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Biology II For Majors Exam 3
UCO Dr. Caddell
375
Biology
Undergraduate 2
10/29/2012

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Cards

Term
About how many species of animals are there?
Definition
3 million
Term
What is the mode of nutrition for animals?
Definition
Heterotrophic.
Term

Are Animals eukaryotic or prokaryotic?

Unicellular or multicellular?

Definition
Eukaryotic and multicellular
Term
Do animals have a cell wall? if not what do they have for support?
Definition
No. they have structural proteins
Term
What are muscle cells specialized for?
Definition
locomotion
Term
Where and when did animals diverge?
Definition
from fungi about 1 billion years ago
Term
What is the sister taxon to the animals?
Definition
the choanoflagellates
Term
What type of feeders are choanoflagellates?
Definition
Suspension
Term
What is cleavage in animal cells?
Definition
rapid mitosis without cell growth
Term
What is a blastula?
Definition
A multicellular ball of cells with a space
Term
What is a blastocoel?
Definition
the space in a blastula
Term
What is the process of gastrulation?
Definition
Germinal tissues differentiate, The blastula infolds and form the digestive tract.
Term
What is the archentron?
Definition
opening in the blastula
Term
What is a blastopore?
Definition
opening into the archentron
Term
What is the ectoderm?
Definition
outermost layer that becomes the integument or central nervous system
Term
What is the endoderm?
Definition
inner layer that becomes the lining of the digestive tract and gives rise to liver and lungs of vertabrates
Term
What is a body plan?
Definition
morphological developmental of an organism
Term
What is symetrical traits?
Definition
Radial, bilateral, or asymetrical traits
Term
What is the dorsal side?
Definition
The topside
Term
What is the ventral side?
Definition
The bottom side
Term
What is the anterior?
Definition
The front end
Term
What is the posterior?
Definition
The back end
Term
What are tissues in animals?
Definition
specialized collections of cells that are seperated from others
Term
Where do tissues com from?
Definition
Germinal layers
Term
What are diploblastic tissues?
Definition
Tissues that come from two germ layers
Term
What are triploblastic tissues?
Definition
Tissues that come from 3 germ layers
Term
What is the mesoderm?
Definition
germ layer that forms into muscles and other organs
Term
What is the coelum?
Definition
space between the body wall and digestive tract
Term
What is the coelum filled with?
Definition
Fluid
Term
What are acoelomates?
Definition
Organisms that lack a coelum
Term
What are pseudocoelomates and coelomates?
Definition
organisms that have a coelum
Term
What are the functions of coelum?
Definition
protects organs from physical trauma, serves as a hydrostatic skeleton
Term
How do protostomes embryos develop?
Definition

1.spiral determinant cleavage(plane of cell devision is diagonal to embryonic axis)

2. determinant- developmental fate determined early

3. coelum forms from blocks of mesoderm that are adjacent to blastopore, mouth develops from blastopore

Term
How do deuterostome embryos develop?
Definition

1. radial indeterminant( plane of cell devision is parrallel or perpendicular to embryonic axis)

2. indeterminant- cell retains ability to develop into a complete embryo

3. coelum forms from mesoderm that buds from archentron mouth develops second, anus develops first from blastopore

Term
What type of groups are metazoans?
Definition
a monophyletic group
Term
What type of group are the porifera?
Definition
a paraphyletic group
Term
What are HOX genes?
Definition
conserved set of DNA sequences,that are general purpose, and control genes that lay out the basic body plan
Term
What do small changes in HOX genes cause?
Definition
evolutionary change
Term
What are the four main tissue groups?
Definition
epithelial, muscular, connective, and nervous tissue
Term
What is epithelial tissue derrived from?
Definition
ectoderm and endoderm
Term
Where is epithelial tissue found?
Definition
Covering the  outside of the body, lines organs and cavities.
Term
What are the functions of epithelial tissues?
Definition
protect from fluid loss or dessication, protect from pathogens, sensing, secretion, and absorbtion
Term
What is the simple type of epithelial tissue?
Definition
epithelial tissue that is one cell layer thick
Term
What is the stratified epithelial tissue type?
Definition
epithelial tissue that is more than one cell layer thick
Term
What is the apical surface of epithelial tissue?
Definition
The side that faces a lumen, the outside of an organ, or the outside of a body
Term
What is the basal surface?
Definition
The end of an epithelial cell that is attatched to a basal lamina
Term
What type of connective tissue are there?
Definition
fibrous, adipose, cartiledge, bone, and blood.
Term
What is loose connective tissue made up of?
Definition
collagenous fibers and elastic fibers
Term
Where is muscle tissue derrived from?
Definition
The mesoderm
Term
What is a muscle cell often called?
Definition
a fiber
Term
What are muscle cells made up of?
Definition
Mostly protein
Term
What do muscle cells do when stimulated?
Definition
They contract or shorten
Term
What do muscle cells do when nonstimulated?
Definition
The relax or lengthen
Term
What is the main function of muscle cells?
Definition
locomotion
Term
What are skeletal muscles composed of?
Definition
A bundle of muscle fibers
Term
What are muscle fiber composed of?
Definition
myofibrils
Term
What are sarcomeres?
Definition
Contractile units of muscles
Term
What type of muscles are skeletal muscles?
Definition
striated and multinucleate
Term
Where are skeletal muscles attatched?
Definition
to endo or exoskeletons
Term
What are skeletal muscles controlled by?
Definition
The non-autonomic nervous system
Term
What are smooth muscles shaped like?
Definition

like a spindle

fat at the center and tapered towards the ends

Term
Do smooth muscles have striations like skeletal muscles?
Definition
No they lack striations
Term
Where are smooth muscles found?
Definition
In the lining of internal organs
Term
What are smooth muscles controlled by?
Definition
The autonomic nervous system
Term
Where are cardiac muscle tissue found?
Definition
only in vertabrates
Term
What is cardiac muscle comprised of?
Definition
Have sarcomeres and are striated
Term
What is the intercalated disk in cardiac muscle tissue?
Definition
disk that conveys contraction from one cell to the next
Term
What controls cardiac muscle?
Definition
The autonomic nervous system
Term
What is nervous tissue derrived from?
Definition
Ectoderm
Term
What is the function of nervous tissue?
Definition
detect stimuli and transmit nervous impulses
Term
What are neurons?
Definition
Cells that transmit nervous impulses
Term
What are glial cells?
Definition
cells that nourish and insulate neurons
Term
How are neurons arranged?
Definition
in networks.
Term
What does the cell body of a neuron contain?
Definition
A nucleas and organelles
Term
What are dendrites?
Definition
Branches of a neuron that receive neural impulses and transmit them towards the cell body
Term
What are axons?
Definition
Specialized structure of a neuron that transmits impulses to dendrites of another neuron
Term
What is a synapse?
Definition
Space between the axon of one neuron and the dendrite of another
Term
What type of movement is a nerve impulse?
Definition
It is NOT a flow, it is a change of membrane potential- ions moving back and fourth
Term
How is a nerve impulse transfered?
Definition
Nerotransmitters are released by the axon into the synaptic space and are taken up by the dendrite
Term
What are the three basic types of neurons?
Definition
sensory, interneurons, and motor
Term
Describe the pathway of neurons to a stimulus?
Definition
sensory neurons transmit signals to a brain or ganglia, interneurons recieve and decide what to do in response, once a decision is made motor neurons send out impulses
Term
What materials must animals exchange with the environment?
Definition

1. nutrients

2. gases

3. wastes

Term
What type of fluid are cells surronded by?
Definition
interstitial fluid
Term
Simple organisms have a _______ surface area per volume.
Definition
large
Term
Complex organisms have a _______ surface area per volume.
Definition
smaller
Term
What happens in the digestive system?
Definition
food is ingested, physical reduction and chemical digestion occurs, absorbtion of nutrients, and elimination of undigested materials
Term
What is the function of the circulatory system?
Definition
to circulate materials, mainly nutrients from digestive tract, oxygen from respiratory system, and CO2 to where it is eliminated
Term
What is the function of the respiratory system?
Definition
Uptake of O2 and elimination of CO2
Term
What is the main function of the excretory system?
Definition
Removes nitrogen waste
Term
What do skeletal and muscle systems function together in?
Definition
Locomotion, support and protection
Term
What is movement?
Definition
muscle movement in the opposite direction
Term
What is abduction?
Definition
Movement of an appendage away from the body
Term
What is adduction?
Definition
Movement towards the body
Term
What are the different types of skeletal systems?
Definition

Hydrostatic

Exoskeletons

Endoskeletons

Term
What is a Hydrostatic skeletal system?
Definition
skeletal system in which fluid is in a compartment under pressure  under which muscles can change the shape. common in invertabrates such as earthworms
Term
What is an exoskeletal system?
Definition

Skeletal system in which the skeleton is a hard outer encasement on the surface of the animal that is secreted by the epidermis and is made of calcium carbonate.

in arthropods can be a cuticle made out of chitin.

Term
What is an endoskeletal system?
Definition
skeletal system in which the skeleton is embedded within soft tissue
Term
What are endoskeletons of echinoderms comprised of?
Definition
Calcified plates called ossicles
Term
What are endoskeletons of chordates comprised of?
Definition
composed of bone or cartiledge
Term
What determines the type of locomotion an organism may have?
Definition
natural selection and habitat
Term
What two forces have to be overcome for locomotion?
Definition
Gravity and resistance
Term
What are the factors that a water habitat places on locomotion?
Definition
dense viscous,gravitational pull less intense, resistance is strong.
Term
What are locomotive adaptations to water habitats?
Definition
streamlining, buoyancy, and propulsion
Term
What adaptation do bouyant animals have for locomotion in water?
Definition
gas-filleblatters, large surface area, adipose tissue
Term
How does the adaptation of streamlining in water habitats benefit an animal?
Definition
the animal is in a fusiform or torpedo shape which helps it move throught the water quicker
Term
What is propulsion in water based locomotion?
Definition
forcing water in the opposite direction an organism wants to move
Term
How do organisms use propulsion?
Definition

1. use of appendages to push water

2.use of tubes to force water

3.use of fins

4. undulation of tails

Term
What are the factors that land habitats place on locomotion?
Definition
gravity is a major challenge,resistance is not a problem, movement requires muscular force
Term
Describe Crawling as a type of Land locomotion?
Definition
Crawling increases frictional force and requires force exerted from muscles as well as integumentary structure
Term
Describe Hopper/runner/walkers as a type of Land locomotion?
Definition
Each move requires muscular force so these animals have large lege muscles and strong skeletal support
Term

Describe Flying as a type of Land locomotion?

What adaptation have been made in these animals?

Definition

Gravity is a major challenge

Adaptations: Wings shaped like airfoil, small size, air-filled spaces in bones, loss of teeth(birds), loss of urinary bladder(birds)

Term
What type of locomotion is the most energetically efficient?
Definition
Swimming for animals adapted to swimming
Term
What type of locomotion is more efficient per unit of time?
Definition
Running for animals adapted to running
Term
What are all animals referred to as?
Definition
Metazoans
Term
What are choanocytes similar to?
Definition
Choanoflagellates
Term
What is the cambrian explosion?
Definition
explosion of diversity that is responsible for about half of all extant animal phyla
Term
What are the hypothesis in support of the cambrian explosion?
Definition

1. New predator prey relationships generated diversity through the nervous system

2.Rise in atmospheric oxygen provide opportunities for animals with high metabolic rates and larger bodies to thrive

3.HOX gene complexes evolved providing developmental flexibility

Term
What are the characteristics of invertabrates?
Definition

They have no-backbone

make up 95% of animals

All phylum level clade include invertabrates

Term

What clade did all sponges formerly belong to?

What clades do they belong to now?

Definition

Porifera(paraphyletic)

Silicea and calcarea

Term
What are the general characteristics of sponges?
Definition

They are sedentary

most are marine

have no tissues

are asymmetrical

 

Term

What is the mode of nutrition for the sponges?

How is this accomplished?

Definition

Suspension feeders.

Water is drawn through pores into a canal system, then cavity called the spongocoel. Water then flows out trough the osculum

Term

How many cell layer do sponges have? 

What are the name(s) of the cell layer(s)?

Definition

2

the epidermis and the choanocytes

Term
What are the two cell layer of the sponge seperated by?
Definition
By gelatinous mesohyl
Term
Where are choanocytes found in a sponge?
Definition
The lining of canals and the spongocoel
Term
What is the morphological characteristics of a choanocyte?
Definition
Have a single flagellum with a collar
Term
describe the function of a choanocyte?
Definition
To create a current that pulls water through a sponge, The water is pulled through fingerlike projections of the collar where food particles get trapped in mucus, the food is then phagocytized by choanocyte or passed to amoebocytes.
Term
Where are amoebocytes found in a sponge?
Definition
In the mesohyl
Term
What are the morphological characteristics of an ameobocyte?
Definition
has pseudopodia
Term
Describe the function of the amoebocyte?
Definition

Digests food passed from choanocytes, and passes nutrients to other cells.

Makes fibers, spicules of mesohyl

can differentiate into any other sponge cell

Term
What type of sexual reproduction do sponges have?
Definition
Most are monoecious sequential hermaphrodites(first one sex then the other)
Term
Describe the process of sexual reproduction in sponges.
Definition

1. choanocytes, amoebocytes produce gametes by meosis

2. sperm leaves in water flow, end up on plankton

3. egg remaining in canal system, gets fertilized by sperm drawn into sponge

4. zygote develops into larva, disperses in plankton

Term

Describe the processes of Asexual reproduction in sponges.

2 processes

Definition

Fragmentation: waves tear sponges and since amoebocytes can differentiate into any cell type then the fragment can colonize any acceptable habitat

 

Gemmules: Sponges that live in freshwater ponds and intertidal zones are subject to drying up. gemmules are packets of choanocytes and amoebocytes(and spicules) in a dessication- resistant coat. when conditions are back in the gemmules favor the sponge will begin to colonize again

Term
What type of clade is cnidaria?
Definition
A phylum level clade
Term
What are characteristics of Cnidarians?
Definition

1.Have true tissues

2. radial symmetry

3. Endoder gives rise to the gastrodermis

4. Ectoderm gives rise to the epidermis

5. have a gelatinous mesoglea

Term
What are the two adult forms of cnidarians?
Definition
Polyp and medusa
Term
What are the characteristics of the polyp form of cnidarians?
Definition

1. cylindrical shape

2. sessile with exceptions

3. mouth "up"

4. feeding tentacles around mouth

5. have a mouth that is ring shaped

 

Term

What are the characteristics of the medusa form of cnidarians?

(5 Characters)

Definition

1.bell-shaped

2. motile: drift or contract

3. mouth "down"

4. tentacles ring margin of bell

5. can be propelled by forcing water out of bell

Term
What are characteristics of both the polyp and medusa form of Cnidarians?
Definition

1. Gastrovascular cavity acts as hydrostatic skeleton

2. Contractile fibers(composed of microfilaments) in epidermis, gastrodermis, and tentacles

3. Network of nerons( diffuse, no brain)

4.contraction of fibers can cause change in shape.

5. most have alternation of stages

 

Term
How do polyps and medusa capture prey and protect themselves?
Definition
Throught the use of tentacles lined with cnidocytes
Term
Describe the process of capturing prey with tentacles?
Definition
The cnidocytes lining the tetacles are trigerred by the prey causing to discharge and puncture the prey releasing venom into the prey
Term
What is the diploid stage in the Cnidarian life cycle?
Definition
Polyp and Medusa
Term
What is the haploid stage in the Cnidarian lifecycle?
Definition
the Gametes
Term

What are the characteristics of the Platyhelminthes?

(8 Characters)

Definition

1. flatworms: dorsoventrally flattened

2. free living aquatic or terrestrial, or endoparasitic

3. microscopic to 20 meter long

4. Triploblastic, acoelomate

5. most have branched gastrovascular cavity with one opening(incomplete digestive tract).

6. no circulatory system

7. gas exchange, excretion across body surface

8. protonephridia sytem maintains solute balance

 

Term

What type of clade is Turbellaria?

What clade does it belong to?

Definition

A class level clade

belongs to Phylum level clade Platyhelminthes

Term

What are the characteristics of Organisms in the clade Turbellaria?

(4 Characters)

Definition

1. most are free-living marine: planarians are freshwater

2. body not devided

3.skeletal muscles below epidermis allows undulations

4. cilia on ventral surface help in crawling.

Term
What is the mode of nutrition for Turbellaria?
Definition
carnivorous predators
Term

What are the characteristics of organisms in the clade Cestoda?

(6 Characters)

Definition

1. endoparasites of invertabrate intestines.

2. Have a scolex with hooks and suckers for attatchment.

3.no mouth or gastrovascular cavity

4. nutrients are absorbed across body wall

5. have a devided body

6. Proglottids contain mainly reproductive organs: shed from posterior end

Term

What type of clade is Trematoda?

What clade does it belong to?

Definition

A class level clade

Phylum level clade Platyhelminthes

Term

What are the characteristics of organisms in the clade trematoda?

(7 characters)

Definition

1. Are endoparasites

2. Have suckers

3. undevided bodies filled mainl with reproductive organs

4. wide range of hosts

5. complex life cycles- sexual and asexual stages, multiple hosts

6. Sexual reproduction in definitive host

7. Asexual reproduction in one or more intermediate hosts

Term
What are type of clade does Is Cestoda and what clade of organisms does it belong to?
Definition

Class level clade

belongs to Phylum Level Clade Platyhelminthes

Term
What type of clade is Mollusca?
Definition
A Phylum level clade
Term

What are the key morphological characteristics of organisms under the clade Mollusca?

 (7 Characters)

Definition

1. Soft bodied

2. Most have hard shell

3. Most are aquatic, some intertidal, and one group in moist terrestrial

4. Diverse modes of nutrition(herbivores, Carnivores, Detritovores, Suspension Feeders)

7.Most are dioecious

 

Term

What is the body plan of organisms in the clade Mollusca?

12 features

Definition

1.foot which is a muscular organ used for locomotion

2.nerve cords extend from nerve ring encircling the esophagus into the foot

3.a viceral mass 

4.have a true ceolum

5.have a complete digestive tract

6.Have a nephridium 

7.Have open circulatory system

8.have a mantle 

 9.Have a mantle cavity

10.Have a visceral mass

11.Have Gills 

12. Have a radula 

Term
What is the function of the Mantle in the body plan of the Phylum level clade Mollusca?
Definition

1.secretes shell

2. Forms mantle cavity

3. encloses visceral mass

Term
What is the function of the nephridium in the body plan of the clade Mollusca?
Definition
to remove metabolic waste from hemolymph
Term
What does the mantle cavity contain and what is its function in the body plan of the Phylum Level Clade Mollusca?
Definition

The gills are contained in the mantle cavity

the mantle cavity recieves digestive wastes and excretory products that are then washed out

Term
What is the mantle cavity not the same as?
Definition
A coelum
Term
What is the function of gills in the body plan of the Phylum level clade Mollusca?
Definition
Gas exchange underwater
Term
What does the visceral mass in the body plan of the Phylum Level Clade Mollusca contain?
Definition
Most of the internal organs
Term
What is the function of the Radula in the body plan in the Phylum level clade Mollusca?
Definition
To be a feeding device modified according to the organisms diet
Term
What type of clade is Polyplacophora and what clade does it belong to?
Definition

Class level Clade

Belong to the Phylum level clade Mollusca

Term

What are the Key morphological feature of organisms in the clade Polyplacophora?

(7 characters)

Definition

1.Live in marine or intertidal habitats

3. No head

4. Dorsal shell made of 8 plates

5. Broad flat foot for crawling, gliding

6. Abrading radula:scrape algae

7. Are herbivores

Term
What type of Clade is Gastropoda and what Clade does it belong to?
Definition

Class Level Clade

Belong to the Phylum Level Clade Mollusca

Term

What are the Key morphological characteristics of Organisms in the Clade Gastropoda?

(6 characters)

Definition

1. Most marine some terrestrial

2. Shell in one piece and often coiled

3. Aquatic species have gills

4.In terrestrial have vascularized parts of mantle to function in gas exchange

5. Undergo torsion in embryonic development

6. Have a head

Term
What is the process of Torsion?
Definition
In embryonic development of Gastropods the mantle cavity is repositioned above the head
Term
What type of clade is Bivalvia and What clade does it belong too?
Definition

Class level clade

belongs to Phylum level clade Mollusca

Term
What is the modes of nutrition do Gastropods have and How do their radulas accomodate these modes?
Definition

Herbivores: The radula is ribbon like with teeth

Predators: drills that bore through shells of prey

Cone snails- eject venomous radular teeth

Term

What are the Key morphological Characteristics of organisms in the clade Bivalvia?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1.Shell has 2 hinged valves: adductor muscles close

2. no head, no radula

3. photosensitive eyes on some

 

Term
What is the nutritional mode of the clade bivalvia?
Definition
suspension feeders
Term
How do organisms in the clade bivalvia utilize their nutritional mode?
Definition

1. water comes into inccurent siphon formed by mantle folds

2. Water moves across gills in mantle cavity

3. gills have cilia and mucus to trap food and gas exchange

4. food is moved to mouth by palps

5. filtered water exits the excurrent siphon

Term
Describe the modes of locomotion of organisms in the clade bivalvia?
Definition

1. Sedentary

2. Burrowers

3. swimmers

Term
Describe the sedentary mode of locomotin of Bivalvia?
Definition

Do not move

in areas of high energy waves they attatch to their substrate by protein threads

Term
Describe burrowers mode of locomotion of bivalvia?
Definition
Burrowers have a highly protrusible foot to allow them to dig into the ground
Term
How do scallops in the clade bivalvia swim?
Definition
They rapidly clap the 2 valves
Term
What type of clade is Cephalopoda and what clade does it belong to?
Definition

A class level clade

Belong to the phylum level clade Mollusca

Term

What are the key morphological characteristics of organisms in the clade cephalopoda?

(7 Characters)

Definition

 1. Active predators

2. enlarged head

3. Mantle that covers visceral mass

4.Foot joined with head

5.Tentacles with suction disks

6. closed circulatory system

7. most have lost their shell

Term
What is the morphological characteristics of the head of Cephalopods?
Definition
The head has well developed eyes that can form images and a brain
Term
What are the key morphological characteristics of the foor joined with the head in cephalopods?
Definition
It forms tentacles and muscular siphon
Term
Describe the mode of locomotion for cephalopods?
Definition

propolsion

Water is drawn into the mantle cavity, then forced out through excurrent siphon

Term
How does a cephalopods feed?
Definition
Prey is grasped with the tentacles, the radula is modified into beak like jaws that delivers venom
Term
What is the only shelled cephalopod?
Definition
The chambered nautilus
Term
Where is the shell in a squid?
Definition
Embedded in the mantle cavity
Term
What type of Clade is Annelida?
Definition
A Phylum level clade
Term

What are the key morphological characteristics of organisms in the clade Annelida?

(5 Characters)

Definition

1. Marine, freshwater, damp terrestrial habitats

2. Nutritional modes: Carnivores, suspension feeders, detritivores, and ectoparasites

3.Coelum partitioned by septa into somites or segments

4.Eucoelomate

5. Exhibit metamerism

 

Term
What is metamerism? What clade exihibits this?
Definition
Body with internal and external segments all the same age with one or more repeating internal organs in each segment
Term
What type of clade is Oligochaeta? What clade does it belong to?
Definition

A Class Level Clade

 Belongs to Phylum Level Clade Annelida

Term
What are the key morphological characteristics of organisms in the clade Oligochaeta?
Definition

1.Cuticle of chitin

2. Chaete- integumentary bristle of chitin

 3.underneath epidermis have circular muscle then longitudinal

4. Have a coelum

5. Dorsal blood vessel that runs length

6. Pair of ganglia connected to ventral nerve cord

7. enlarged ganglia

8. complete digestive system

 

Term
When is Chaete reduced in the oligochaetes?
Definition
When the organism has a burrowing/fossorial lifestyle
Term
What type of skeleton do Oligochaetes have?
Definition
A hydrostatic skeleton
Term
How many Chaetae per segment do oligochaetes have?
Definition
4 pairs per segment
Term
What type of head do Oligochaetes have?
Definition
A tapered head for burrowing
Term
What type of circulatory system do Oligochaetes have?
Definition
A closed circulatory system
Term
What allows for gas exchange in the oligochaetes?
Definition
tiny blood vessels in the epidermis
Term
What is the mode of nutrition of oligochaetes?
Definition
They are detritovores
Term
Describe digestion in the oligochaetes.
Definition

1. soil sucked in by the muscular pharynx and is transported to the crop via the esophagus

2.the crop then transports the soil to the gizzard which physically reduces the soil

3.The soil is then transported to the intestines for chemical digestion and absorption

 

Term
What is the typhlosole?
Definition
Infolding of the digestive tract
Term
Why do oligochaetes need a large intestinal surface area and how is this accomplished?
Definition

To extract nutrients

through infoldings of the intestine

Term
Describe the reproduction of the Oligochaetes?
Definition

They are hermaphroditic and usually exchange sperm.

1.The clitellum usually produces a slime tube that earthworms move through

2. The slime tube picks up egg and sperm and forms a cocoon for the embryo

Term
What type of clade is Polychaeta and what clade does in belong to?
Definition

A class level clade

Belongs to the Phylum level clade Annelida

Term
What are the key Morphological characteristics of the Polychaetes?
Definition

1. Internally similar to oligochaetes, except digestive tract not specialized to digest detritus

2. suspension feeder, carnivorous predators

3. Most marine, some freshwater, and some planktonic

4.Many chaete on a pair of paddle-like parapodia per segment

5. parapodia not jointed

6. some have appendages on head for sensing or prey capture

 

Term
What is the mode of nutrition for oligochaetes?
Definition
Detritovores
Term
What are parapodia?
Definition
near feet like structures on polychaetes that function in crawling, movement in tube-like burrows, and gas exchange
Term
What type of clade is Hirudinea? What clade does this clade belong to?
Definition

Class Level Clade

Belongs to Phylum Level Clade Annelida

Term
What are the key morphological characteristics of the clade Hirudinea?
Definition

1. mostly freshwater, some marine or terrestrial

2. predators or ectoparasites

3.ectoparasites have sucker that make incision in host with jaws or enzymatically digest hole

4. Secrete anesthetic and anticoagulant hirudin

5.Have pleats called annuli that allow expansion

6. Have enlarged side chambers of digestive tract to allow ingestion of large volumes of blood

Term
What type of clade is Arthropoda?
Definition
A phylum level clade
Term

What is the success of the diversity of arthropods attributed to?

( 3 succeses)

Definition

1.Fused body segment hard exoskeleton

2.specialized jointed appendages

3.change in sequence or regulation of existing HOX genes.

Term
What are the key features of the arthropods?
Definition

1.Eucoelomates

2. Cuticle that is flexible but not expandable and multilayered

 

Term
What are the key features of the cuticle in the arthropods?
Definition

1.Multilayered

2. Made of chitin in terrestrial species

3. Made of Calcium Carbonate in aquatic

4. Varies in thickness thinnest at joints thickest at points need protection

5. Anchoring surfaces for skeletal muscles

6. Provides support against gravity

7. molted to allow growth

8. newer cuticle produced beneath old

Term
What are tagmata?
Definition
Fused segments in the embryo
Term
What are the key characteristics of tagmata?
Definition

1. Consists of varying numbers of former segments

2. have specialized functions

3. Exoskeleton may or may not retain external evidence of segmentation

Term
What the functions to which arthropods tagmatum can be specialized?
Definition

1.Walking

2.Swimming

3.Climbing

4.Defense

5.Food Aquisition

6.Feeding

7.Reproduction

8.Sensation

9.Well developed sensory organs

 

Term
What type of circulatory system do arthropods have?
Definition
Open
Term
How do arthropods exchange gas?
Definition
Gills or tracheal tubes
Term
What type of clade are Cheliceriformes?
Definition
A subphylum level clade
Term
What are the key features of cheliceriformes?
Definition

1. clawlike appendages; pincers or fangs

2. 2 tagmata

3.no antennae

Term
What are the features of the tagmata of the cheliceriformes?
Definition

1.Cephalothorax with 6 pairs of appendages that includes pedipalps for sensing,feeding, and reproduction. 4 pairs of walking legs

2. Abdomen with no appendages

Term
What type of clade is arachnida and what clade does it belong to?
Definition

Class level clade

Subphylem cheliceroforme

Term
What are the key features of ticks and mites?
Definition

1.Ectoparasitic

2. have piercing and sucking mouth parts

3. usually less than 1mm 

4. ticks feed on the blood of invertabrates

5. mites attack vertabrates, invertabrates, and plants

6. belong to the clade arachnida

Term
What are the characteristics of true spiders?
Definition

1. deliver venom

2. have a pumping stomach to pour digestive juices over prey

3. liquified prey tissue is sucked in

Term
How do spiders produce silk?
Definition
spinerates spin proteins into silk fibers
Term
How do spiders use silk?
Definition

1. Subdue

2. Dropline

3. Egg cover

4. Gift Wrap

5. ballooning

 

Term
How do spiders exchange gases?
Definition
Gas is exchanged between hemolyph and air using a book lung
Term
Describe the structure of a book lung?
Definition
Plate like surfaces in a chamber that takes air in through an opening in the body
Term
What type of clade are the scorpions? What clade do they belong to?
Definition

ordinal level clade

Class level clade Arachnida

Subphylem level clade cheliceriforme

Term
What are the key feature of the scorpions?
Definition

1.pincer like pedipalps

2. inject venom through peircing end of the abdomen

Term
What type of clade is the Horshoe Crab? What clade does it belong to?
Definition

Class level clade

Subphylem level clade Cheliceriforme

 

Term

What are the key characteristics of Horshoe Crabs?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1. Marine burrowers

2. Book gills on abdomen

3. Living fossils

Term
What type of clade is Myriapoda? 
Definition
A subphylem level clade
Term

What are the key characteristics of the Myriads?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1. Terrestrial

2. contains Centipedes and millipedes

3. Head appendages consist of 1 pair of sensory antennae 3 pair mouth parts including jaw like mandibles

Term
What clade do millipedes belong to?
Definition
Subphylem level clade Myriapoda
Term

What are the characteristics of the millipedes?

(4 Characters)

Definition

1. cylindrical body

2. numerous tagmata, each composed of 2 fused segments with 2 pairs of legs

3.herbivores

4. ancestors may have been early colonizers of land

Term
What clade do centipedes belong to?
Definition
Subphylum level clade Myriapoda
Term
What are the characteristics of the centipedes?
Definition

1.dorsoventrally flattened body

2.carnivorous predators some with venom

3. segments with 1 pair of appendages

Term
What type of clade is Hexapoda?
Definition
A Subphylum level clade
Term
What are the characteristics of the Subphylem level clade Hexapoda?
Definition

1. Contains insects and 6 legged wingless relatives

2.Thrive in all habitats except marine

3. 1st explosion with the evolution of flight

4. 2nd explosion with the evolution of angiosperms

5. 3 tagmata

6.mouth parts specialized for chewing, lapping, piercing, or sucking

7. have antennae

8. open circulatory system

9. cerebral ganglia in head

10.fused paired nerver cords and ganglia on ventral side

11.gas exchange- trachial tubules, or spiracles

Term
What did the evolution of flight allow insects to do?
Definition
To rapidly dispers, aquire resources, and escape predators
Term
What is the basic wing morphology of insects?
Definition

1. are not appendages but extensions of the exoskeleton

2. 1 or 2 pairs

3. bees and wasps have 2 or more on each side hooked together and move as 1

4.Butterflys have 2 wings on each side that overlap and move as 1

5. Beetles and others have anterior wings that protect the wings underneath for flight

Term
What is incomplete metamorphosis?
Definition

Nymphs resemble adults but smaller, have different body proportion, lack wings.

nymphs molt becoming more and more like the adult each time

Term
What type of clade is Crustacea?
Definition
A subphylum level clade
Term
What are the key characteristics of organisms in the clade Crustcea?
Definition

1. most are marine or fresh water

2. 2 tagmata

3. typically highly specialized appendages on both tagmata

4. 2 pairs of atennae

5. gas exchage by gills or across integument

Term
What are the two tagmata of the Crustacea?
Definition

1. Cephalothorax

2. Abdomen

Term
What type of clade is Malacostraca and what clade does it belong too?
Definition

A class level clade

belongs to the Subphylem level clade Crustacea

Term
What type of clade is Decapoda and what clade does it belong to?
Definition

Ordinal level clade

belongs to the class level clade malacostraca

Term
What are the characteristics of the decapods?
Definition

1. mostly marine

2.shield shaped carapace

3.cuticle hardened by calcium carbonate

Term
What clade do copepods and krill belong to?
Definition
Subphylum level clade Crustacea
Term

What are the key characteristics of the copepods and krill?

(3 characters)

Definition

1. are small

2. many are planktonic

3.very important food for other animals

Term
What clade do the barnacles belong to?
Definition
Subphylem level clade Crustacea
Term
What are the key characteristics of Barnacles?
Definition

1. are sessile

2. have a heavily calcified cuticle

3. often confused with molluscs

4. external appendages trap food from water

Term
What are the characteristics of Dueterostomes during embryonic development?
Definition

Radial indeterminate cleavage

mesoderm buds from archentron, forms coelum

blastopore forms anus

Term
What type of clade is Echinodermata?
Definition
A phylum level clade
Term
What type of habitat do echinoderms live in?
Definition

1. All marine with little tolerance to change in salinity

 

Term
What type of skeleton do echinoderms have?
Definition
and endoskeleton of ossicles which are calcareous plates
Term
What type of symmetry do echinoderms have?
Definition
 larvae have bilateral symmetry: adults appear radial but behave as bilaterals under stress.
Term
What type of vascular system do echinoderms have?
Definition
a water vascular system of canals
Term
What is the function of echinoderms tube feet?
Definition
locomotion, feeding, and gas exchange
Term
What type of nerve system do echinoderms have?
Definition
A complex nervous system with nuerons that lie beneath the skin
Term
What is significant about the esophagus of echinoderms?
Definition
Esophagus is surrounded by nerve rings, from which radial nerves run
Term
What do ring and radial nerves do in the echinoderms?
Definition
coordinate writing activity
Term
What are the sensing organs of echinoderms functions?
Definition

1. touch

2. changes in light and light intensity

3. temperature

4. orientation

5. the surrounding water

Term
What are the basic characteristics of echinoderms skin?
Definition
has spines and ridges
Term
What type of clade is asteroidea?
Definition

A class level clade

Belongs to the Phylem level clade Echinodermata

Term
What are the key features of organisms in the clade Asteroidea?
Definition

1. Star shaped, with central disk

2. crossed arms x shaped

3.mouth on underside

4. regenerate lost body parts

5. spines come from ossicles

6. gills are outpockets of coelum

7. complete digestive tract

Term
How is gas exchanged in organisms of the clade asteroidea?
Definition
through skin gills that function in gase and solute exchange
Term
How do organisms in the clade Asteroidea use their tube feet to move?
Definition

1. water moves through madroporite in ring canal, into the ampula

2. muscles in the ampula contract, forcing water into the podium which lengthens

 

Term
How do asteroideans adhere and detatch and what functions does this allow?
Definition

secrete adhesive compound and use deadhesive compounds to detatch and contract feet

allow them to crawl, capture prey, and hold their place

Term
What do Asteroideans mainly prey on?
Definition
bivalves
Term
Describe the process of Asteroideans feeding on bivalves?
Definition

1. tube feet pule valves apart

2. they evert their stomach through their mouth 

3. secrete digestive enzymes onto prey

Term
What type of clade is echinoidea and what clade does it belong to?
Definition

a class level clade

belongs to the Phylum level clade Echinodermata

Term
How many rows of tube feet do Echinoideans have?
Definition
5
Term
Why do Echinoideans form a complete shell?
Definition
Their ossicles are very thick
Term
What mechanism helps echinoideans move and deter predators?
Definition
prominent spines that are moved by muscles
Term

What is the mode of nutrition of echinoideans?

What adaptations have they acqurired for this mode?

Definition

Herbivores

Chewing parts to gnaw on algae

Term

What type of clade is Cnidoidea?

What clade does it belong to?

Definition

A class level clade

Belongs to the phylum level clade Echinodermata

Term
What is the structure of the arms of the Crinoideans?
Definition
long arms covered with filamentatous structures
Term
How do crinoideans capture their food?
Definition
Capture suspended food that is passed to the mouth
Term
Where is the mouth located on a crinoidean?
Definition
on top
Term

What type of clade is Holothuroidea?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

A class level clade

Belong to the phylum level clade Echinodermata

Term
What organism is found in the clade Holothuroidea?
Definition
Sea cucumbers
Term
What are the key morphological feature of Holothuroideans?
Definition

1. elongated

2. no spines

3. reduced embeded ossicles

4. 5 rows of tube feet

5. tube feet around mouth modified into feeding tentacles

6. Evisceration of digestive tract if attacked by prey that can be regenerated

Term
What type of clade is chordata?
Definition
A phylum level clade
Term
What type of symmetry do chordates have?
Definition
bilateral
Term
What are the four derrived characters of the chordates?
Definition

1.notochord

2. dorsal hollow nerve chord

3. muscular post anal tail

4. Pharynx with slits or clefts

Term
The derrived characters are only present in many species of chordates during what stage?
Definition
in the embryonic stage
Term
What are the characteristics of the notochord?
Definition

1.part of endoskeleton

2. in all chordata embryo

3. long flexible rod dorsal to digestive tract, ventral to chord

4.has fluid filled cells in fibrous sheath; hydrostatic skeleton

5. anchoring surface for trunk muscles 

6.Evolutionary precursor of vertebral column

7. in most vertebrates jointed skeleton develops around notochord

 

Term
What are the characteristics of the Dorsal Hollow nerve chord?
Definition

1. from ectoderm of embryo

2. forms a tube

3.Unique only to chordates

4. precursor of spinal cord and brain

Term

What are the characteristics of the pharynx of chordates?

( 4 Characters)

Definition

1. pouches push outward to form grooves called clefts

2.clefts may form slit-like openings in body wall

3. soft and skeletal tissue between clefts are arches

4. In all chordate embryos

Term
What is the fate of pharygeal clefts or slits and arches?
Definition

1. in non vertabrate chordates, function in suspension feeding

2. in jawed aquatic vertebrates, function for gas exchange; precursor gills in fish

3.In tetrapods, clefts do not form slits but develop into parts of ear and neck.

Term
What are the characteristics of the post anal tail of the chordates?
Definition

Contain skeletal elements and muscles that function for propulsion

is greatly reduced in many species

Term
What type of clade is Cephalochordata?
Definition
A subphylum level clade
Term
What are the characteristics of the cephalochordates?
Definition

commonly know as branchiostoma(amphioxus)

1. live in marine environments

2. larvae in water column, adults in substrate

3.Larvae, adults have all 4 chordate characters

4. adults burrow, filter food through pharyngeal slits into atrium; food passed to digestive tract, water goes into atrium and out atriopore

5. Gas exchange mainly across body surface

6. Muscle segments allow undulations for swimming

Term
What type of clade is Urochordata?
Definition
A subphylum level clade
Term
What are the characteristics of the Urochordates?
Definition

1. Larvae live a few minutes but display all 4 chordate characteristics

2. larval pharynx non functional

3. Larva settle down and reabsorc notochord, and nerve chord, pharynx grows

4. adults become suspension feeders

5. often called sea squirts

Term
What is significant about the HOX genes of tunicates?
Definition
they only have 9 and all other chordates have 13
Term
What could the ancestral chordate have looked like?
Definition
a lancelet
Term
What genes do chordates share with vertebrates?
Definition
the genes that control development of the heart and thyroid
Term
The same HOX gene in the lancelets control the development of what?
Definition
regions in the tip of the lancelet nerve cord and vertebrate brain
Term
What type of group is are the crainiates?
Definition
an unranked group
Term

What are the characteristics of the crainiates?

(9 Characters)

Definition

1. have a head

2. have a brain, skull, and sensory organs

3. derived characters- increased genetic complexity and neural crest

4. higher metabolism

5. more extensive muscles, including digestive tract

6. heart with two or more chambers

7. red blood cells with hemoglobin

8. kidneys

9. aquatic species gill slits associated with muscles and nerves allow pumping of water through pharynx for gas exchange and suction feeding

Term
What do cells in the neural crest migrate to become?
Definition
other parts of the embryo such as bone, cartilage of skull, dermis of face, and teeth
Term
What is the origin of the craniates?
Definition

originated during the cambrian explosion

Haikouella- lancelet-like fossil with large brain, small eyes, fish-like muscle segments, gills- not yet a craniate

Myllokunmingia- true craniate fossil from cambrium had a cranium,ear and eyes capsules

Term
What type of clade is Myxini?
Definition
a subphylum level clade
Term

What are the characteristics of hagfishes(Myxini)?

(5 Characters)

Definition

1. least derived extant craniate lineage

2. skull of cartilage; small brain,eyes, and ears

3. lack jaws and vertebral column(notochord is retained)

4. Live in Marine environments and are bottom dwelling scavengers

5. have slime glands- can produce several liters of slime in less than 1 minute, coating gills of attacking fish

Term
What type of clade is vertebrata?
Definition
Subphylum level clade
Term

What are the characteristics of the vertebrates?

(5 characters)

Definition

1. more complex nervous system

2. more extensive skull

3. vertebral column

aquatic vertebrates

4. dorsal,ventral, anal fins for propulsion and steering

5. more efficient gas exchange in gills

Term
What did the vertebral column start out as?
Definition
small pieces of cartilage along dorsal side of notochord
Term

How is the nerve cord protected in vertebrates?

what does the vertebral column provide?

Definition
Vertebrae enclose and protect the nerve chord; provides support, and anchors muscles
Term
What type of clade is petromyzontida?
Definition
a class level clade
Term
What are the characteristics of the lamprey(peromyzontida)?
Definition

1. notochord with cartilaginous pipe with pairs of projections

2.surving forms highly derived

3. larvae live in streams and are suspension feeders similar to lancelets.

4. larvae also called ammocoete

5. adults migrate to lakes or seas and are ectoparasites on fish

6. adults have a suctorial mouth that is round with rasping tongue, ingests blood and fluids

7. lack of paired fins

Term

What are the characteristics of conodonts?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1. usually 3-10 cm in length

2. Mineralized barbed hooks in mouth

3. no Jaw

 

Term

What are the characteristics of the Ostracoderms?

(4 Characters)

Definition

1. arose during Ordovician through Devonian periods

2.Paired fins and inner ear

3. No jaws but mineralized bone covering parts of body

4.Bony shield composed of tooth-like structures that are thousands of small teeth fused together

Term

What may have provided the selective pressure for the dental mineralization?

 

Definition

transition from filter feeding to preying may have provided selective pressure for dental mineralization

 

Term
What is significant about the endoskeleton in derived vertebrates?
Definition
In derived vertebrates the endoskeleton is mineralized beggining with the skull
Term
What was the vertebrate skeleton intially composed of?
Definition
cartilage
Term
When did mineralization occur in vertebrates?
Definition
after lampreys diverged
Term

What are the characteristics of Gnathostome vertebrates?

(4 characters)

Definition

1. "Jaw Mouth": have moveable jaws

2.Major evolutionary step that allowed feeding on energy-rich living tissue

3.appeared in mid-Ordivician-470mya

4.Extant gnathostomes include sharks through mammals

Term
What could hinged jaws evolved from?
Definition
May have evolved from two pairs of skeletal rods that supported the anterior gill slits.
Term
What did the evolution of jaws allow organisms to do?
Definition
 allowed better grip and slicing of food items
Term

What are the derived characters of Gnathostomes?

(3 characters)

Definition

1. Hinged jaws

2. enlarged forebrain allowed better smell and vision

3. Duplication of Hox genes and other genes allowed further complexity

Term

What type of clade are chondricythes?

What clade does it belong to?

Definition

A class level clade

Subphylem Vertebrata

Phylum Chordata

Term

What are the characteristics of the Chondricthyes?

(4 Characters)

Definition

1. includes sharks, rays, and ratfishes

2. skeleton primarily cartilage but somewhat calcified/mineralized

3. Traces of bone in scales,teeth, and some skeletal elements

4. evolved from more mineralized ancestors

Term

What are the characteristics of sharks?

(2 characters)

Definition

1. Have pectoral and pelvic fins

2. Have several rows of teeth (are scales around jaw)

 

Term

What are the characteristics of Rays?

(4 characters)

Definition

1. Dorso-ventrally flattened body

2. wing-like pectoral fins

3. Benthic(on the bottom of aquatic habitats)

4. Jaws that crush molluscs and crustaceans

 

Term

What are the characteristics of Ratfishes?

(2 Characters)

Definition

1. Deep-Dwelling organisms

2. Long tapering caudal fin

Term

What type of clade is Osteichythyes?

What clade does it belong to?

Definition

Class level clade

 

Subphylum vetebrata

Phylum Chordata

Term
What organisms do Osteichthyes include?
Definition
Vast majority of vertebrates including tetrapods
Term
What type of organisms are non-tetrapod Osteichthyes?
Definition
Are aquatic bony fishes, ray finned and lobed finned fishes
Term

What are the characteristics of Bony fishes?

(4 Characters)

Definition

1. skeleton mostly bone with some cartilage

2. breathe by drawing water over gills derived from pharynx and Pharyngeal slits

3. covered with bony scales and mucous glands

4. have a swim bladder

Term
What is the function of the swim bladder?
Definition
To maintain buoyancy and stability
Term
How is the swim bladder filled and emptied?
Definition
Filled and emptied by gas exchange with blood
Term

From what did the swim bladder evolve in bony fish?

What was its original function?

Definition
From a sac originally attatched to the digestive tract and functioned as an emergency lung
Term

What type of clade is Actinopterygii?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

A subclass level clade

Class Osteichthyes

Term
What are the characteristics of organisms in the clade Actinopterygii?
Definition

1. Fish supported by bony rays

2. Most extant fish

3. originated in fresh water

Term

What type of clade is Sarcopterygii?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Sub class level clade

Class osteichthyes

Term
What are the characteristics of organisms in the clade Sarcopterygii?
Definition

1. Lobe finned fishes

2. Rod-shaped bones surrounded by muscle in fins

3. include lung fishes and coelcanths

4. Extict lobe-finned fishes were the ancestors of the tetrapods

Term
What drove the evolution of the tetrapods?
Definition
Intermittent severe drought caused freshwater bodies to decrease in depth and size. lobe-finned fishes and early tetrapods were well adapted for life in shallow ponds. lobe fins evolved into paddle-like limbs and feet. gas bladders connected to digestive tract and gills and acted as a lung
Term

What are the derived characters of the tetrapods?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1. limbs

2. specialized vertebra in neck that allowed head to be lifted for air breathing

3. bones of pelvic girdle articulated with vertebral column that helped to counter gravity

Term

What type of clade is Amphibia?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Class level clade

Phylum Chordata

Term
What are the characteristics of Amphibians?
Definition

1. live in water and land

2. Many have aquatic larval stage that undergoes metamorphosis to become a terrestrial adult

3. eggs have no shell

4. mucous-producing glands

Term

What type of clade is Urodela?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class Amphibia

Term

What are the characteristics of organisms in the clade urodela?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1.Includes salamanders

2. Tailed

3. 4 well-developed legs for crawling

Term

What type of clade is Anura?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class amphibia

Term
What are the characteristics of organisms in the clade Anura?
Definition

1. includes frogs

2.tailess

3. Strongly developed hind limbs

4. Hop for locomotion

Term

What type of clade is Apoda?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class Amphibia

Term
What are the characteristics of organisims in the clade Apoda?
Definition

1. includes caercillians

2. legless

3. are burrowing creatures

Term

What are the characteristics of the amniotes?

(2 Characters)

Definition

1. Includes reptiles,birds and mammals

2. organisms produce and amniotic egg

 

Term
What are the characteristics of an amniotic egg?
Definition
4 specialized membranes including amnion that encloses fluid. protective clacareous or leathery shell that allows egg to be deposited on land.
Term
What did the development of an amniotic egg allow amniotes to do?
Definition
To radiate through terrestrial habitats
Term
How are mammal eggs different than other amniotes eggs?
Definition
They no longer have a shell
Term

What type of clade is Reptillia?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

A class level clade

Phylum Chordata

Term
What are the characteristics of Reptiles?
Definition

1. extant clade include turtles, crocodilians, birds, squamates(lizards and snakes), tuataras

2. epidermal scales made of keratin

3. birds also have feathers

4. lay shelled eggs on land

Term

What type of clade are turles?

What clade do they belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class Reptilia

Phylum Chordata

Term

What are the characteristics of Turtles?

(3 Characters)

Definition

1. Have a boxlike bony shell fused to vertebrae and ribs

2. no teeth

3. enlarged scales on shell

Term

What type of clade is Crocodilia?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class Reptilia

Phylum Chordata

Term

What are the characteristcs of organisms in the clade Crocodilia?

(5 Characters)

Definition

1. include alligators and crocodiles

2. semi-aquatic predator

3. elongate jaws

4. numerous cone shaped teeth

5. large epidermal scales

Term

What type of clade are the birds?

What clade do they belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class Reptilia

Phylum Chordata

Term
What are the derived characters of the birds?
Definition

1.no urinary bladder

2. usually only 1 ovary

3. gonads small except during breeding season

4. no teeth

5. have a beak

6. efficient 4 chambered heart and efficient gas exchange system

7. acute vision

Term
What are the derived characters of birds geared towards?
Definition
Weight reduction for flight
Term
What are the wings of the birds?
Definition
modified tetrapod forelimbs
Term
What are the characteristics of bird wings?
Definition

1. Are attatched with large pectoral muscles attatched to keel on sternum

2. shaped as airfoils

3. bones show pneumatism(air spaces)

 

Term
What are the characteristics of contour feathers?
Definition

Have shafts, barbs, barbules and hooks

 

Term
What are the characteristics of downy feathers?
Definition

1.Have no hooks

2. are close to the body

3. retain body heat from metabolism

Term
What type of scales do birds have?
Definition
Epidermal scales
Term

When did feather evolve?

What were they probably used for?

Definition

Long before flight

Probably used for social display or cryptic coloration

Term
What were wings probably evolved for?
Definition
To knock down aerial insect prey
Term
What organism are birds thought to have evolved from?
Definition
A bipedal dinosaur
Term

What type of clade is Squamata?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

Ordinal level clade

Class Reptiilia

Phylum Chordata

Term

What are the characteristics of Squamates?

(3 characters)

Definition

1. includes snakes and lizards

2. most lizards have legs, snakes are legless

3. Lizards have external ear openings. snakes do not

 

Term
What organism are snakes derived from?
Definition
lizards
Term

What type of clade is Mammalia?

What clade does it belong under?

Definition

A class level clade

Phylum Chordata

Term
What are mammals derived from and what did early ones look like?
Definition
derived from synapsids that lacked hair and laid eggs: first mammals were small and shrew-like
Term

What are the derived characters of mammals?

(6 characters)

Definition

1. mammary glands that produce milk

2. hair for retention of heat(endothermy)

3. efficient circulation with a 4 chambered heart

4.efficient gas exchange with a diaphram

5. large brain with learning during parental care

6. heterodonty(differentiated teeth)

Term
What are the three mammal lineages?
Definition

1. Monotremes

2.Marsupials

3. Eutherians

Term

What are the characteristics of the monotremes?

(2 characters)

Definition

1.Include platypus and echidnas

2.Are egg laying

Term

What are the characteristics of Marsupials?

(2 characters)

Definition

1. Include opossums, Kangaroo, and Koalas

2. Have a pounch in which offspring develop after birth

 

Term

What are the characteristics of Eutherians?

(2 characters)

Definition

1. include all placental mammals

2. Are viviparous meaning offspring complete embryonic development in the uterus

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