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AP BIOLOGY:
Chapter Forty-Two Outline
THE CHORDATES
Characteristic Features of the Phylum Chordata fig 42.1
Three principal features
Single, hollow dorsal nerve cord
Flexible dorsal notochord
Pharyngeal slits or pouches
General features
Segmented body plan, most visible in blocks of embryonic muscle fig 42.2
Internal skeleton against which muscles work
A postanal tail that extends beyond the anus
Non-Vertebrate Chordates
Tunicates fig 42.3
Most specimens are sessile as adults, may be colonial
Possess notochord and nerve cord only in adult stage
Adults lack body cavity and visible segmentation
Adults are filter feeders
Create water currents with ciliary action
Stream of water drawn into pharynx
Food particles trapped in mucus produced by endostyle
Adults secrete a cellulose tunic around themselves
Colony of individuals may possess common sac and external opening
Many possess symbiotic photosynthetic bacteria
Tadpole-shaped larvae appear distinctly different from adults fig 42.4
Exhibit most primitive chordate characteristics
Do not feed and have a poorly developed gut
Some species do not change into sessile adult form
Lancelets fig 42.5
Scaleless, fish-like marine organisms
Notochord runs entire length of body and persists in adults
Segmentation of muscles readily visible
HAve more pharyngeal gill slits than fishes
Skin only one cell layer thick, lacks pigmentation
No obvious head, eyes, nose or ears
Filter feeders, create water currents via cilia on anterior end of gut
Possess an oral hood with tentacles that extend beyond the mouth
True primitive condition, unlikely that they evolved from degenerate fishes
Vertebrate Chordates
Vertebrates are chordates with a backbone
First vertebrates were marine, without jaws or paired fins fig 42.6
Became dominant creatures in the sea
Amphibian ancestors first to invade the land
Replaced by reptile more suited to live out of water
Dinosaurs ruled the earth for 150 million years
Mammals became dominant 65 million years ago
Characteristics of the vertebrates
A vertebral column replaces the notochord
Possess a distinct skull (cranium) enclosing the brain
Hollow dorsal nerve cord enclosed in a groove in vertebral column fig 42.7
Possess characteristic liver, kidneys, endocrine glands
Have a heart and closed blood vessels
Circulatory, excretory functions much different from other animals
Seven principal classes of vertebrates fig 42.8
Three classes are aquatic fishes
Class Agnatha: lampreys and hagfish
Class Chondrichthyes: cartilaginous sharks, skates and rays
Class Osteichthyes: bony fishes
Four classes are terrestrial tetrapods
Class Amphibia: salamanders, frogs and toads
Class Reptilia: reptiles
Class Aves: birds
Class Mammalia: mammals
FISHES
History of the Fishes
The first fishes
Appeared over 505 million years ago
Jawless, toothless filter feeders
Breathed with gills, had tail but no fins
Only existing vertebrates for 50 million years
Developed fins by end of period
Had massive bone shields protecting the head and neck
Comprised five ostracoderm orders
Internal skeleton was made of cartilage
Survived by the Agnatha: parasitic lampreys and hagfish fig 42.6
Invention of jaws occurred 410 million years ago fig 42.9
Evolved from modified gill arches, the area between gill slits
Gill arch formed by cartilage looking like a sideways V
Modifications of arches resulted in modern jaws
Teeth evolved from skin that lined the mouth
Members of order Acanthodia, spiny sharks
Internal skeletons of cartilage
Skin scales contained small plates of bone
Were predators, more efficient swimmers that ostracoderms
Possess maximum of 7 paired fins, reinforced with spines
All spiny sharks are extinct
Evolution of heavily armored placoderms
Dominant during Devonian, extinct by its end
Front of body heavily armored, rear was completely naked
Jaw improved with upper jaw fused to skull
The rise of active swimmers
Pioneer vertebrates replaced by sharks and bony fishes fig 41.10
Further improvement of the jaw
Superior, streamlined design for swimming
Mobile fins for propulsion, stabilization and directional movement
Sharks become top predators
Occurred more than 287 million years ago, in the Carboniferous Period
Shark skeleton is made of cartilage that is calcified
Large pectoral fins improved swimming enormously
Aggressive predators that achieved large size fig 42.11
Among first vertebrates to develop teeth
Teeth sit on top of jaw, not firmly anchored in it
Teeth lost readily, replaced by one from row behind
Skin covered with tooth-like scales with a sandpaper texture
Reproduction in sharks is advanced for a fish
Internal fertilization
Eggs generally develop in female's body, young born alive
Extinction of many varieties at end of Permian Period (249 million years ago)
Followed by burst of evolution during age of dinosaurs
Flattened skates and rays evolved at this time
Bony fishes dominate the sea
Class Osteichthyes, bony fish, evolved at same time as sharks
Developed heavy skeleton made completely of bone
Process of ossification replaces cartilage with bone
External plates and scales also ossified
Comprise large group called teleosts fig 42.12
Unlike sharks, bony fish evolved in fresh water
Had air sacs at back of throat for buoyancy
Have highly mobile fins, this scales and symmetrical tails fig 42.13
Became divided into two groups
Lobe-finned fish: ancestors of land mammals
Ray-finned fish: ancestors of most modern fish
Internal skeleton of bony rays supports and stiffens each fin
Air sacs transformed into an air pouch for buoyancy
The path to land
Lobe-finned fishes comprise seven modern species fig 42.14
Paired fins consist of fleshy, muscular lobe supported by bone core
Bony rays only at tip of fin
Muscles move fins independently of one another
Amphibians most certainly evolved from this group
Characteristics of Fishes
Gills
Extract dissolved oxygen from water around them
Swallowed water passes over filaments rich in blood vessels
Water forced out slits in side of throat
Blood moves opposite the flow of water
Backbone
Internal skeleton with backbone surrounding spinal cord
Brain fully encased in protective skull
Single-loop blood circulation
Blood pumped from heart to gills
Oxygenated blood from gills passes to rest of body
Heart is series of four chambers that contract in sequence
Nutritional deficiencies
Unable to synthesize aromatic amino acids
All vertebrates must consume these amino acids in their diet
Important Adaptations of Bony Fishes
Swim bladder
Gas-filled sac that allows regulation of buoyant density
Fish can remain suspended at any depth in the water fig 42.115
Sharks must move through the water or sink
Cells of swim bladder can generate own carbon dioxide
Lateral line system
Series of sensory organs that project into a canal beneath skin surface fig 42.16
Cilia of organs deflected by movement of water as it passes over them
Fish can assess movement through water
Fish can detect motionless objects by water deflection off them
Terrestrial vertebrate sound receptors may have evolved from these organs
Gill cover
Hard plate covering gills called the operculum fig 42.17
Flexion of covers pumps water over gills
Volume of cavity increased when mouth open and gill cover closed
Closing mouth decreases volume, forcing water over gills to outside
Water moves over gills while fish is stationary
AMPHIBIANS
History of Amphibians
Are able to live in two worlds, in water and on land
Origin of amphibians
Likely evolved from lobe-finned fishes
DNA analysis shows closer relationship to lungfish than coelocanths
Pattern of skull and bones show greater resemblance to rhipidistian fishes
Innovations associated with invasion of land
Legs to support body weight and for movement fig 42.18
Lungs needed because gills require buoyancy of water for support
Redesigned heart to deliver more oxygen to walking muscles
Water-bound reproduction to prevent eggs from drying out
Needed to devise means to keep body from drying out
Earliest amphibian fossil, Ichthyostega, found in Greenland fig 42.19
For 100 million years amphibian fossils found only in North America
Spread throughout world when Pangaea formed
Strongly built animal with four well supported legs
Backbone more substantial than in fish
Long, broad overlapping ribs encased lungs and heart
Likely breathed by raising and lowering floor of mouth
Rise and fall of amphibians
Common during Carboniferous Period (360-287 million years ago)
Shared wet tropical environment with early reptiles
Moved into dry upland regions during Permian Period (286-249 million years ago)
Developed bony plates and armor, some grew to pony size fig 42.20
Developed leathery skin to prevent water loss
Didn't breathe through skin like most modern amphibians
Ousted from niche by therapsid reptiles by end of Permian
Only 15 families of amphibians by end of Triassic
Only two families through the Jurassic
Amphibians today
Current amphibians all descended from 2 families
Expansion during Tertiary Period (65-3 million years ago) into wet habitats
Presently 37 families and over 4,200 species
Characteristics of Living Amphibians
Classified into three orders fig 42.21
Order Anura: frogs and toads
Order Urodela: salamanders and newts
Order Apoda: caecilians
Key characteristics
Legs (except burrowing caecilians)
Cutaneous respiration
Frogs, salamanders and caecilians supplement lung respiration
Moist skin provides extensive surface area, but limits body size
Lungs
Internal surfaces are not as well developed as-in reptiles or mammals
Breathe by moving floor of mouth
Pulmonary veins
Veins return blood from lungs to heart
Aerated blood leaves heart at greater pressure than lungs
Partially divided heart
First chamber of heart in fish is missing in amphibians
Second (atrium) and last (conus arteriosus) chambers separated by wall
Prevents aerated blood from lungs from mixing with nonaerated blood from body
Separation is imperfect since third chamber (ventricle) is not divided
Other characteristics
Zone of weakness between base and crown of teeth
Caecilians have greatly reduced eyes and ears
Frogs and salamanders have two bones in middle ear (reptiles have one)
Possess sensory rod in retina called a "green rod"
Orders of Living Amphibians
Anura
Include frogs and toads, amphibians without tails fig 42.22
Frogs have smooth, moist skin; long legs; live in or near water
Toads have bumpy, dry skin; short legs; are adapted to dry environments
Are carnivores, eat a wide variety of insects
Return to water to reproduce
Eggs lack water-tight membranes and dry out readily
Eggs fertilized externally
Eggs hatch into algae-eating, swimming larval tadpoles
Larva metamorphose into adult forms after a period of growth
Tail, gills and lateral line system disappear
Legs grow from body
Mouth broadens and develops jaws and teeth
Sac-like bladder in throat becomes two lungs
Pulmonary vein appears, heart develops internal wall
Urodela
Have elongated bodies, long tails and smooth moist skin fig 42.23
Most live in moist places, newts live entirely in water
Reproduction
Lay eggs in water or moist areas
Fertilization is external in most species
Just-hatched young look like adults, do not undergo profound metamorphosis
Apoda
Highly specialized group of burrowing amphibians
Lack legs, have small eyes, are often blind
Eat worms and soil invertebrates
Male deposits sperm directly into female, young are born alive
REPTILES
Improved on Amphibian Innovations to Colonize the Land
Legs support body better, enable reptiles to run
Lungs and heart are more efficient
Skin covered with scales to minimize water loss
Eggs encased in water-tight covers
The Rise and Fall of Dominant Reptile Groups
Dominant large land vertebrates for 250 million years
Four major forms took turns as dominant type fig 42.24
Pelycosaurs: becoming a better predator fig 42.25
Early reptiles that evolved water tight eggs
Powerful jaws were anchored to holes in the skull
Died out 250 million years ago
Therapsids: speeding up metabolism fig 42.26
Ate more frequently than ancestors to produce body heat
Far more active than other vertebrates of that time
Called "mammal-like reptiles," reined for 20 million years
Replaced by cold-blooded thecodont line 230 million years ago
Gave rise to mammals before extinction 170 million years ago
Thecodonts: wasting less energy fig 42.27
Were ectotherms like amphibians and early reptiles
Endothermy no longer advantageous with warmer climate, needed less food
First bipedal land vertebrates, walked on two feet
Dominant for 15 million years
Replaced by direct descendants, dinosaurs
Dinosaurs: learning to run upright fig 42.28
Legs positioned directly underneath body
Enabled running with speed and agility
Hole in side of hip socket distinguishes them from thecodonts
Dominated for 150 million years, abruptly went extinct 65 million years ago
Today's reptiles
Of 16 orders of reptiles, only four survive today fig 42.29
Turtles are most ancient reptile line
Have solid skulls like first reptiles
Have changed little since before time of dinosaurs
Most reptiles belong to second line to evolve, lizards and snakes
Evolved 250 million years ago in late Permian
Became diverse only with disappearance of dinosaurs
Rhynchocephalonts are the third linage fig 42.24
Appeared shortly before dinosaurs
Common in Jurassic, declined in Cretaceous
Unable to compete with lizards, only one species survives, the tuatara
Crocodiles are fourth linage, appeared much later
Descended from same line that produced dinosaurs
Little change in the last 200 million years
Comprise archosaurs along with thecodonts and dinosaurs
Are more closely like birds than other reptiles
Both groups care for their young, have four-chambered heart
Share other anatomical features
Crocodiles and birds more closely related to dinosaurs and each other than they are related to lizards and snakes
Key Characteristics of Reptiles
Amniotic egg
Water-tight eggs contain food source (yolk) and four membranes fig 42.30
Membranes are: yolk sac, amnion, allantois and chorion
Each plays role in making egg an independent life-support system
Just beneath the shell, the chorion allows oxygen to enter, but retains water
Inner amnion encased developing embryo within fluid-filled cavity
Yolk sac sends food from yolk to embryo through amnion via blood vessels
Allantois surrounds cavity into which waste products are excreted
Dry skin
Layer of scales or amour cover bodies to prevent water loss fig 42.31
Scales develop as surface cells fill with keratin
Same protein forms human fingernails and bird feathers
Thoracic breathing
Expand and contract rib cage to suck air in and force it out
Capacity limited only be volume of lungs
Other Important Characteristics
Internal fertilization
External fertilization not possible since sperm cannot penetrate egg membranes
Male places sperm inside female, fertilize egg before membranes form
Circulatory system provides more oxygen to body fig 42.32
Septum in heart extended from atrium partway into ventricle
Tends to decrease mixing of oxygen-poor and oxygen-rich blood in ventricle
Septum totally divides ventricle in crocodiles and birds (and likely dinosaurs)
Endothermy versus ectothermy
Endothermy = cold-blooded = poikilothermy: body temperature fluctuates with ambient temperature
Ectothermy = warm-blooded = homeothermy: constant body temperature maintained
Reptiles regulate body temperature by behavior, bask in sun, hide in shade
Thecodont ancestors of crocodiles were ectothermic, as are crocodiles
Kinds of Living Reptiles
Classified into 16 orders, 12 of which are extinct fig 42.33
Reptiles occur worldwide, except in coldest regions
Humans have recently had negative impact on number and distribution of reptiles
Chelonia: turtles and tortoises fig 42.34
Turtles live in water, tortoises live on land
Only reptiles whose bodies are encased in a protective shell
Lack teeth, but have sharp beak
Composition of shell
Made of hard plates in some, tough leathery skin in others
Composed of two basic parts
Carapace covers dorsal surface
Plastron covers ventral portion
Vertebrae and ribs of most species are fused to inside of carapace
Support for muscle attachment comes from shell
Tortoise shells are dome-shaped, turtle shells are streamlined, disk-shaped
Freshwater turtles have webbed toes, marine turtles have flippers
Marine turtles migrate long distances to lay eggs on land
Placed by many biologists into own subclass Testudines
Rhynchocephalia: tuatara
Single species makes up entire order, found only on islands off New Zealand
Has conspicuous spiny crest running down back
Has inconspicuous parietal or third eye on top of head
Concealed under scales, has lens, retina and is connected to brain
May function as a thermostat, protect it from overheating
Squamata: lizards and snakes fig 42.35
Suborders Suaria: snakes and Serpentes: lizards
Have paired male reproductive organs and lower jaw not joined directly to skull
Movable hinge with five joints allows flexibility in jaw movements
Lizards lack lower arch of bone below lower opening of skull
Snakes versus lizards
Lizards have limbs, snakes do not
Snakes lack movable eyelids and external ears
Lizards are more ancient group
Rely on agility and speed to catch prey and avoid predators
Many lizards can loose tail to escape predator and regenerate new one
Crocodilia: crocodiles and alligators fig 42.36
Primitive-looking reptiles also includes caimans and gavials
Practically unchanged since they evolved from thecodonts 200 million years ago
Live in or near water in tropical or subtropical regions
Are aggressive carnivores, bodies adapted for hunting by stealth
Eyes and nostrils on top of head, lie submerged in water
Enormous mouths with sharp teeth and strong neck
Can feed underwater, valve prevents water from entering air passage
Only reptiles that care for their young
BIRDS
One of Four Groups to Conquer the Air
Success derived from development of the feather
Developed from reptilian scale
Lightweight, readily replaced if damaged
Most successful of all terrestrial vertebrates
The History of Birds
First bird, Archaeopteryx, from the late Jurassic fig 42.37
Shares features with small therapod dinosaurs
Skull has teeth
Very few bones are fused to each other
Bones are solid (bird's bones are hollow)
Has long reptilian tail and no breastbone to anchor flight muscles
Originally classified as coelurosaur Compsognathus
Distinctly avian due to presence of feathers on wings
Some paleontologists classify it as a feathered dinosaur, not a true bird
Birds best classified in own class due to feathers, hollow bones and super-efficient lungs
Recent discovery of birds from Cretaceous that have features of modern birds
Fossil record incomplete, feathers rarely fossilize, hollow bones are delicate
Relationships of modern birds inferred from DNA studies
Flightless types like ostrich, extinct elephant bird and Moa are most ancient
Ducks, geese, other waterfowl evolved next in early Cretaceous
Followed by woodpeckers, parrots, swifts, owls
Songbirds evolved in mid-Cretaceous
Shorebirds, birds of prey, flamingos, penguins evolved in late Cretaceous
Key Characteristics of Birds
Are clearly related to reptiles
Lack teeth, have vestigial tail unlike reptiles
Like reptiles lay amniotic eggs, have scales on feet and lower legs
Feathers
Modified reptilian scales
Provide lift for flight and conserve heat
Structure combines maximum flexibility with minimum weight fig 42.38
Develop from pits in skin called follicles
Shaft emerges, pairs of vanes develop on opposite sides
Vanes have branches called barbs
Barbs have projections called barbules, equipped with microscopic hooks
Hooks link barbs to one another
Can be replaced, like scales
Flight skeleton
Bird bones are thin and hollow
Many bones are fused to provide rigidity
Only vertebrate to have fused collarbone (wishbone) or keeled breastbone
Internal physiological changes necessary to cope with high energy demands of flight
Efficient respiration
Need greater contact surface to absorb enormous quantities of oxygen fig 42.39
Inhaled air goes past lungs to air sacs near and in bones of back
Air then goes to lungs and is exhaled
Air passes through lungs in only one direction, opposite the flow of blood
Provides a counter-current flow to extract oxygen more efficiently
Efficient circulation
Oxygen captured by lungs must be transported to flight muscles quickly
Wall dividing ventricle is complete, two circulations do not mix
Flight muscles get fully oxygenated blood
Most birds have a rapid heart beat
Hummingbird = 600 times per minute, chickadee = 1000 bpm
Ostrich = 70 beats per minute, same as human
Endothermy
Birds maintain higher body temperatures than most mammals
Metabolism in flight muscles proceeds at faster rate
Feathers provide insulation to conserve heat
Kinds of Birds
Can deduce habits and food by examining beak and feet
Carnivorous birds have curved talons and sharp beak
Duck beaks are flat to shovel through mud
Finch beaks are short and thick to crush seeds
MAMMALS
Least Diverse of Five Classes of Vertebrates fig 42.41
Almost all large land vertebrates are mammals, tend to dominate communities
Typical mammal is not large, 3200 of 4100 species are rodents, bats, shrews, moles
History of the Mammals
Arose from therapsids in mid-Triassic, 220 million years ago
First mammals were small insectivores
Large eye sockets indicate they may have been active at night
Mammal jaw reduced to massive bone with a single joint
Removed potentially weak junctions
Two bones moved to middle ear to make three bone chain that improved hearing
Were a minor group as long as dinosaurs flourished with only five orders
Extinction of dinosaurs allowed for rapid diversification of mammals into 19 orders
Key Mammalian Characteristics
Hair
Even naked whales and dolphins have bristles on snouts
Allowed for regulation of body temperature, invasion of colder climates
New structure, not derived from reptilian scales or feathers
Each hair extends like stiff thread from bulb-like hair follicle
Composed of dead cells filled with fibrous keratin protein
Insulates against heat loss
Provides camouflage
Whiskers function as sensory structures
May serve as defensive weapons as in porcupines and hedgehogs
Milk-producing glands
All females possess mammary glands that produce milk
Milk is rich in fat, sugar, protein with 95% water
Other Key Characteristics of Mammals
Endothermy
Allows activity at any time of day or night
Supports colonization of severe environments, deserts to ice fields
Hair provides insulation to support endothermy
Higher metabolic rate required as well
More efficient circulation provided by four chambered heart
More efficient breathing results from diaphragm breathing muscle
Placenta fig 42.42
Most mammals are placental and viviparous (live birth)
Blood stream of mother and fetus in close contact at placenta
Food, water, oxygen pass from mother to child
Wastes pass from child to mother, carried away
Teeth
Help mammals select and eat a wide variety of foods
Whale teeth may form bony mesh to trap tiny crustaceans
A few mammals are omnivores
Adult mammal maintains same teeth through entire life
Are highly specialized to match food eaten fig 42.43
Rodents are most common of all mammals, have incisors that grow throughout entire life
Digestive systems for eating plants
Most mammals are herbivores, cellulose is major source of food
Mammals lack enzymes to release glucose units
Rely on mutualistic partnership with bacteria that degrade cellulose
Some mammals have four-chambered stomachs
First chamber is largest, holds most cellulose-digesting bacteria
Material is regurgitated and chewed again (cud-chewing)
Swallowed again and digested by rest of stomach, passes to intestines
Other mammals digest plant material in the large intestine
Have relatively small stomachs, do not chew a cud
Bacteria live in pouch called the caecum, off the large intestine
Herbivores must eat a lot of material to gain sufficient nutrition
Horns and hooves
Keratin is structural material for claws, fingernails, hooves
Hooves are keratin pads on toes of running mammals
Protect toe, cushion from impact
Horns are composed of a core of bone surrounded by keratin sheath
Horns are not shed, bony core is attached to skull
Outer layer is compacted hair-like layers
Deer antlers are made only of bone
Male deer grow and shed a set of antlers each year
Covered by thin skin layer of velvet while growing
Velvet dies and is scraped off when antlers are fully grown
Antlers used to attract females, combat males in fall and winter
Shed in spring after breeding season
Flying mammals
Amphibians are only group of land vertebrates that have never evolved flight
Pteosaurs were flying reptiles for 130 million years
Birds evolved 140 million years ago, flew with pterosaurs for 75 million years
Bats evolved 50 million years ago, share skies with birds
Bats are only mammals capable of powered flight fig 42.41d
Wings are modified forelimbs
WIng is leathery membrane of skin stretched over bones of four fingers
Edges attach to side of body and to hind leg
At rest hang upside down from legs
Evolved sonar system to navigate in dark and find insects
High frequency pulses emitted through mouth or nose
Sound waves reflect off objects, captured by ears
The Orders of Mammals
Modern mammals comprise nineteen orders
Seventeen are placental
Two are non-placental
Monotremes: egg-laying mammals fig 42.44
Includes duck-billed platypus and two species of echidna
Retain a few reptilian characteristics
Lay shelled eggs
Structure of shoulder and pelvis similar to early reptiles
Have a single opening through which feces, urine and reproductive products leave the body
Most closely related to early mammals than any other mammal
Possess fur and functioning mammary glands like other mammals
Marsupials: pouched-mammals fig 42.45
Major difference in embryonic development of marsupials and other mammals
In marsupials fertilized egg is surrounded by chorion and amnion, no shell forms as in monotremes
Marsupial embryo nourished by abundant yolk within egg
Short-lived placenta forms from chorion just before birth
In as few as eight days after fertilization an embryonic marsupial is born
Crawls into marsupial pouch, attaches to nipple, continues to develop
Evolved shortly before placental mammals, 100 million years ago
Nearly all of today's species live in Australia and New Guinea
Only 20 species live elsewhere
Marsupials in Australia and New Guinea have diversified to fill niches otherwise held by placental mammals
Virginia opossum is the only marsupial in North America
Placental mammals fig 42.41
Produce true placenta that nourishes embryos for entire development
Placenta is first organ to form during course of development
Held in womb of mother, contains abundant fetal and maternal blood vessels
Fetal placenta formed from membranes of chorion and allantois
Maternal placenta formed from wall of uterus
Young undergo considerable development before being born
Kinds of Mammals
Most recent addition is a tree-dwelling kangaroo in Australia fig 42.46
Mammals exhibit a wide variety of body forms fig 42.47
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