Lecture Notes
Lecture Notes
Lecture Outline
An awareness of the common evolutionary origin of all animals allows us to explain the
structures and functions of animals living now. The first living organisms possessed
certain features that they passed on to their descendants; the descendant populations
maintained some of these characteristics and modified others. The passing of these traits
from parents to offspring is referred to as . Subsequent populations of
descendants evolved in different ways, changing size, shape and many other features in
response to natural selection. The animals living today possess some features maintained
from the distant past (often referred to as plesiomorphic characters), as well as certain
sets of more recently evolved characters (synapomorphic characters).
The particular features that are shared among groups of animals (similar morphological
features or DNA sequences, to name two) are used as the basis for animal
. The current classification scheme is based on the work of : his
binomial nomenclature is used to give a and species name for every living
organism (referred to as a taxon). The names used in classification above the genus level
(e.g., family, class, or phylum) group organisms together according to the degree of
shared ancestry as indicated by shared features. Taxonomic groups should reflect the
evolutionary relationships among and between taxa.
Animals are intimately linked to their environment. The interaction between animals and
their environment, in the broadest sense of the term, is studied in . Many
animals share an environment, using it as a source of resources such as shelter, food,
water and mates. Human populations grow very rapidly, so humans have spread to most
parts of the earth, impacting the environments of almost all living things. As humans use
and degrade the environment, fewer resources are available to the myriad of other life
forms on earth (collectively referred to as biodiversity). The world population is
estimated to reach 9.3 billion by 2050, heralding even greater effects on biodiversity.
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