Animals Class and Char
Animals Class and Char
Characteristics and
Classification
Segmented Worm
What is an animal?
Tree Frog
Plant Cells- notice that the Animal cells do not have cell
cells are all separated by walls. In fact many animal cells
walls. Plants need cell walls contain specialized structures
to protect their structure. that interconnect the cells.
Almost all animals have differentiated tissues. The simplest case is to
have muscle and nervous tissue. Muscle and nervous tissue are a
necessity because they allow an animal to move and respond to its
environment . Almost all animals are mobile. Even if it is only at one
stage of their life cycle.
Jelly fish
pie
Think back to the Sea sponge and Venus fly trap. Both of the organisms
consume other living organisms. The sponge filters water through its
body to pull out food particles. The Venus fly trap lures bugs onto its
palate and then snaps shut digesting the bugs with enzymes. Both are
stationary.
The sea sponge has a cellular membrane. The Venus fly trap has cell
walls. Neither organism has true muscular or nervous tissue. Given this
information which organism is an animal?
If you said the sea sponge you are correct. The sea sponge is an
example of the simplest animal. Things like reproduction, life cycle
and body composition are factors we did not discuss that scientist
considered when they classified the sea sponge as an animal.
Classification in the world of science is about “best fit.”
A dog and a cat belong to the same Phylum, Class, and Order. They
are both in the Phylum Chordata because they both have vertebral
columns. They are both in the Class Mammalia because they have
hair, mammary glands, and a specialized ear bone. They are both in
the Order Carnivora because they both are meat eating mammals.
When identifying an organism by its scientific name we use only the
Genus and Species name. This is called binomial nomenclature. The
Genus name is capitalized and the species name is lowercase. It is
proper to either underline or italicize both of the names. See the
examples below.
www.flickr.com
www.wikipedia.com
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/
www.yahooimages.com
www.images.fws.gov
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/index.html