Animal Kingdom

Characteristics:

  • Eukaryotic
  • Don’t have cell walls
  • Ingest/digest food
  • mobile
  • Reproduce sexually and produce an embryo that undergoes a state of development
InvertebratesVertebrates
Make up multiple phylaPhylum: chordata
generally smallgenerally large

\

Characteristics Used to Classify Animals

\
Levels of Organization:

  • Classified based on the differences in their tissues and organ systems
  • Most animals have cells that are organized into tissues (except sponges)
    • Tissue: a group of similar cells that perform a specific function (organized into organs and organ systems)

\
Number of Germ Layers:

  • Most animal have three layers
    • Ectoderm- Outer Layer, (skin, nerve tissue, sense organs)
    • Mesoderm- Middle layer (muscles, blood, kidneys, reproductive organs)
    • Enderm- inner layer (lungs, liver, pancreas, bladder, stomach lining)
  • Classified based on whether they have 123 germ layers

\
Symmetry and Body Plans:

  • Asymmetrical Body Plans: body is an irregular shape eg. sponges
  • Symmetrical body plans: radial symmetry can be divided along any plane into roughly equal halves
  • Bilateral symmetry: Can be divided along one plane into 2 equal halves

\
Body cavities:

  • Coelum: fluid-filled body cavity that provides space for the development and suspension of organs and organ systems.

    - organs are contained in the body cavity

  • Can be:

    • coelomate: have
    • Acoelomate: without
    • pseudocoelomate is similar to coelom but lacks a layer of cells
  • Advantages: allows for quick responses and movement and development of complex organs

\
Digestive system:

  • No digestive system (sponges)
  • Incomplete digestive system: only one opening, food goes in and waste comes out of the same hole
  • Complete digestive system: digestive tube has 2 openings
  • Protostome: mouth develops first
  • Deuterostome: anus develops first

\
Segmentation:

  • The division of the body into repetitive segments or sections
  • Advantages: If one section is damaged, the rest continue to work. Mobility is also more effective

\
Movement:

  • Most animals are mobile
  • Sessile: some animals are stationary and stay in one place, but at some point in its early stages it had movement

\
Reproduction:

  • Reproduce sexually
  • produced by either external or internal fertilization
    • External: fertilization happens outside of the body
    • Internal: Gameters combine inside the body

*some animals like aphids reproduce sexually/asexually

\
Nervous System:

  • Some have it, some don’t
  • Cephalization:
    • nervous tissue is concentrated at one part of an organism (eg. the brain)
    • Ceph: means brain

\
\
\
\