animals Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 characteristics of animals?

A

Cell structure and Specialization, Nutritional mode, reproduction, development.

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2
Q

How are cells and tissues interconnected in animals?

A

extracellular, structural proteins

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3
Q

What two tissues are characterisitic of animals?

A

muscle and nervous

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4
Q

What is the nutritional mode of animals?

A

phagotrophic chemoheterotrophs

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5
Q

How does sexual reproduction in animals work?

A

Gametes are rpoduced by meiosis, fuse to form diploid zygot

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6
Q

3 forms of asexual reproduction in animals?

A

Fragmentation, fission, budding

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7
Q

What is parthenogenesis?

A

Development of an unfertilized egg cell into an embryo

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8
Q

What are 2 benefits of asexual reproduction?

A

Rapid population growth in favourable conditions.
Advantageous when opportunities for sexual reproduction are limited.

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9
Q

How does a zygote develop into an embryo? (3 steps)

A

1) Rapid mitotic divisions called cleavage form an 8-cell embryo
2) More cleavage forms a blastula with a blastocoele
3) Gastrulation forms a gastrula with a ectoderm and endoderm

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10
Q

What is the archenteron?

A

Pouch formed in the gastrula which opens to the outside via the blastospore.

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11
Q

What are Hox genes and what do they do?

A

Highly conserved genes that regulate embryonic development by regulating development along the anterior-posterior axis

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12
Q

Direct development vs Indirect development

A

Direct development is when the animal after birth is a juvenile version of its adult form.
Indirect development is when an animal has a larval stage that is morphologically and behaviourally different from the adult stage.

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13
Q

Are all animals motile?

A

Yes, at atleast one stage in their life

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14
Q

What are the two kinds of symmetry in animal body plans?

A

Radial symmetry - usually sessile
Bilateral symmetry - specialized for directional movement
- also have cephalization

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15
Q

What are the 3 embryonic tissue layers and what do they give rise to?

A

Ectoderm - skin + nervous system
Endoderm - lines developing digestive tube
Mesoderm - muscle tissue

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16
Q

What is the coelom and what does the coelom do?

A

fluid-filled body cavity where internal organs develop within the mesoderm
- allows organs to shift without deforming body
- cushions internal organs
- hydrostatic skeleton

17
Q

What is the hemocoel and what does it do?

A

Forms between the mesoderm and endoderm and arises from the blastoceoel.
- contains hemolymph which is analagous to blood and circulated throughout the body cavity in an open ciruculatory system by the heart
- involved in circulation, nutrient transport, waste removal and may function as a hydrostatic skeleton

18
Q

What are animals with coeleoms called?

A

coelomates.

19
Q

What are the 2 forms of development in bilateral triploblastic animals? (+ features)

A

Protostome development
- spiral, determinate cleavage
- mouth forms from blastopore
- coelom forms by splitting of solid masses of mesoderm
Deuterostome development
- radial, indeterminate cleavage
- anus forms from blastospore
- coelom forms by outpocketing of mesoderm from archenteron

20
Q

What are the basal animals?

A

sponges

21
Q

What is the clade of animals with true tissues?

A

Eumetazoa

22
Q

What are the 3 major clades of bilaterians?

A

Deuterostomia, Ecdysozoans, Lophotrochozoans

23
Q

How are choanoflagellates related to animals? (2 items)

A

1) cell morphology - choanoflagellate cells + collar cells of sponges are the same
- similar cells found in other animals
2) DNA sequence homology
- molecular phylogeny confirms relationship

24
Q

What are some hypotheses for the Cambrian explosion?

A
  • Evolution of predators and prey led to developpment of more complex body structures
  • Neoproterozoic Oxygenation event led to more energetic lifestyles and greater body size
  • Evolution of Hox genes facilitated diversification of body forms