bio 3220 comparative vertebrate anatomy thank you to mcgraw-hill and dr. anil rao (mscd) for use of...

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BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

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Page 1: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

BIO 3220

COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY

Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Page 2: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Basic Definitions

AnatomyMorphology

Page 3: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Phylogeny – Evolutionary History

PaleontologyFunctional AdaptationComparative MorphologyEmbryology

Page 4: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 5: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Homology

Shared common ancestrySame embryonic precursor

Page 6: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 7: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Analogy

Shared functionInsect wings & bird wingsGills & lungs

Page 8: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 9: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 10: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Homoplasy/Homoplastic Organs

Shared anatomyGenerally, not homologousE.g. Insect wings vs. leaf

Page 11: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 12: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Key Points

Homology

Analogy

Homoplasy

Page 13: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Form vs. Function

Function, then form– Darwin’s Theory of Natural Selection– Adaptation

Form, then function– Preadaptation

Page 14: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Evolution

Random chance mutations, coupled with geographic isolation leads to…

Change in gene frequency in a population

Page 15: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Divergent Evolution

RelatedPresent species evolved from common

ancestor

Page 16: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 17: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Convergent Evolution

Not closely relatedDissimilar features evolved to become

similar features

Page 18: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 19: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations
Page 20: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Parallel Evolution

Related & IsolatedCorresponding features undergo equivalent

changes in isolated environments

Page 21: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Organic Evolution

Present day species are descendants of previous species

Changes that have taken place in plants & animals over time

Page 22: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Vestigial Structures

Phylogenetic remnantBetter developed in ancestorE.g. pelvic girdle in python

Page 23: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Key Point

Can you think of a vestigial structure in humans?

Page 24: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Rudimentary Structure

More developed in descendantE.g. neck, ear

Page 25: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Ontogeny

An individual’s life historyFertilization to deathInfluenced by environment as well as

geneticsStructures earliest to develop are likely the

oldest phylogenetically

Page 26: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

Heterochrony

Paedogenesis– Gonads develop quicikly

Paedomorphosis– Immature features of ancestor become features

of future SPECIESNeoteny

– Immature features are retained as an adult in the INDIVIDUAL

Page 27: BIO 3220 COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ANATOMY Thank you to McGraw-Hill and Dr. Anil Rao (MSCD) for use of PowerPoint illustrations

paedomorphosis