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Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals, Kingdom Animalia is the largest of the kingdoms. But when you think of an "animal", what image comes to mind? While animals like bears, fish, and birds are the most familiar to us, over half of all the animals on Earth belong to a group of animals known as "arthropods". Arthropods include animals such as centipedes, crabs, insects, and spiders. This means that the majority of animals come from a group of critters that give most folks the creeps! So, what exactly is an "animal"? With so many different kinds of animals, it's hard to imagine what they all might have in common. First, animals are multicellular. This means they are made of many cells, unlike bacteria, which are made of only one cell. Second, all animals are heterotrophs; they must get their food by eating other organisms, such as plants, fungi, and other animals. In addition, all animals need oxygen to survive. Did you know that fish can breathe oxygen from the water that passes through their gills and earthworms get their oxygen through their skin? Most animals (with the exception of sponges) have bodies that are differentiated into tissues, which are organized into organs, which are in turn organized into organ systems. Animals range in size from microscopic animals known as plankton to the massive blue whale. They inhabit virtually every habitat on the planet – from the poles to the tropics, mountain tops to ocean depths. All animals have cells that lack rigid cell walls (like those found in plant cells) and have nuclei and membrane-bound organelles (eukaryotic). Most animals reproduce sexually and are diploid (adults have cells that include two copies of their genetic material). There are between 3 and 30 million species of animals, though this remains a rough estimate. The largest subgroup of animals by far is the insects. Characteristics of Animals Animals are eukaryotic, multicellular, ingestive heterotrophs, most of which are mobile. Animals may be herbivores, predators, saprophytes, or parasites. Most animals reproduce sexually, while some reproduce asexually. Animals exhibit the following features : A. levels of organization B. symmetry C. cephalization D. digestive tract

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Page 1: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

Kingdom Animalia

With over 2 million different kinds of animals, Kingdom Animalia is the largest of the kingdoms. But when you think of an "animal", what image comes to mind? While animals like bears, fish, and birds are the most familiar to us, over half of all the animals on Earth belong to a group of animals known as "arthropods". Arthropods include animals such as centipedes, crabs, insects, and spiders. This means that the majority of animals come from a group of critters that give most folks the creeps!

So, what exactly is an "animal"? With so many different kinds of animals, it's hard to imagine what they all might have in common. First, animals are multicellular. This means they are made of many

cells, unlike bacteria, which are made of only one cell. Second, all animals are heterotrophs; they must get their food by eating other organisms, such as plants, fungi, and other animals. In addition, all animals need oxygen to survive. Did you know that fish can breathe oxygen from the water that passes through their gills and earthworms get their oxygen through their skin? Most animals (with the exception of sponges) have bodies that are differentiated into tissues, which are organized into organs, which are in turn organized into organ systems.

Animals range in size from microscopic animals known as plankton to the massive blue whale. They inhabit virtually every habitat on the planet – from the poles to the tropics, mountain tops to ocean depths.

All animals have cells that lack rigid cell walls (like those found in plant cells) and have nuclei and membrane-bound organelles (eukaryotic). Most animals reproduce sexually and are diploid (adults have cells that include two copies of their genetic material). There are between 3 and 30 million species of animals, though this remains a rough estimate. The largest subgroup of animals by far is the insects.

Characteristics of Animals

• Animals are eukaryotic, multicellular, ingestive heterotrophs, most of which are mobile.

• Animals may be herbivores, predators, saprophytes, or parasites.

• Most animals reproduce sexually, while some reproduce asexually.

Animals exhibit the following features:

A. levels of organization

B. symmetry

C. cephalization

D. digestive tract

Page 2: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

A. Animals show levels of organization within them.

This Means that similar cell types are organized into specialized tissues, such as skin or muscle, and these tissues in turn are organized into organs, such as a heart or liver. Organs may be organized into organ systems, such as the circulatory system.

B. Many animals show symmetry.

Symmetry is the quality of having one part of the body be a mirror reflection of another part. If it is theoretically possible to place a mirror across an organism and have the reflection coincide with the blocked half, then that animal shows symmetry.

For example: the two sides of a human body are a familiar example of symmetry because each half is roughly a reflection of the other.

Animals exhibit two types of symmetry :

1. Radial symmetry:

Certain animals have a body with a number of similar parts radiating out from a central axis. Their body therefore can be divided into equal halves by any number of planes passing through the center. Such a form of symmetry is known as radial symmetry

Example: Hydra

2. Bilateral symmetry:

Most of these animals have paired structures, arranged on either side of a central axis connecting the head with the tail-like the arms, eyes, ears and so forth on either side of a human. The body can be divided into two similar halves by one plane going down the center. The head end is called the anterior end and the "Lower" or tail end is called the posterior end. The side of the body facing forward is called the ventral side, and the side facing backwards is called the dorsal side. Most of the animals that immediately come to mind show bilateral symmetry. For example: dogs, ants, horses, humans, etc. Example: Lobster

C. Most animals show cephalization.

Cephalization is the differentiation of a definite head, most obvious on animals with bilateral symmetry. Since the animals move with the head or anterior end forward, it is helpful to have the sense organs here. A concentration of nerve tissue, often a full brain, is also often seen in the head.

Page 3: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

D. Most animals contain a digestive tract.

Digestive tract refers to a tube or gut into which food is taken to be digested and absorbed into the body. This is in contrast to each cell of an organism absorbing food from either a neighbouring cell or directly from the environment. Some animals, such as flatworms, have a digestive tract with a single external opening that both ingests food and expels waste, thus serving as both mouth and anus. Most animals have a digestive tract with two external openings: the mouth for the intake of food and the anus for elimination of waste.

Classification Within Animalia Animals are divided into two main categories:

A. Invertebrates or nonchordata - those without backbones B. Chordata - most of which have backbones and are vertebrates

A. Nonchordata

• The invertebrates include over twelve phyla.

• Below are listed the main phyla of invertebrates.

1. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Porifera Porifera consists of sponges.

• Sponges resemble plants in their "Branched" appearance

as well as their inability to move (instead they attach to

surfaces).

• Sponges consist of hollow tubes, with openings called

osculum at one end.

• The sides of the tubes are composed of a double layer of

cells separated by a jelly-like substance

• Water is expelled through the osculum.

• Habitat: sponges are all aquatic animals. While most of them are marine, i.e. salt water, a

few are found in fresh water.

• Locomotion: the larvae of sponges can swim using flagella. These larvae eventually attach

themselves to a surface and grow into an adult organism, which then remains attached to

one place, or sessile.

• Support: sponges require structural support to prevent collapse. A protein fiber called

spongin serves as a skeletal system in some sponges, while others have an internal

skeleton composed of crystalline spicules, made of calcium carbonate or siliceous

material.

• Reproduction: sponges reproduce both asexually and sexually.

Asexual methods: buds May break off from an organism and grow into a separate organism. Sexual method: Sperm from one sponge may be taken in and carried to eggs. The zygote develops into a larva that swims using its flagella until it attaches itself somewhere and grows into a new organism.

• Poriferans lack a nervous system. Sponge cells are unusual in that they function on their

own, without any coordination with one another.

Page 4: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

2. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Cnidaria

• This phylum includes hydra, corals, sea anemones and jellyfish.

• Cnidarians are characterized by stinging cells called cnidocytes.

• They also have tentacles.

• Cnidarians are animals that exhibit radial symmetry.

• A cnidarian's body shows some CELL SPECIALIZATION AND DIVISION OF LABOR. The

outer epidermis contains sensory nerve cells, gland cells, small interstitial cells, epithelio-

muscular cells and cnidocytes. Each of these cells performs different functions.

• Cnidarians have a hollow central cavity with one opening called the mouth, which actually

serves as mouth and anus, taking in food and expelling waste.

• Habitat: Cnidarians are found in both fresh and salt water.

• Locomotion: Some cnidarians are free-floating medusas, while others live anchored to a

surface as polyps. Some, like jellyfish, go through a polyp stage, but live most of their lives

as medusae.

• Feeding: Cnidarians capture food by stinging barbs called Nematocysts, Which paralyze

or poison their prey. The prey is then taken into the mouth with tentacles

• Reproduction: Most cnidarians can reproduce both sexually and asexually. Asexual

reproduction is by budding. Sexual reproduction is by production of eggs and sperm.

Page 5: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

3. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Platyhelminthes

• This phylum includes the most common flatworms.

• They are the most primitive representatives of bilateral symmetry.

• They have a single opening to their digestive tract that serves as mouth and anus.

• Excretory and reproductive systems are well developed in platyhelminthes. The presence of these two systems indicates that flatworms have advanced beyond the tissue level of organization to an organ level of organization. However platyhelminthes lack respiratory and circulatory systems.

• They also have nervous systems, able to sense light, and simple brains. Examples of platyhelminthes include planarians, flukes and tapeworms

4. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Nematoda This phylum includes the roundworms.

• A tough cuticle covers their body.

• Nematodes are found in almost all habitats. Some of them are free-living forms found in

water and soil, while some live as parasites in plants and animals. You may have heard

of the human parasites hookworms, pinworms, or filarial worms. The nematode

Trichinella spiralis generally enters the human body through improperly cooked pork,

causing trichinosis.

• Nematodes have a digestive tract with two openings, a mouth to take in food and an

anus for excreting the wastes.

• Sexes are separate in nematodes and look different from each other, A phenomenon

known as sexual dimorphism. Males are smaller than females and have curved tails.

Page 6: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

5. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Annelida

Annelida includes the segmented worms, including the earthworm.

• Most are free-living, while a few are parasitic.

• Annelids contain well-developed organ systems, such as circulatory, digestive,

nervous, and excretory.

• The circulatory system consists of sealed vessels that deliver blood to all parts of

the body.

• The digestive system has two openings. The digestive tube is differentiated into

specialized regions such as a crop for storage, and a gizzard for grinding.

• The most familiar representatives of this phylum are the earthworms, which

benefit plant growth. Their burrowing aerates the soil while their feces enrich it.

6. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Arthropoda Arthropoda include animals with jointed appendages and exoskeletons, such as insects and spiders, lobsters and crabs, and millipedes and centipedes.

• The phylum arthropoda contains the greatest number of species of any animal phyla, with about 75% of the species.

• The exoskeleton-the hard outer covering-protects the organism and lends structural support. It must be shed periodically in a process called molting, to allow growth.

• Arthropods have an open circulatory system, meaning blood is released from the vessels of the circulatory system to bathe body cells. The blood is then collected back into ducts and returned to the system. Blood in arthropods carries food and waste products but plays no role in respiration.

• Arthropoda contain well-developed organ systems, such as circulatory, digestive, nervous, and excretory.

• The digestive system has two openings.

• Reproduction is generally sexual, and sexes separate, the fertilization of the egg taking place within the female's body

.

Page 7: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

7. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Mollusca

• Mollusca include snails, slugs, clams, squids, and octopus.

• Mollusks are the second largest phylum of invertebrates.

• Mollusks have soft bodies and often an inner or outer shell.

• Some mollusks are sedentary filter feeders, like clams, which strain their food from the

water as it passes by. Others are highly mobile predators, such as squid and octupi.

• Mollusks have organ systems for circulation, which is open, respiration, digestion, excretion, nerve conduction, and reproduction.

9. Invertebrate Animalia Phylum Echinodermata

Phylum echinodermata includes starfish, brittle stars, sea cucumbers, sea urchins and sand dollars.

• Echinoderms are spiny-skinned animals, exclusively marine bottom dwellers.

• Adults show radial symmetry

• They possess an internal skeleton of calcareous plates which may bear spines.

• They lack a circulatory, respiratory, or excretory system.

• They have a nervous system but no brain.

• They have a digestive tract with a mouth and anus.

• Numerous small protrusions called tube feet aid in locomotion, feeding,

respiration, and excretion.

• Echinoderms have both sexes and can reproduce asexually or sexually.

Page 8: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

B. Chordata • Chordata include the subphylum vertebrata, Or Vertebrates, which contains most of the animals

that we commonly think of when we think of an animal. • Some of the animals in this subphylum are fishes, frogs, snakes, lizards, turtles, birds, bats, rats,

cats, dogs, lions, and humans. • Chordates are bilaterally symmetrical • The subphylum vertebrata includes these classes:

A) 3 classes of fish B) amphibia C) reptilia D) aves (birds) E) mammals

A) Vertebrate classes of fish Fish, of course, are aquatic vertebrates. In order to move efficiently through water, which is 800 times denser than air, fish developed several key adaptations, such as:

• A streamlined body

• A powerful tail for propulsion

• Fins for stabilization and movement

• The capacity to regulate the amount of gas in their body and thus the ability to move up or down

in water

• Highly developed senses of touch and smell

• A row of sensory cells along their body that detect chemicals and vibrations

• Gills for breathing In addition:

• Fish have well-developed systems of circulation, digestion, respiration, excretion, and nerve

conduction.

• Sexes are separate and fertilization is external.

B) vertebrate class Amphibia Amphibians live both in water and on land, and may be considered halfway between fish and reptiles. They are considered to be the first land vertebrates to have evolved.

• Amphibians change form, through metamorphosis, from an aquatic larval form to an adult

terrestrial form, which may spend much of its time in water.

• Larval amphibians breathe through gills while adults breathe with lungs and through their

skin.

• Eggs lack a protective shell and must be laid in water to avoid being dried out

(desiccation). Fertilization is external, when the male releases sperm to cover the eggs.

• Skeletons are bony.

Page 9: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

• The skin is thin, kept moist by numerous glands, and lacks scales.

• Amphibians have well-developed organ systems. Examples: frogs, salamanders, toads.

C) vertebrate class Reptilia Reptiles were the first vertebrates to evolve that were fully terrestrial, i.e. Lived entirely on land. Reptiles in the form of dinosaurs were the dominant land animals from 225 to 65 million years ago. Reptiles developed several key adaptations that allowed them to live on land, completely apart from water:

• Their skin is waterproof and protected by scales or plates.

• They have more powerful limbs equipped with claws, or suction cups, adapted for

movement, digging, and/or climbing on land.

• They have a more efficient circulatory system than amphibians, meaning that blood

reaching the cells has more oxygen in it than in amphibians.

• Their excretory system is adapted for conservation of water.

• Their respiratory system, which includes lungs, is completely internal where moistness can

be maintained.

• Fertilization is internal, providing a moist environment in which sperm can travel to eggs.

• Fertilized eggs are known as amniote eggs. They can be laid on land because the embryo

is protected by a membrane called an amnion, and by a tough outer shell, both of which

protect the egg and prevent desiccation. Within the shell, the egg is provided with food in

the form of a yolk. Other features of reptiles: Reptiles, like fish and amphibians, are cold-blooded, meaning their internal temperature depends on the surrounding temperature. Examples: Turtles, crocodiles, snakes, lizards and even the dinosaurs!

Page 10: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

D) vertebrate class Aves The members of the aves class are commonly called birds. Birds are warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrates that are covered with feathers. Birds are thought to have evolved from reptiles. Key features of birds:

• The feathers are modified scales that provide lift for flight and insulation.

• Birds have toothless beaks.

• Their forelimbs are modified into wings, usually used for flight.

• Bones are hollow, spongy and have air spaces in them, making them very light. This is an

adaptation for decreasing the weight of the body.

• Birds have extensions of the lungs, called air sacs, which connect to air spaces in the

bones and increase buoyancy for flight.

• They have a four-chambered heart, which is seen in mammals too.

• Birds are warm-blooded, able to maintain a constant body temperature.

• Eggs are protected by an amnion and hard outer shell.

• Usually parents incubate eggs.

• Birds may feed on insects, fruits, seeds, worms, nuts, nectar, small reptiles, amphibians,

fish, or mammals, as well as dead animals.

• Courtship, artful nest building, parental care of young, and migration during winters are

some interesting features of bird behaviour.

Some birds have lost their ability to fly. The wings of these birds may be small compared to their body size. Such flightless birds have specialized as runners, such as the ostrich, rhea, and emu, or as swimmers, such as the penguin.

Page 11: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

E) vertebrate class Mammalia Mammals are warm-blooded vertebrates that have hair or fur and feed their young ones with milk produced from mammary glands. Mammals are the dominant land vertebrates, with over 4,000 species. Key features of mammals:

• Mammals are warm-blooded and hence can maintain a constant body temperature.

• Mammals breath through lungs aided by a muscle called a diaphragm.

• They have a four-chambered heart for efficient blood circulation.

• Mammals have well-developed organ systems, particularly the nervous system which often

includes a highly developed brain.

• Fertilization in mammals is internal.

• Mammals are generally viviparous, meaning development of embryos occurs in the female's

uterus and the young are born live.

• Mammals may be herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, or scavengers.

• Some mammals can fly, their forelimbs being modified into wings, which include extensions

of the skin between the body and fingers. examples: bats, flying squirrels.

• Some mammals are aquatic, though they still breathe air. Examples: whales, dolphins,

manatees.

Types of mammals A. some mammals, called prototheria, lay eggs. Examples: echidna, duck-billed platypus.

B. a few species, called marsupials, give birth to very immature offspring, which are then kept in internal pouches to complete development. Examples: kangaroos, koala bears.

Page 12: Kingdom Animalia - Nova Scotia Department of Educationhrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/bakerlianne/EngDocs/Kingdom Animalia.pdf · Kingdom Animalia With over 2 million different kinds of animals,

C. the third and largest group of mammals is called placental mammals. In these mammals, the young complete their development in the uterus of the mother and are born in a fairly advanced stage of their development. examples: most of the mammals that commonly come to mind such as lions, horses, mice, rabbits, apes, and humans.

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