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Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7
17

Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Jan 18, 2018

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Georgiana Smith

Taxons Domain – Eubacteria, Archaea and Eukarya Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
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Page 1: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization

Chapter 7

Page 2: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Why do we need Nomenclature?

Page 3: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Taxons

• Domain – Eubacteria, Archaea and Eukarya• Kingdom• Phylum• Class• Order• Family• Genus• Species

Page 4: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Question?

• How is DNA evidence of common ancestry?

Page 5: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

VGT vs HGT

• Vertical Gene Transfer – genes transfer from parent to offspring

• Horizontal Gene Transfer – genes transfer from one species to another

• Base of the tree of life is a net

Page 6: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Animal Systematics

• Arranging animals into groups to show evolutionary relationships

Page 7: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Vocabulary

Page 8: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.
Page 9: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Phylogeny

Page 10: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Body Symmetry

• What sort of symmetry do humans have?• Asymmetry• Bilateral symmetry• Radial symmetry• Cephalization

• How did evolution play a part in this?

Page 11: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Patterns of Development

• Major stages: fertilization, cleavage, gastrulation, organogenesis

• Master control genes: Hox , Pax

Page 12: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Cleavage

• An embryonic stage that follows fertilization• Characterized by rapid cell division• Ends when cells form a hollow ball called a

blastula

Page 13: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Gastrulation

• Embryonic stage that follows cleavage and blastula formation

• Cell movement generates additional inner layers

Page 14: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Differentiation

• After gastrulation, development begins to differentiate, depending on the organism

Page 15: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Vocabulary

• Ectoderm – gives rise to the epidermis• Endoderm – gives rise to the tissue that lines

the gut cavity• Mesoderm – gives rise to supportive (bone),

contractile (muscle) and blood cells• Coelom – gives rise to viscera

Page 16: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.

Protostomes vs Deuterostomes

Page 17: Animal Classification, Phylogeny and Organization Chapter 7.