1 / 19

Introduction to Zoology

Introduction to Zoology. Classification of Animals. Review. Biology is the study of life… So what makes something living?. All living things must:. Be made up of at least 1 cell that contains genetic material (DNA) Reproduce (sexually or asexually)

umeko
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Zoology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Zoology Classification of Animals

  2. Review • Biology is the study of life… • So what makes something living?

  3. All living things must: • Be made up of at least 1 cell that contains genetic material (DNA) • Reproduce (sexually or asexually) • Grow (increase in size, mature, develop, etc.) • Metabolize (have a need and use for energy) • Respond to stimuli

  4. That’s all fine and good, but when do we get to the animals? • Zoology-the study of animals • Two Major Categories: • Vertebrates-have a backbone • Invertebrates-do not have a backbone • Vertebrate or Invertebrate?

  5. Characteristics of Animals • All multicellular (metazoans) • Eukaryotes (cells with nucleus & organelles) • Cells do not have a cell wall or chloroplast • Ingestive heterotrophs (take in food and internally digest it) • Store food reserves as glycogen

  6. Besides having the characteristics of living things, animals also: • Carry out the following life processes: 1.) Locomotion: • Motile-can move from one location to another on their own • Sessile-cannot move from place to place, but do have moving parts Motile Sessile

  7. Ingestion Life Processes continued • Ingestion-take in food • Digestion-chemical breakdown of food • Assimilation- using the substances obtained from food and utilizing it for growth • Excretion-waste removal • Respiration-taking in O2 and breaking down glucose to release energy

  8. Classification • So now that we’ve got all these animals, how do we make sense of it all? • TAXONOMY! • Taxonomy-Science of classifying organisms and assigning each organism a universally accepted name.

  9. Linnaean Classification System • Created by Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) • Before Linnaeus, organisms were classified based on their type of locomotion and physical characteristics • Problem? Names were too long, and people describe things differently. • Utilizes binomial nomenclature- a two name system (genus and species) • Names are in Latin • Ex: Homo sapiens

  10. Scientific Name • First name is genus; second name is species • 3 Rules For Scientific Name • Italicized or underlined • Genus name is Capitalized • Species name is lower-case • Example: Tursiopstruncatus

  11. The Modern Classification System • 7 Taxa: • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species

  12. Kingdom Animalia • Has 7 Major Phyla • Porifera • Cnidaria • Annelida • Mollusca • Arthropoda • Echinodermata • Chordata

  13. Phylum Porifera • Porifera- “pore bearer” • Sponges • Simplest of all animals • Filter feeders • No true tissues or organs

  14. Phylum Cnidaria • Includes hydras, sea anemones, jelly fish, and coral • Have stinging cells for defense and prey capture • Simple body plan (gastrovascular body cavity with one opening)

  15. Phylum Annelida • Annelid- “little ring” • Includes marine worms, earthworms, leeches • Bodies are segmented

  16. Phylum Mollusca • Includes snails, octopusses, squids, clams, mussels, conchs, etc. • Have a shell (either external or internal) • Have a mantle lining the shell

  17. Phylum Arthropoda • Arthropoda- “jointed foot” • Most diverse group • Includes crabs, lobsters, insects, spiders • Have an exoskeleton (outer hard covering is their skeleton)

  18. Phylum Echinodermata • Includes sea stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, and brittle stars. • Radially symmetrical • Posess a water vascular system- fluid filled channels that function in gas exchange, locomotion and feeding.

  19. Phylum Chordata • VERTEBRATES! • Characterized by the presence of a vertebral column • Includes 5 classes • Fish • Amphibians • Reptiles • Birds • Mammals

More Related