Biology Yyy Yyy
Biology Yyy Yyy
Biology Yyy Yyy
Presented by:
Classification
• Kingdom: • Subphylum:
– Animalia – Vertebrates
• Phylum: • Class:
– Chordata – Mammalia
Subclass
Prototheria
Theria
Infraclass
• Metatheria
• Eutheria
Characteristics:
• 1. Endothermic:
– Warm-blooded
• Can live in any climate
• Regulate internal
temperature
• VERY ACTIVE
• Able to perform
strenuous activities for
long periods of time.
• High metabolisms
• Require a lot of food
Use hair/fur and a layer of subcutaneous fat to
conserve heat/ prevent heat lose.
•
Insectivora - Shrews, Moles,
Hedgehogs
• Most of the insectivores eat only insects.
There are over 350 species of
insectivores. They are usually very small
animals that use hearing and smell more
than sight to find prey. They are found all
over the world, except for Australia.
Lagomorpha - Rabbits, Hares
And Pikas
• Lagomorphas typically have long ears,
short tails, and strong back legs. Pikas are
the exception. They have short ears and
no tail. Lagomorphs are herbivores and
have strong, sharp incisors that help them
clip plant parts and chew on bark.
Macroscelidea - Elephant Shrews
• There are 28 species of elephant shrews.
They have long elephant-like snouts, long
hind legs, big ears and eyes, and long
tails. They are found in Africa. Their long
hind legs make them very good jumpers.
They used to be classified in the
Insectivora order, but scientists discovered
that they have a different structure.
Perissodactyla - Horses, Rhinos,
Tapirs, Zebras
• There are 15 species in this order. The
perissodactyla have hooves and an odd
number of toes on their hind feet. They are
herbivores.
Pholidota - Pangolins (Spiny
Anteaters)
• There are seven species of pangolins in
the world. They eat ants and live in Asia
and Africa. They have very long tongues
and their bodies, except for their faces and
bellies, are covered in large scales.
Pangolins have no teeth.
Primates - Lemurs, Monkeys,
Marmosets, Apes, Humans
• Most primates have opposable thumbs,
flat nails on their toes and fingers instead
of claws, large brains, and foward-facing
eyes in the front of their face.
Proboscidea - Elephants
• Elephants are very large. They have large
ears and trunks. Males have tusks. They
are herbivores and can live for 60 or more
years.
Rodentia - Squirrels, Chipmunks, Rats,
Mice, Voles, Beavers, Lemmings
• These are the rodents! They are small
animals that gnaw. They have long, sharp
incisors on both the lower and upper jaw.
Most rodents are herbivores. There are
over 2000 species of rodents. They make
up almost half of all the mammal species.
They are found in all parts of the world
except for Antarctica and New Zealand.
INVERTEBRATES:
• Phylum Porifera
• Phylum Cnidaria
• Phylum Platyhelminthes
• Phylum Echinodermata
• Phylum Mollusca
• Phylum Nematoda
• Phylum Arthropoda
• Phylum Annelida
Phylum Porifera
(sponges)
• Have no definite shape –
asymmetrical;
• No tissues or organs
• Colony of specialized cells
• Immobile
• Good powers of regeneration
• Skeleton of spongin and spicules
CLASSES OF SPONGES
Hydra
CLASS SCYPHOZOA
CLASS ANTHOZOA
CLASS CUBOZOA
Phylum Platyhelminthes
flatworms
• First animals to exhibit bilateral
symmetry
• Have primitive brain
• 3 tissue layers
• Includes free-living flatworms and
parasitic flatworms (tapeworms, flukes)
CLASSES OF FLATWORMS
Flatworm
Flatworm
Phylum Echinodermata –
spiny-skinned animals
• includes sea stars, brittle stars, sea
urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers,
and crinoids
• reverted back to radial symmetry (radial
in adults / bilateral in larvae)
• tube feet and water vascular system
• Most exhibit pentamerism
WHY ARE ECHINODERMS
RANKED SO HIGH?
• Clues from embryology – study of the
early development of animals
• Protostomes versus Deuterostomes
• Protostome – blastopore forms the mouth
in all animals except echinoderms and
chordates
• Deuterostomes – blastopore forms the
anus in echinoderms and chordates
CLASSES OF ECHINODERMS
• Bilateral symmetry
• Have protective cuticle
• Simple digestive system
• Parasitism and Crytobiosis
• No circulatory or respiratory tract
CLASSES OF NEMATODA
1). ADENOHOREA (APHASMIDA)
-mainly free-living
-without phasmids
-amphids located posteriorly in the head region