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What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

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Page 1: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

What is a Vertebrate?

Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Page 2: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

FIRST: A Vertebrate is an ANIMAL• What is an Animal?

– KINGDOM Level of Taxonomy– Includes all organisms that possess

the following characteristics:• Multicellular• Heterotrophic• No cell walls around cells• Several other characteristics

Page 3: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

SECOND: A Vertebrate is a CHORDATE• What is a Chordate?

– PHYLUM level of Taxonomy– Includes all ANIMALS that possess the

following characteristics:• Dorsal Hollow Nerve Cord• Pharyngeal Gill Slits• Notochord• Post-anal Tail

– A few chordates possess ALL these characteristics at all life stages, but most only possess all of these during EMBRYONIC stages.

Page 4: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

THIRD: A Vertebrate is a VERTEBRATE• What is a VERTEBRATE?

– SUBPHYLUM level of Taxonomy• A level not normally addressed in intro bio

classes

– Includes all CHORDATES that possess the following characteristics:

• A BACKBONE that protects the nerve cord and supports the body; replaces the notochord

• This also generally implies the presence of a cranium (skull) to protect the brain.

– Some animals have ONLY the cranium, thus they are not quite true vertebrates

Page 5: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

TRUE or FALSE?• All CHORDATES are VERTEBRATES.• All VERTEBRATES are CHORDATES.

Page 6: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

The term Chordata comes from• The Notochord

Page 7: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

About the Notochord• In a Vertebrate Chordate,

– the Notochord is present only during the EMBRYONIC stages of life.

– The notochord is replaced by the backbone

Page 8: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

About the Nerve Cord• Dorsal• Hollow• Anterior end enlarged to create

the BRAIN

Page 9: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Pharyngeal Gill Slits• Pharynx = throat• Present in embryos• These slits in the throat area

become the gills in fish and other vertebrates that breath water

• In mammals and other land vertebrates they become structures of the lower jaw, face and throat.

Page 10: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1
Page 11: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Other Chordate Characteristics• Closed circulatory system

– Blood always contained in blood vessels

• Muscle blocks or segments called somites in embryos

Page 12: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Who are the Chordates closest relatives?•The closest INVERTEBRATE relative of the chordates are the members of Phylum Echinodermata

–The Sea Stars–The Sea Urchins–The Sea Cucumbers

•How can this be?–The embryonic development of echinoderms has a very important similarity to the embryonic development of chordates, even though the adult forms look very different.

Page 13: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Echinoderms and Chordates•The embryonic opening called a blastopore becomes an ANUS in both echinoderms and chordates.•In all other INVERTEBRATES it becomes the MOUTH.

Page 14: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Phylum Chordata – 4 subphyla• Subphylum Urochordata• Subphylum Cephalochordata• Subphylum Myxini• Subphylum Vertebrata

Page 15: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Subphylum Urochordata•The Tunicates•Also called Sea Squirts•The 4 Chordate characteristics are present in the larval form•The adult looks very different•Larva are free swimming with tails, etc.•Adult is sessile.

Page 16: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1
Page 17: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Phylum Cephalorchordata•A group called the lancelets•Most common member of this group is amphioxus•Swimmers•Possess all chordate characteristics in adult form

Page 18: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1
Page 19: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Phylum Myxini•New Phylum •Once thought to be vertebrates, but they do not possess a true backbone – only a true cranium•Hagfish is the only member•Hagfish sliming video

•More slime•More

Page 20: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Subphylum Vertebrata• WE are vertebrates; hence

humans have studied phylum vertebrata a lot.

Page 21: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

When did the 1st vertebrates arise on Earth?

•Around 500 million years ago

Page 22: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

What were the first vertebrates like?•The first vertebrates were DIFFERENT from vertebrates we know today.•They lacked JAWS.

–Think lampreys which are the only vertebrates that remain today who lack jaws.

•Jawed vertebrates did not appear until around 400 million year ago

•lamprey video•One more

Page 23: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Where did vertebrates first evolve?•Ocean

Page 24: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Defining characteristic of a vertebrate?•Backbone•Though others are discussed.

Page 25: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Vertebrates and sex•All vertebrates have separate sexes – male and female

Page 26: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Some terms with regard to reproduction•Oviparous

–Egg layer–Young are nourished from yolk inside an egg that is laid outside the mother’s body

Page 27: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Some terms with regard to reproduction•Ovoviparous

–Young develop internally, but are nourished with YOLK as though they were inside an egg.–“Live birth”

Page 28: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1

Some terms with regard to reproduction•Viviparous

–Young develop internally–Nourished directly from the mother’s bloodstream

•NO yolk

–Placenta and umbilical cord involved– icky picture warning…

Page 29: What is a Vertebrate? Vertebrate Anatomy – Unit 1