Term
extinct, choanoflagellates |
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Definition
The Animal Kingdom Contains
– 99% of all animal species are __
• Animals diverged from fungi as far back as 1.5 billion years ago
• Common ancestor of all animals may have resembled modern __.
– Protists that are the current closest living relatives of animals |
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Term
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Definition
The Animal Kingdom:
Have a __ and posess a collar of __ for trapping food.
Similiar cells also found in cnidarians, flatworms, and echinoderms |
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Term
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Definition
Body Plans:
Set of morphological and developmental traits
• Symmetry – three types
1. __ of symmetry
• ex. sponges
2. __ symmetry
3. __ symmetry |
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Term
oral, aboral, vertical, central, mirror |
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Definition
Radial Symmetry:
– Animals that are symmetrical around a
central axis
• seastars, sea urchins, jellyfish
– Have a top ( __ ) and bottom side ( __ )
– Any __ slice through the __ axis
divides the animal into __ images
– Typically are sessile, slow moving, or planktonic. |
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Term
one, dorsal, ventral, anterior, posterior, head, active |
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Definition
Bilateral Symmetry:
– Only __ vertical cut divides the animal into mirror images
• Animals have:
– A __ (top) side and a __ (bottom) side
– A right and left side
– __ (head) and __ (tail) ends
– Cephalization = the development of a __ (brain, eyes, ears)
– Tend to be more __ in their movements |
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Term
cleavage, blastula, hollow, blastoceol, gasrulation, gastrula |
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Definition
Reproduction and Develpoment:
• Most animals reproduce sexually
• After fertilization, the diploid zygote undergoes rapid mitotic cell division called __.
• Cleavage leads to formation of a __.
– In most animals is a __ ball of cells
– Internal opening is the __
• The blastula undergoes __
– inward folding at one end of the embryo
– Forms into a __ with different layers of embryonic tissues |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
archenteron, ectoderm, endoderm, mesoderm |
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Definition
Germ Layers:
• Layers of cells in the gastrula that differentiate (develop) into different types of tissues and organs
• In a gastrula
– Fluid-filled space = __ (early gut)
– Outer layer = __
– Inner layer = __
– Cells that migrate between two layers = __ |
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Term
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Definition
Ectoderm forms the __, lining of the anterior and posterior ends of the gut, nervous system (skin) |
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Definition
Endoderm forms the __ of the gut, glands associated with the gut, lining the respiratory tract (lining of organs and respiratory tract) |
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Term
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Definition
Mesoderm forms the muscle, skeleton, connective tissue, circulatory system , urogeneital system, splits to form __. (actual __) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
ectoderm, endoderm, 3, fluid-filled, mesoderm |
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Definition
Germ Layers:
• Diploblastic animals have only __ and __
– Jellies and corals
• Triploblastic animals have all __ germ layers
– All bilateral animals (symmetry)
• Most triploblastic animals possess a coelom = a __-__ body cavity
– A true coelom is derived from __ |
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Term
cushion, hydrostatic skeleton, true coelom, endoderm, mesoderm, lack |
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Definition
Body Cavities in Triploblastic Animals:
• Functions of a body cavity
– Fluid helps to __ your organs
– Isolates the organs from the walls of the body
– In soft-bodied animals the fluid-filled cavity acts as a __ __.
• Coelomates are animals that possess a _ __
• Pseudocoelomates have a body cavity that is formed between the __ and __
• Acoelomates __ a body cavity |
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Term
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Definition
• Two types of development for triploblastic animals
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Term
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Definition
• Protostome development:
– Cleavage is spiral = cells in layers that are offset by __
– Determinate = each cell has a determined fate __ in development
– Schizocoelous = initially solid masses of __ split, forming the body cavity |
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Term
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Definition
Deuterostome development:
– Cleavage is radial = cells lined up on top of each other
– Indeterminate = each cell in the early stages of cleavage __ the capacity to develop into a complete embryo (stem cells)
• Identical twins
– Enterocoelous = mesoderm buds from the wall of the __ to form the coelom |
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Term
know differences!!
where does the mouth and anus develop? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Fate of Blastopore
• The blastopore forms during gastrulation
– Opening in the __ to the exterior of the gastrula
• In protostome development, the blastopore becomes the __
• In deuterostome development, the
blastopore becomes the __ |
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Term
morpology, molecular, common, sponges, true tissues, bilateria, deuterostomia |
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Definition
Animal Phylogeny:
• Zoologists recognize about three dozen animal phyla
• Relationships between phyla are debated
• Two main phylogenetic hypotheses one based on __, the other based on __ data
• Points of agreement
1. All animals share a __ ancestor (monophyletic)
2. __ are basal animals (lack true tissues)
3. Eumetazoa is a clade of animals with __ __ (all animals except for sponges and a few other groups)
4. Most animal phyla belong to the clade __
5. Chordates and some other phyla belong to the clade __ |
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Term
growth, immature, metamorphosis, Hox genes, cell division, differentiation |
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Definition
Animal Development:
• Development = changes in structures or proportions related to __
• Often juvenile organisms resemble adults
• However many animals have at least one larval stage
– A larva is sexually __ stage and morphologically distinct from the adult
– Eventually undergoes __
• All animals, and only animals, have __ __that regulate the development of body form
– Control __ __ and __ |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
surface, inside space, slowly |
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Definition
Animal Body Size and Shape:
• Many different animal body plans have evolved in animals
• Factors influencing body size and shape:
1. Surface area to volume ratios
• Surface area = amount of __ an
organism has
• Volume = amount of __ __ an
organisms has
• As an organism gets bigger, the surface area increases more __ than the volume |
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Term
surface area, volume, smaller |
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Definition
Animal Body Size and Shape:
• A small organism has more __ __ relative to its __. (higher ratio)
The bigger you are the __ your ratio |
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Term
Loose, continuously, torpor |
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Definition
Surface Area to Volume Ratios:
• Influences how animals interact with their environment (take in food, regulate internal [H2O], temp. regulation)
• Tiny animals (hummingbird, shrew)
• Very high surface area to volume ratios
• __ a lot of body heat to their surroundings
• Eat __
• Can undergo bouts of __ to reduce
metabolic demands |
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Term
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Definition
Gravity:
• As animals get larger they need to be __ to support their weight (thicker legs, skeletons)
• Also as size increases, __ __
increases to allow heavier animal to move around |
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Term
dense, viscous, bouyant, weightbearing, Buoyancy |
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Definition
Medium:
• Water is much more __ and __ than air
– Animals experience a lot of drag when moving through water (streamlining)
– Very __ = supports the weight of animals (do not need __ skeletons)
• Can get very large! (whales)
__- upward force exerted by a fluid that opposes an objects weight |
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Term
friction, fast, flying, support |
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Definition
Medium:
• Air
– When moving, experience less __
than in water (streamlining not required,
unless __ moving or __)--chetah, bird
– Not much __, no bouyancy (need greater structural support - skeletons or something similiar- to counteract gravity |
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Term
peristalsis, muscle contractions |
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Definition
Hydrostatic Skeletons
• Consists of fluid held under pressure in a closed body compartment
– Use muscles to change the shape of the fluid-filled compartment to move
• This is the main type of skeleton in most cnidarians, flatworms, nematodes, and annelids
• Annelids use their hydrostatic skeleton for __
– A type of movement on land produced by rhythmic waves of __ __ passing from front to back |
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Term
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Definition
Variation in White-tailed Deer Mass:
• Largest in Canada & N. US (136 kg)
• Kansas (93 kg)
• Louisiana (60 kg)
• Florida Keys (23 kg)
Bergmann's Rule: Body mass increases with __ |
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