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Contents

[edit] Zoology

[edit] skull parts

[edit] chondrocranium

  • supports brain and special sense organs
  • A portion of the embryonic cranium forming the bones of the base of the skull and eventually undergoing ossification.
  • only in fetal life
  • except in cyclostomes and sharks
  • notochord's cartilaginous sheath usually joins the chondrocranium.
  • trabeculae pair of "small beams", anterior to the notochord, with hypophysis located between posterior ends. Related to the forebrain, nasal capsules, orbis, and rostrum. Trabeculae can have different conditions: widely separated (platytrabic), joined, fused anteriorly (Y shape, tropitrabic).
  • parachordal cartilages - fuse to form the basal plate by surrounding the notochord
  • basal plate is of segmental origin from the sclerotomes of embryonic head somites
  • occipital condyles, which articulate the first free vertebra of the spine. (chapter 9)

[edit] visceral skeleton

[edit] dermal elements

  • (or dermatocranium)
  • superficial framework of the skull

[edit] Vertebrate structure and morphology

Concepts:

Questions?

Primative animals:

Retained primative features:

[edit] Shared characters

Characters shared by related phyla:

  • Multicellular animals
  • Embryos with three tissue (germ) layers -- ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm
  • Bilateral symmetry
  • Gut is complete (seperate openings for mouth and anus in blastopore)
  • Internal skeleton from mesoderm
  • Mesoderm is formed (at least in part) from dissue derived from embryonic gut

Related "phyla":

Except: one group has no internal skeleton, another: no digestive tract. Another: lacks a coelom (body cavity).

[edit] Chordata

Characters:

  1. notochord (= back + cord)
  2. dorsal hollow nerve cord (nerve cord)
  3. pharynx
    • outside of the plylum, pharyngeal slits found only in hemichordates
  4. ventral heart
    • (or ventral pulsating vessel in cephalochordates).
    • Blood vascular system is closed (blood does not enter tissue space)
  5. cephalization
  6. tail extending posterior to the anus
  7. metamerism
    • segmentation of some features of the body



Figure 2.1 Stylized larval urochordata drawing
Left Right

[edit] Primative vs derived

[edit] Agnatha

  • Agnatha are Vertebrata but are without jaws. Not monophyletic.
  • pl. Agnathans
  • first known vertebrates to evolve
  • all extinct 200 myo (except lampreys and hagfish)
  • most primative body plan of a living vertebrate is ammocoetes, lamprey larva.
  • advanced over (other?) protochordates
  • characters: cranium, brain, paired organs of sight, large persistant notochord, usually have vertebrae, usually cartilaginous skeletons, often have pectoral spikes, folds, or lobes.
  • first evolution of dentine, enamel. bone.
  • characters that came later: jaws, true teeth, girdles, typical appendages, pelvic fins
  • more than a dozen orders

[edit] Cyclostomata

[edit] Hagfishes

Hagfish

  • exclusively marine
  • evolved Lower cambrian, at least 550 myo, probably.
  • eyes are vestigial
  • gills in pouches
  • primarily scavengers
  • sister group of all animals to follow
  • craniata (phylum) is hagfishes combined with sister group vertebrata (subphylum)
  • Myxinoidea (Myx = slime) is the first subclass of Agnatha (the dubious class)

[edit] Lamprey

Lamprey

  • larva called ammocoetes
  • Petromyzontia
  • no close relatives, though perhaps near anaspids in the same cubclass Cephalaspidomorpha
  • more primitive than any other agnathans except hagfish (Donoghue, Forey, Aldridge, 2000)
  • gills in pouches (but different to hagfish)
  • semiparasidic upon bony fishes
  • ammoceotes (larva) more ancestral characters than adult. Especially for mouth parts, pharynx, gonads, and some digestive organs.
  • larva become adult by metamorphosis

[edit] Pteraspidomorpha

Pteraspidomorpha (= wing + shield + form)

  • appear 500myo, before any other vertebrates except conodonts
  • principal representative: pteraspids (order Heterostraci)
  • pteraspids have heavy armour covering head and anterior of body.
  • most have rostrum projecting over the mouth
  • bizarre spines on the shield
  • no paired fins
  • lateral eyes
  • two nostrils, common exit from all of the gill pouches (unlike other agnathans)
  • possibly slow swimmers, but not bottom feeders
  • most were marine

[edit] Anaspids

  • Anaspid (= without + shield)
  • Order: Anaspida
  • long exinct
  • only jawless vert with streamlined form.
  • small, platelike scales
  • no head armor
  • active swimmers
  • pectoral spikes
  • long, thin, paired fins (may have undulated)
  • many gill openings (like cephalaspids and cyclostomes
  • lateral gill openings (unlike cephalaspids' ventral ones)

[edit] Chordata species ranking

[edit] Other agnathans

[edit] Actinopterygii

Actinopterygii, the ray-finned fishes. Most bony fishes belong to this subclass, but they do not include the ancestors of land vertebrates. We know from cranial bone patterns, and the nature of the venous system and reproductive ducts.

[edit] Panderichthyida

[edit] Mesoderm

Mesoderm formed by:

  • separation from the gut tube
  • by delamination
  • by primative streak
  • cells detach from existing tissue layers and migrate individually as mesenchyme.
see: embryogenesis

Recommended references:

  • Gilbert, and Ranio (eds.). 1997. Embryology: constructing the organism One of the few comparative texts. Invertebrate embryology is followed by chapters on cephalochordates, fishes, amphibians, reptiles, and birds, and mammals. (amazon)

[edit] Secretory glands

Secretory gland

mucous cell: (epidermal)

proteinaceous cell: (epidermal)

[edit] Pigment cells

chromatophores of the epidermis:

chromatophores of the dermis: