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Origin and Early History of the Vertebrates

Origin and Early History of the Vertebrates. The Protochordates as Ancestors. Some living chordate groups may resemble the primitive vertebrate ancestors ( protochordates ). Hemichordates. Burrows in marine sediments (acorn worms) (+) pharyngeal gill slits; tornaria larvae;

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Origin and Early History of the Vertebrates

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  1. Origin and Early History of the Vertebrates

  2. The Protochordates as Ancestors • Some living chordate groups may resemble the primitive vertebrate ancestors (protochordates)

  3. Hemichordates • Burrows in marine sediments (acorn worms) • (+) pharyngeal gill slits; tornaria larvae; • Considered as direct ancestor because it has primitive notochord but appears as an extension of the digestive tract to the proboscis region.

  4. Urochordates:Tunicates • Small marine invertebrate chordates quite common today; hold the key to vertebrate origin. • Also known as tunicates • Appears thick-walled, squirt sac with 2 openings. Inside the central cavity of the animal are numerous gill slits. • (+) notochord-supported tail for locomotion • Nervous system: dorsal hollow nerve cord, several ganglia, nerves • Adult form: Sessile; (-) notochord; (+) gills – for filter feeding Haltabo 09-10

  5. Tunicate larva • Characteristics: Tadpole shape and possesses the three chordate characteristics. • It has been suggested that such larva may have become sexually mature without developing the other adult tunicate characteristics. • It evolves into a fishlike vertebrate similar to the lancelet, which is a chordate that shows the three chordate characteristics in its adult form, as well.

  6. Haltabo 09-10

  7. Cephalochordates • Small, eel-like, sand-burrowing animals; entirely marine dwellers (free-living; sessile; solitary; colonial) • Filter-feeders; larva is similar to jawless fishes (hagfish and lampreys) • Microscopic suspension feeders • Gender: Dioecious (separate male & female species); • Fertilization: external • Earliest known predecessor: Pikaia, and Yunnanozoon

  8. Characteristics of a Hypothetical Primitive Vertebrate • The prechordate ancestor was probably a primitive, sessile echinoderm which used tentacles for filter feeding. • Loss of tentacles and formation of pharynx with gill slits resulted in the first Urochordates, which soon replaced the earlier ciliated larval form with a tailed larva containing a notochord and dorsal nerve cord • This new larval form is found in modern Urochordates (tunicates) which retain the sessile filter-feeding stage as adults

  9. Some of the ancient tailed larvae probably gained the ability to reproduce without the adult stage and thus gave rise to both modern Cephalochordates and the first vertebrates. From comparison between modern and fossil vertebrates and cephalochordates, we can reconstruct a hypothetical primitive vertebrates • It would be small and look like fish • It would have myotomes (segments of muscles) • the muscles would run longitudinally between the septae, which would be anchored to the notochord

  10. Branchiostoma lanceolata, Amphioxus Similar to Amphioxus but there would be several structures absent in Cephalochordates FEATURES: (-) developed head ; (+) pharyngeal gill slits; (+) tail with anus; body (myotomes); (+) notochord; Closed circulation; (-) colorless blood; (+) thyroid gland Haltabo 09-10

  11. Fossil Records of the Earliest Vertebrates • Cathaymyrus-earliest confirmed chordate fossil from the Lower Cambrian Chengjiang Fauna in China • Soft-bodied fossil assemblage much like that of younger Burgess Shale

  12. The first vertebrate fossils are tiny bits of bone (Calcium phosphate) found in the Late Cambrian Deadwood Formation of Wyoming • This is a marine sandstone belonging to an ostracoderm of the Class Agnatha • Class Agnatha is characterized by: • No jaws, no paired fins • Simple vertebrae and primitive brain

  13. Ostracoderm Characteristics : 1. Presence of an armored shield 2. Absence of joint between the head and body 3. Body is dorsoventrally flattened 4. Eyes on the dorsal part of the head 5. Possess a cartilaginous internal skeleton

  14. Ostracoderm • extinct during Devonian period due to incapability to compete with jawed fishes

  15. Placoderms -origin: agnathan fish - Include marine and freshwater forms; integument appears like plaques around their bodies -presence of jaw and mobile head *jaws are derived from the third gill arch -partial attainment of bony internal skeleton -most were effective predators

  16. Placoderm Haltabo 09-10

  17. Bothriolepis - most primitive placoderm Haltabo 09-10

  18. Class Chondricthyes (Sharks) • Gr. chondros, cartlilage + ichthys, fish • Streamlined fish-like body with heterocercal tail; jawed, paired appendages and cartilaginous skeleton, 5-7 gills with separate openings; no operculum; no swim bladder • Evolved from Placoderms

  19. Class Chondricthyes

  20. Acanthodians or spiny fishes (Class Acanthodii, Silurian-Permian) probably descended from the Agnathans • Features: • (+) jaws • Spines along the leading edges of heir fins • Paired fins for mobility

  21. Class Osteichthyes(Teleostomi) • Gr. Osteon, bone + ichthys, fish • Primitively fusiform body but variously modified; mostly ossified skeleton single gill opening on each side covered with operculum; usually with swim bladder. • May also be classified into separate classes: • Class Sarcopterygii (lobed-finned fishes) • Class Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes)

  22. Osteichthyes

  23. Class Sarcopterygii (lobed-finned fishes)

  24. Class Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes)

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