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Animal development Chapter 37
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Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Dec 27, 2015

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Corey Jackson
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Page 1: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Animal development

Chapter 37

Page 2: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Direct and Indirect Development

• Direct DevelopmentPeople and other mammals – as well as birds and

reptiles – are all born as “miniature adults” developing via a process called direct development.

In indirect development, a juvenile animal differs significantly from an adult of the same species and undergoes radical changes in body form during development, such as the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly.

Page 3: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Indirect Development

• Butterfly

Page 4: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Main Ideas

• The fertilized egg implants into the uterus and is nourished by the placenta.

• The zygote develops into a fully formed fetus in about 38 weeks

• The mother affects the fetus, and pregnancy affects the mother.

Page 5: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Connect to your world

• A human zygote develops from a single cell into a fully formed human in about nine months. The rate of growth in the first few weeks is astonishing, if you grew at the same rate after birth, you would be 4 meters (13ft) tall at one month of age.

• The zygote’s growth is directed by its DNA. However, the environment of the uterus and the mother’s overall health also have a strong impact on how well the zygote develops.

Page 6: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Cleavage

• A human egg is usually fertilized in the mother’s oviduct and undergoes cleavage divisions on its way to the uterus , a journey that takes about 4 days.

• By about 1 week after fertilization, the zygote has developed into a hollow ball of cells, known as the blastocyst. The blastocyst consists of a hollow ball of cells with a thicker inner cells mass, and the sticky outer wall will adhere to the uterus and burrow into the endometrium, a process called implantation.

Page 7: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

The Journey of the Egg

Page 8: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Blastocyst

• The outer layer of the blastocyst will first become the chorion and will later form the embryonic contribution to the placenta.

• The inner cell mass develops into the embryo and the three other extra embryonic

membranes.

Page 9: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Gastrulation

• A stage in which three cell layers develop from the balstocyst: the ectoderm, the mesoderm, and the endoderm.

• The ectoderm layer develops into the skin and nervous system. The mesoderm layer forms many of the internal tissues and organs.

• The endoderm layer develops into many of the digestive organs and the lining of the digestive system.

• Once these structures begin to form, the ball of cells is known as an embryo.

Page 10: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Development of Fetus

• Fertilization• Zygote• Cleavage• Gastrulation• Organogenesis• Growth• Birth

Page 11: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Embryonic Membranes

• Amnion• Chorion• Placenta

Page 12: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Role of placenta in development

• Placenta connects the mother and embryo to allow for the exchange of oxygen, nutrients, and wastes between them.

• Production of hormones – Human chorionic gonadotropin, estrogen and progesterone.

Page 13: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Umbilical cord

• It is the connecting cord from the developing embryo or fetus to the placenta. It actually consists of two arteries and veins that are twisted together.

Page 14: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Birth

• During the last month of pregnancy, the fetus becomes positioned head downward in the uterus, with the crown of the skull resting against the cervix.

• Normally the process of birth begins around the end of the ninth month.

• Birth results from a complex interplay between uterine stretching caused by growing fetus and fetal and maternal hormones that trigger labor.

Page 15: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Just before birth

Page 16: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Stages involved in birth process

1. Dilation of the cervix -hormones released by mother and fetus

• Cervix dilates at least 10 centimeters. If it does not dilate the doctor will follow cesarean section or c-section.

2. Emergence of the baby: powerful contraction of the uterus help rotate the baby so that its head is toward the cervix. Head emerges, followed by the rest of the body. Within a short time, the baby is breathing.

3. Expulsion of the placenta:

Page 17: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Cesarean section

Page 18: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Structure of mammary glands

Colostrum: during the first few days after birth, the mammary glands secrete a thin, yellowish fluid called colostrum. Colostrum is high in protein and contains antibodies that help protect the new born against some diseases and are absorbed directly through the infant’s intestine. It is gradually replaced by mature milk which is higher in fat and milk sugar (lactose )and lower in protein.

Page 19: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Twin babies

Page 20: Animal development Chapter 37. Direct and Indirect Development Direct Development People and other mammals – as well as birds and reptiles – are all born.

Test tube babies