Six Kingdoms Archaea Eubacteria Plantae Fungi Protista Animalia
Six Kingdoms Archaea Eubacteria Plantae Fungi Protista Animalia
The Animal Kingdom Multicellular Heterotrophic Typically reproduce sexually No cell walls Capable of motion in some stage of their lives Respond quickly to external stimuli as a result of nerve cells, muscle or contractile tissue, or both
Porifera SPONGES!
Cnidaria Jellyfish, hydra, sea anemone, coral, Portuguese Man o’ War
Platyhelminthes (Flatworms) Tapeworm
Nematodes (Roundworms) Hookworm
Annelida (Segmented worms) Earthworms, leeches, etc.
Mollusca Oysters, mussels, squids, octopuses, snails, etc.
Arthropoda Crabs, insects, lice, shrimp, spiders, scorpions, centipedes and millipedes
Echinodermata Starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, etc.
Chordata With Notochord
s e t a d r o h C f o s e s s a l C e v i F (5% of ) tes a r b e t r e ev r a s l a anim
5% of all living things Classified into 5 groups, based on: their skin covering how they reproduce how they maintain body temperature and characteristics of their limbs
Latin for “external temperature” or Cold-blooded (Aquatic- lives in the water) system used to detect movement and vibration in the surrounding water Fish an internal gas-filled organ that contributes to the ability of a fish to control its buoyancy 1. Ectothermic & aquatic 2. Typically covered with scales 3. Lateral line system 4. Paired fins 5. Gills 6. Lay eggs in water 7. Swim bladder in bony fish
Lateral line system
Swim bladder
Latin for "two lives" Amphibians 1. Ectothermic 2. No scales, hair, and feathers. Smooth or rough skin that needs moisture (for breathing through skin) 3. Lay eggs in water, -which hatch into an intermediate life form that usually breathes with gills and change into the adult form that breathes air and can live outside water 4. No claws
Latin for “sewer” -the posterior opening where the urinary, intestinal and reproductive tracts empty Amphibians 5. Three-chambered hearts 6. Double-loop circulatory system 7. Cloaca Cool Video
Giant Japanese Salamander
Reptiles 1. Ectothermic 2. Dry & scaly, no hair or feathers 3. Lungs 4. Claws –unless they don’t have legs
Reptiles 5. Three-chambered heart 6. The first animals to develop the amniotic egg. This allows reptiles to lay eggs on land.
Frilled Lizard
Latin for “internal temperature” or Warm-blooded Birds 1. Endothermic 2. Feathers 3. Many bones are thin and hollow. 4. Forelimbs are modified as wings.
Birds 5. Four-chambered hearts 6. One-way air circulation with air sacs 7. Lay eggs
Peregrine Falcon
Mammals 1. Endothermic 2. Hair 3. New glands like sweat glands and sebaceous glands. 4. They have mammary glands.
Mammals 5. 4 -chambered heart 6. Diaphragm 7. Highly developed brains
- Slides: 28