Classification লেবেলটি সহ পোস্টগুলি দেখানো হচ্ছে৷ সকল পোস্ট দেখান
Classification লেবেলটি সহ পোস্টগুলি দেখানো হচ্ছে৷ সকল পোস্ট দেখান

রবিবার, ১৪ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Vertebrates


Vertebrates

Vertebrates - Back boned animals:
Not only vertebrates are back boned animals because vertebrata is not the phylum of back boned animals. Chordata is the phylum of back boned animals and vertebrata is the sub-phylum of chordata. Here, back bone is generally considered as notochord. This notochord is strong and rigid to give good support to chordate animals. But in vertebrates, it was modified as jointed backbone which is called as 'vertebrae'. Animals those possess vertebrae is called as vertebrates.
Modern and major classification of vertebrates:
As per the modern day of classification, there are only five classes of vertebrates. They are
  • Pisces (Fishes)
  • Amphibia (Amphibians such as Frogs and toads,etc.)
  • Reptilia (Crocodiles, snakes, Dinosaurs, turtles, etc.)
  • Aves (All birds including penguins & excluding bats, etc.)
  • Mammalia (Rats, Rabbits, Elephants, Whales, Bats, Human beings, etc.)
Pisces - Aquatic animals:
Pisces is the class where all aquatic animals such as fishes excluding dolphins, whales and some aquatic amphibians and reptiles. Fishes originate in the Devonian period which is considered as the "Age of fishes". Fishes again classified into:
  • Agnatha (Jawless fishes)
  • Chondrichthyes (Cartilaginous fishes such as shark, ray, etc.)
  • Osteichthyes (Bony fishes such as Catfish, Tilapia, Carps, etc.)
We can see that very common adaptation acquired by fishes for aquatic life. They are
  • Streamlined body,
  • Gills for respiring dissolved oxygen in water,
  • Fins present at suitable places for effective swimming.
Amphibians - Animals evolved from water to land:
It is believed that the amphibians evolved from labyrinthodonts which are the transitional animal group between fish and amphibians. The most familiar animals found in amphibians are frogs and toads, etc.
The adaptation acquired by amphibians is:
  • Cutaneous respiration when the animals found inside the water,
  • Nictitating membrane found in the eye to get clear view inside the water.
  • Webbed foot to give effective swimming.
Reptiles - Amazing animals:
Yes, reptiles are very amazing because the size range of animals also very amazing, as it ranges from very small lizard to huge dinosaurs. You can see variety of adaptations in this group because it habituated in water, in land, in damps, in deserts, etc.
Birds - Aerial animals:
Even in invertebrates, insects exhibit flight, but the birds shows exact flight adaptation, that's why it is very perfect aerial animals. The flight adaptations are:
  • Reduced bone marrow to reduce bone weight.
  • Pored bones
  • Air sacs,
  • Bursa of fabricius,
  • Feathers & wings, etc.
Mammals - Milk feeding animals:
The striking characteristic of mammals is feeding milk to their young ones. Based on their habits and adaptations, it is diverged into various groups such as
  • Burrowing rats and moles,
  • Flying bats,
  • Fast running cheetahs,
  • Long leaping kangaroo,
  • Aquatic whales and dolphins, etc.

Classify Pisces upto sub-class giving salient features and examples


The super class Pisces (L., Piscis, fish) includes all the fishes which are essentially aquatic forms with paired fins for swimming and gills for locomotion. About 40,000 species of fishes are known. Various workers have provided different schemes of their classification.
However, no classification had been universally accepted because of the confusion due to staggering numbers of fishes and great diversity in their shape, size, habits and habitat.
According to Parker and Haswell (1960) the super class Pisces if sub-divided into three classes.
CLASS-I-PLACODERMI
(i) These include all extinct fishes found from early Devonian to Permian period.
(ii) Body heavily armoured with bony scales or plates.
(iii) Primitive jaws with teeth.
(iv) Paired or unpaired fins were present.
(v) Skeleton bony.
(vi) Notochord persistent throughout life.
(vii) They are immediate ancestors of astracoderms.
The class placodermi includes six subclasses.
(i) Sub-class – I – Acanthodii, Ex: Climatius
(ii) Sub-class – II – Arthrodin, Ex: Cocoosteus
(iii) Sub-class – III – Petalichthyda, Ex: Macropetalch
(iv) Sub-class – IV – Antiarchi, Ex: Pterich thyodes
(v) Sub-class – V – Rhenanida, Ex: Gemuendina
(vi) Sub-class – VI – Palaeospondylia, Ex: Palaeospondylus
CLASS-II – CHONDRICHTHYES:
(i) Mostly marine and predaceous
(ii) Body fusiform or spindle shaped.
(iii) Endeskeleton is cartilaginous
(iv) Skin with placoid scales.
(v) Fins both median and paired all, supported by fin rays. Pelvic fin bears claspers in males.
(vi) Notochord tail fin heterocereal persistant. Vertebrae complete and separate from notochord.
(vii) Mouth ventral in position, jaws p[resent. Teeth are modified placoid scales.
(viii) Digestive system complete, stomach J-shaped, intestine with spiral valves.
(ix) Gill slits separate, 5-7 pairs, laterally placed, without operculum.
(x) Air bladder and lungs absent.
(xi) Heart 2-chambered, poikilothermous.
(xii) Kidneys opisthonephrii, Ureotelic.
(xiii) Sexes separate, Gonads paired, fertilization internal, oviparous or ovoviviparous. It includes two sub-classes.
1. Sub-class-I-SELACHII (Elasmorbranchii
(i) Multiple gill slits on either side protected but individual skin flaps.
(ii) A spiracle behind each eye.
(iii) Cloaca present.
Ex: Scolodon (shark), Torpedo (Electric ray) pristis (saw fish)
(ii) sub-class-II – HOLOCEPHALUI
(i) Single gill opening on either side covered by a fleshy operculum.
(ii) No spiracles, cloaca and sales.
(iii) Single nasal opening.
Ex: Chimaeras or Rat fishes.
Class-III- OSTEICHTHYES (Teleostomi)
(i) Body is spindle shaped.
(ii) Median and paired fins are present.
(iii) Tail fin is usually Homocercal.
(iv) Endoskeleton is partly or wholly bony.
(v) Skin covered by 3 types of dermal scales ganoid, cycloid or ctenoid. Some without scales. No placoid scales.
(vi) Mouth terminal or subterminal Jaws usually with teeth. Cloaca lacking, anus present.
(vii) Gills are covered by a common operculum on either side.
(viii) An air (swim) bladder often present with or without duct connected t pharynx.
(ix) Adult kidneys mesonephric.
(x) Well developed lateral line system. Internal ear with 3 semicircular canals.
(xi) Sexes separate, Gonads paired fertilization usually external.
(xii) Mostly oviparous, rarely ovoviviparous or viviparous.
This subclass includes two sub-classes.
Sub-class-I – Sarcopterygii
(i) Paired fins are leg-like or lobed with a fleshy, bony central axis covered by scales.
(ii) Internal nares present.
(iii) All are fresh water forms.
Ex: - Latimeria (living fossil)
Protopterus & Lepidosiren
(Lung-fishes)
Sub-class II – Actinoptergii
(i) Paired fins thin, broad without fleshy basal lobes.
(ii) Double external nares are present
(iii) Popularly called ray-finned fish.
This subclass is divided into the infraclasses or super orders
(i) Chondrostei Ex: - Polypterus
(ii) Holostei Ex: - Lepidosteus
(iii) Telestoei Ex: - Labeo, Catla