Thursday, December 16, 2010

Land Lubber Grasshopper Disection

http://www.earthlife.net/inverts/arthropoda.html 
There are 3 classes in the Subphylum Uniramia (Phylum Arthropodia):
  1. Insecta (Insects)
  2. Chilopoda (Centipedes)
  3. Diplopoda (Millipedes)
External Structures:
      
    front legs and antennae
  • 2 compound eyes that consist of many simple visual units called ommatidia, 1 simple eye
    •  
      Eye of our grasshopper
      
    • can see ultra violet wave lengths
  • antennae
  • Mouth:
    • labrum
    • labia
    • mandibles
    • 
      back leg that is used for jumping
      
    • maxillae (maxillary and labia palps are used for tasting)
    • hypopharynx
  • exoskeleton
  • thorax
  • legs
  • protective wing

  • wings (2 different kinds- actual wings and then ones that protect them)
  • 
  • ovipositor (only in females)
Internal Stuctures:
  • veins
  • 
    inside of our grasshopper
    
  • esophagus: muscular tube that conveys food from the pharynx to the crop
  • crop: storage organ
  • stomach
  • tracheal system: respiratory organ-air enters spiracles, leads to tracheae (branching tubules-branch repeatedly, reach individual cells or small groups of cells in the body)
  • spiracles: small opening in body wall
  • auditory membranes


Monday, December 13, 2010

Earthworm Dissection

External Structures:

  • Prostomium: sensory device (helps them feel their way through the soil)
  • Clitellum: produces most of the material secreted from earthworm cocoons
  • tubercula pubertatis: used to identify mature earthworms
  • anterior: head end of the worm (usually more pointed)
  • posterior: tail end of the worm
  • Ventral: bottom side of worm


Internal Structures:

  • Ventral nerve cord: nerves that are in the abdomen
  • Seminal receptacle: pocket related to the semen of an earthworm
  • Nephridium: organ that performs the functions of kidneys
  • Gizzard: pocket used as a stomach
  • Crop: buldge of the esophagus
  • Seminal Vessicles: small hollow organs that carry semen
  • Esophagus: part of digestive tract

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Jointed Appendages and Embryology Research

Websites:
How Invertebrates Move:
  • Annelida (earth worms, leeches, marine worms) have segmented bodies and simple appendages, move by their various muscles and their appendages,
  • Mollusca (squid, snails, slugs) glide by using cillia or ventral muscular waves
  • Arthropoda (crab, shrimp lobster) move by their jointed appendages, exoskeleton and segmented bodies)
  • Echindoermata (starfish, sea urchins, etc.) move by using suckered "tube feet" or nudging themselves across the bottom of the ocean floor
  • Cnideria (jellyfish)Platyhelminthes (flat worms) and Nemotoda (round worms) move by gliding using cilia and swimming (pulse rhythmically-pulling it forwards
Embryology:
Embryology:
Chordata:
Echidermata:
Arthropoda:
Mollusca:
Annelida:
Nemotoda:
Platyhelminthes:
Cnideria:
http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_13.htm
·         Reproduce by releasing eggs and sperm into the sea
·         Fertilized egg develops into free swimming creature
·         Settles at the bottom of the sea
·         Develops into tiny flower-like organism (called polyp)
·         Polyp bud in a different – produce medusa- detach themselves and are free swimming again
Development Stage:
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-blastula.htm
Zygote (fertilized egg)) divides (process called cleavage), these first divisions creates a solid ball of cells called morula
Blastula then forms when dividing cells create a layer called blastoderm that surrounds the central cavity (this transition from the morula to the blastula is called blastulation
Gastrulation is the next embryonic structure (gastrula)
Blastula: early stage of an embryo by the division of an ovum (liquid-filled sphere whose wall is made of a single layer of cells), implantation in the wall of the uterus occurs

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Research

http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/sciences/zoology/animalphysiology/anatomy/animalcellstructure/animalcellstructure.htm
Website:

  1. What are the characteristics of an animal cell?(kingdom Animalia)
  • Eukaryotic
  • enclosed by a plasma membrane, containing membrane-bound nucleus and organelle
  • animal tissues bound together by a triple helix of protein called collagen
  • Centrioles: self replicating organelles (made up of microtubules), help organize cell division
    2.   What are the characteristics that all animals share?
  • eukaryotic
  • multicellular organisms with ways of moving that help them reproduce, obtain food and protect them selves
  • do not have cell walls
  • heterotrophic
  • depend directly or indirectly on aurotrophs for food
    3.   What are invertebrates?
animal that does not have a backbone
  
   4.   What are vertebrates?
animals with an endoskeleton(internal skeleton that provides support for animals body) and a backbone