BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

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BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes

Transcript of BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

Page 1: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

BIODIVERSITY PROJECT

Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes

Page 2: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

• Bilateral symmetry • Body segmentation • Endoskeleton (bony or

cartilaginous) • Pharyngeal pouches

(present during some stage of development)

• Complete digestive system

• Ventral heart • Closed blood system • Tail (at some stage of

development)

Page 3: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

•All vertebrates reproduce sexually, the males reproductive cell, the sperm meets with the female reproductive cell, the egg through sexual intercourse.

•Vertebrates live in all areas of the world, it is hard to pin point an exact area of their location because they are everywhere. A vertebrates habitat is anywhere that there is oxygen.

Page 4: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

•Grizzly Bears mate in the spring time.

•When winter comes around they hibernate.

•Bears usually give birth towards the end of hibernation and can give birth to more than one cub.

•Once the cub is about a year old, it is almost fully grown.

•After 2-3 years the cub is forced to leave by its mother and is ready to support itself.

•Grizzly Bears are ready to mate at the ages of 4-7

•They can live up to 30 years.

Page 5: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

• Vertebrates have bilateral symmetry, meaning that if you cut them in half vertically they would be the same or similar on both halves.

• Vertebrates have cells, tissues, organs, and systems.

• Vertebrates are multi-cellular, meaning that they are made up of more than one cell.

• Vertebrates are eukaryotes, because they have a true nucleus in every cell.

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• All vertebrates are heterotrophs, meaning that they can’t make their own food.

• They eat by consuming food and then digesting it.

• They digest their food by using their digestive system, containing the mouth, the esophagus, stomach, liver, gall bladder, pancreas, small intestine, and the large intestine.

Page 8: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

• Vertebrates have a closed circulation meaning that the blood is closed at all times within vessels

• Blood is pumped by a heart through vessels• A closed circulation does not normally fill body

cavities.

• Vertebrates use aerobic respiration.

• They bring oxygen into their lungs, through their mouths and nose and then produce waste known as carbon dioxide (CO2)

Page 9: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

• Vertebrates have a brain and nerves. • You can tell that they responded to

external stimuli because if you went up and poked a bear, they would respond to your poke.

Page 10: BIODIVERSITY PROJECT Mike Cathcart, Jake Boudreau, and Gio Holmes.

Kingdom – Animalia

Phylum – Chordata Classes - Class Ascidiacea(sea squirts) Class Thaliacea (salps) Class Appendicularia (larvaceans) Class Sorberacea Class 'Agnatha' paraphyletic (jawless vertebrates)Class Placodermi (Paleozoic armoured forms) Class Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish; 900+ species) Class Acanthodii (Paleozoic "spiny sharks") Class Osteichthyes (bony fish; 30,000+ species)Class Amphibia (amphibians; 6,000 species) Class Reptilia (reptiles; 8,225+ species) Class Aves (birds; 8,800–10,000 species) Class Synapsida (mammal-like "reptiles"; 4,500+ species, progenitors of mammals) Class Mammalia (mammals; 5,800 species) Class Leptocardii (lancelets)

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• 1: Vertebrates are some of the smartest species on earth.

• 2: There are five classes of vertebrates fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.

• 3: About 58,000 species of vertebrates have been currently described.

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