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Animal Architecture. WORD OF THE DAY. onomastics. Trends in Animal Evolution. 1. Levels of organization. protoplasmic. cellular. cell-tissue. tissue-organ. organ system. Trends in Animal Evolution. 2. Symmetry. Trends in Animal Evolution. Radial Cleavage (Deuterostomes).
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Animal Architecture WORD OF THE DAY onomastics
Trends in Animal Evolution 1. Levels of organization protoplasmic cellular cell-tissue tissue-organ organ system
Trends in Animal Evolution 2. Symmetry
Trends in Animal Evolution RadialCleavage (Deuterostomes) SpiralCleavage (Protostomes) 3. Development cleavage
Trends in Animal Evolution RadialCleavage (Deuterostomes) Regulative development (a.k.a. indeterminant) echinoderms, chordates SpiralCleavage (Protostomes) Mosaic development (a.k.a. determinant) molluscs, annelids, arthropods 3. Development cytoplasmic specification
Trends in Animal Evolution anus coelom 3. Development dermal layers Enterocoelous (deuterostomes) Mesoderm forms from outpockets of endoderm Gastrula stage ectoderm endoderm mouth Schizocoelous (protostomes) Cells migrate from existing cell layers, forming a solid tissue layer which splits
Trends in Animal Evolution 3. Development Hox genes (aka homeotic genes)
Trends in Animal Evolution 3. Development The result!
Trends in Animal Evolution 4. Body Plans “Tube within a tube” vs. sac-like body plan Increased digestion efficiency Increased absorption efficiency Tissue specialization Development of organs
Trends in Animal Evolution 5. Body cavity Pseudocoelomate Coelomate Acoelomate endodermmesodermectoderm
Trends in Animal Evolution 6. Segmentation
Trends in Animal Evolution 7. Triploblasty
Epithelial Tissue • Covers body surface • Lines body cavities Three types Cuboidal(cube-shaped) Squamous(flattened) Columnar(elongated) Two States Simple(single layer) Stratified(more than one layer)
Connective Tissue Binds, supports, protects, forms blood, stores fats, fills spaces Cells are separated from one another by non-cellular matrix
Connective Tissue Loose Connective Tissue Forms protective layer over muscles, blood vessels, & nerves Occurs beneath epithelium in skin & internal organs (lungs, bladder, arteries) Adipose tissue
Connective Tissue Fibrous Connective Tissue a. forms tendons (connect muscle to bone) and ligaments (connect bone to bone) b. forms cartilage (has structural proteins in matrix between cells) c. forms bone (has calcium salts in matrix between cells)
Connective Tissue WBC RBC Liquid matrix Blood Red blood cells (erythrocytes) carry oxygen White blood cells (leukocytes) function in immune system Plasma transports glucose, wastes, CO2, hormones Platelets (cell fragments) function in blood clotting
Muscle Tissue Striated Muscle Skeletal muscle Voluntary muscle movement Smooth Muscle Digestive system, reproductive tract, blood vessels Involuntary muscle (autonomic) movement
Muscle Tissue Cardiac Muscle Striated muscle found only in the heart
Nervous Tissue Axon Cell body Dendrites Nerve cell = neuron