glands marked the development of mammals lungs marked the evolution
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Vertebrate classification requirements: Vertebral column? No Hagfish Jaws? No Lampreys Bony skeleton? No Sharks, Rays Lobed fins? No? Ray finned fish Lung derivatives? No Coelocanth Legs? No Lungfish Amniotic egg? No Amphibian Milk? No Reptile What’s left??? MAMMALS!! Chordates Echinodermata (sister group to chordates) Craniates Vertebrates Gnathostomes Osteichthyans Lobe-fins Tetrapods Amniotes Milk Legs Amniotic egg Mineralized skeleton Jaws Vertebral column Head Brain Notochord Ancestral deuterostome Cephalochordata (lancelets) Myxini (hagfishes) Cephalaspidomorphi (lampreys) Chondrichthyes (sharks, rays, chimaeras) Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) Actinistia (coelacanthus) Dipnoi (lungfishes) Urochordata (tunicates) Amphibia (frogs, salamanders) Reptilia (turtles, snakes, crocodiles, birds) Mammalia (mammals) Lobed fins Lung derivatives
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