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Form 4 17 Support Movement and Protection

The document summarizes the integumentary system and skeletal systems of invertebrates and vertebrates. It describes the structure and functions of the skin/epidermis and associated structures like hair, scales and feathers. It also describes the structure of invertebrate and vertebrate skeletons, including exoskeletons, endoskeletons, hydrostatic skeletons, and rigid skeletons composed of materials like chitin, bone and cartilage. Key functions of the skeletal systems are support, protection and muscle attachment.

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Richard Nestor
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views

Form 4 17 Support Movement and Protection

The document summarizes the integumentary system and skeletal systems of invertebrates and vertebrates. It describes the structure and functions of the skin/epidermis and associated structures like hair, scales and feathers. It also describes the structure of invertebrate and vertebrate skeletons, including exoskeletons, endoskeletons, hydrostatic skeletons, and rigid skeletons composed of materials like chitin, bone and cartilage. Key functions of the skeletal systems are support, protection and muscle attachment.

Uploaded by

Richard Nestor
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Support, Protection, and

Movement
Chapter 29
Integument

 The integument is the protective outer


covering of the body.
 Includes the skin and structures associated
with the skin such as hair, setae, scales,
feathers, and horns.
Invertebrate Integument

 Many invertebrates have a single-


layered epidermis covering the body.
 Others have added a secreted
noncellular cuticle over the epidermis.
 Additional protection
Invertebrate Integument

 Molluscs have a delicate epidermis.


 Protection is provided by the shell.
 Cephalopods have a more complex
epidermis with a cuticle, simple epidermis,
layer of connective tissue, & a layer of
iridocytes.
Invertebrate Integument
 Arthropods have a
complex integument that
provides protection and
skeletal support.
 Single layered epidermis
(hypodermis) which
secretes a complex
cuticle.
 Procuticle – layers of
chitin and protein.
 Epicuticle – moisture
proofing barrier.
Invertebrate Integument

 The arthropod cuticle may remain tough, but


flexible as in many small crustaceans and
insect larvae, or it may become hardened.
 Decapod crustaceans have a cuticle stiffened by
calcification (deposition of calcium carbonate in the
procuticle.
 In insects, hardening occurs by sclerotization
where protein molecules bond together producing
the insoluble protein sclerotin.
Vertebrate Integument

 Vertebrate
Integument includes:
 Epidermis – thin
outer stratified
epithelial layer,
derived from
ectoderm.
 Dermis – thick
inner layer, derived
from mesoderm.
Epidermis
 The epidermis gives rise to hair, feathers, claws, and
hooves.
 Epidermis is stratified squamous epithelium.
 Cells in the basal part undergo frequent mitosis.
 As cells are displaced upward, cytoplasm is replaced
by keratin.
Epidermis

 Keratin is a tough protein that is also


light and flexible.
 Reptile scales are composed of keratin.
 Birds have keratin in feathers, beaks,
and claws.
 Mammals use keratin in hair, hooves,
claws, and nails.
Dermis
 The dermis is a
dense connective
tissue layer
containing blood
vessels, collagenous
fibers, nerves,
pigment cells, fat
cells, and fibroblasts.
 Dermis serves to
support, nourish, and
cushion the
epidermis.
Dermis

 The dermis may contain bony structures


of dermal origin.
 Ostracoderms and placoderms had
heavy bony plates.
 Living sturgeons
Dermis

 Scales of fishes are


bony dermal
structures that
evolved from the
armor of Paleozoic
fishes.
Dermis

 In reptiles, dermal bone contributes to


the armor of crocodilians, the beaded
skin of some lizards, and portions of a
turtle’s shell.
 Dermal bone is found in the antlers of
mammals.
Dermis

 Claws, beaks, nails, and horns are composed


of a combination of epidermal (keratinized) and
dermal components.
Animal Coloration

 Coloration in animals may be bright as in


warning coloration, or subdued as in
cryptic coloration.
 Colors may be produced by pigments or
structurally.
Animal Coloration

 Structural colors are produced by the


physical structure of the surface tissue
which reflects certain light wavelengths
and eliminates others.
 Iridescent or metallic hues
 Blue
Animal Coloration

 The white of these


feathers is produced
by minute air filled
spaces that reflect
white light.
Animal Coloration
 Pigments are a varied group of large molecules that
reflect light rays producing a particular color.
 Most ectothermic invertebrates have chromatophores
with branching processes.
 Pigment granules can be dispersed or concentrated.
Animal Coloration

 In cephalopods, each chromatophore is a sac-


like cell filled with pigment granules and
surrounded by muscle cells.
 When the muscles contract, they spread the
granules into a pigmented sheet.
Animal Coloration

 Melanins produce black & brown, contained in


melanophores.
 Carotenoid pigments produce yellow and red
colors.
 Frequently contained in special pigment cells called
xanthophores.
 Iridophores are a type of chromatophore that
contain crystals of guanine instead of pigment.
 Silvery or metallic
Skeletal Systems

 Skeletons are supportive systems that


provide protection, support, and a place
for muscle attachment.
Hydrostatic Skeletons
 In the hydrostatic skeleton of an earthworm,
muscles in the body wall develop force by
contracting against incompressible coelomic
fluids.
 Alternate contractions of circular and
longitudinal muscles of the body wall enable a
worm to move forward.
Muscular Hydrostats
 Muscular hydrostats
work because they are
composed of
incompressible tissues.
 Complex movements
are a result of complex
arrangements of
muscles.
 Elephant’s trunk,
mammal & reptile
tongues, cephalopod
tentacles are examples.
Rigid Skeletons

 Rigid skeletons contain some kind of


rigid elements.
 Provide anchor points for pairs of opposing
muscles.
 Provides protection & support

 Exoskeleton – found in molluscs &


arthropods and some other invertebrates.
 Endoskeleton – found in echinoderms,
chordates, and some cnidarians.
Vertebrate Endoskeleton
 The vertebrate
endoskeleton is
composed of bone
and cartilage (types
of connective tissue).
 Bone provides
support, protection,
and serves as a
reservoir for calcium
and phosphorous.
Notochord and Cartilage

 The notochord is a supportive rod found in


protochordates and developing vertebrates.
 Derived from mesoderm.
 Except in jawless vertebrates, the notochord is
replaced by the backbone.
Notochord and Cartilage

 Jawless fishes and elasmobranchs have


cartilaginous skeletons – a derived
feature since their ancestors had bony
skeletons.
 Most vertebrates have bony skeletons,
with some cartilaginous parts.
Notochord and Cartilage
 Cartilage is a soft,
pliable tissue that
resists compression
and is variable in form.
 Hyaline cartilage has
a clear, glassy
appearance with
chondrocytes
surrounded by a
matrix.
 No blood vessels.
Notochord and Cartilage

 Cartilage is often found at articulating


surfaces of many bone joints, and as
supporting rings of the passageways in
the respiratory system.
Notochord and Cartilage

 Cartilage similar to hyaline cartilage is


found in many invertebrates.
 Radula of gastropods
 Lophophore of brachiopods
Bone

 Bone is highly vascular living tissue that


contains significant deposits of inorganic
calcium salts.
 Endochondral (replacement) bone
develops from another form of connective
tissue – usually cartilage.
 Intramembranous bone develops directly
from sheets of embryonic cells.
 Face, cranium, clavicle, dermal bone.
Bone

 Bone can vary in density.


 Spongy bone consists of open, interlacing
framework of bony tissue, oriented to give
strength.
 Compact bone is dense – the open
framework of spongy bone has been filled in
by additional calcium salts.
Bone
 Compact bone is
composed of a
calcified bone matrix
arranged in sets of
concentric rings -
osteons.
 Bones consist of
bundles of osteons
interconnected with
blood vessels and
nerves.
Bone

 Between the rings are lacunae (cavities)


filled with osteocytes (bone cells)
connected by tiny passageways that
distribute nutrients.
Bone – Dynamic Tissue

 Bone is a dynamic tissue.


 Osteoclasts are bone resorbing cells.
 Osteoblasts are bone building cells.

 Both processes occur together so that


new osteons are formed as old ones are
resorbed.
Bone – Dynamic Tissue

 Hormones (parathyroid hormone for


resorption and calcitonin for deposition)
are responsible for maintaining a
constant calcium level in the blood.
Vertebrate Skeleton

 Axial skeleton
includes the skull,
vertebral column,
ribs, and sternum.
 Appendicular
skeleton includes
the limbs and
pectoral and pelvic
girdles.
Vertebrate Skeleton

 Over time, the number of skull bones has


been reduced from as many as 180 in
some early fishes to 35 or fewer in
mammals.
Vertebrate Skeleton

 The vertebral column serves as the main


stiffening axis.
 In fishes it provides points for muscle
attachment, provides stiffness, and preserves
body shape during muscle contraction – much
like the notochord from which it is derived.
Vertebrate Skeleton

 Most vertebrates have paired


appendages.
 Pectoral and pelvic fins in fishes supported
by the pectoral and pelvic girdles.
 Tetrapods have two pairs of pentadactyl
limbs (although they may be highly modified
through bone loss or fusion).
 The pelvic girdle is generally firmly attached
to the axial skeleton, while the pectoral
girdle is more loosely attached.
Animal Movement

 Most animal movement depends on


contractile proteins which can change
their shape to relax or contract.
 These fibrils will contract when powered by
ATP.
 Actin and myosin form a contractile system
found in most animals.
 Cilia and flagella utilize different proteins.
Ameboid Movement
 Ameboid movement is
found in amebas, white
blood cells, and
embryonic cells.
 Movement using
pseudopods depends
on actin and myosin.
Ciliary and Flagellar Movement
 Cilia are found throughout
the animal kingdom
(except in nematodes, rare
in arthropods).
 Uniform in diameter (.2-.5
µm) and structure.
 Basal body similar to a
centriole – 9 triplets of
microtubules composed
of the protein tubulin.
 Cilium has 9 pairs
surrounding two individual
microtubules.
Ciliary and Flagellar Movement

 A flagellum is a
whiplike structure
longer than a cilium
and usually present
singly.
 Structure is the
same.
 Different beating
pattern.
Muscular Movement
 Muscle cells (fibers) can
only do work by
contraction.
 They can’t actively
lengthen.
 They are often arranged
in opposing pairs.
 Three types of muscle
tissue.
 Skeletal
 Smooth
 Cardiac
Skeletal Muscle

 Skeletal, (striated)
muscle appears to
be striped.
 Multinucleate fibers
 Attached to skeletal
elements.
 Voluntary
 Fast acting, but
fatigues quickly.
Smooth Muscle
 Smooth muscle lacks striations.
 Single nucleus
 Involuntary
 Slow acting, but can maintain prolonged contractions.
 Muscles of the stomach, intestines, uterus are
smooth muscle.
Cardiac Muscle

 Cardiac muscle, found only in the heart, is


striated and fast acting like skeletal muscle.
 Involuntary, with one nucleus per fiber like
smooth muscle.
 Fibers are joined by junctional complexes
called intercalated discs.
Muscles
 A skeletal muscle
consists of a bundle
of long fibers
running parallel to
the length of the
muscle.
 A muscle fiber is
itself a bundle of
smaller myofibrils
arranged
longitudinally.
Muscles
 The myofibrils are composed of two kinds of
filaments:
 Thin filaments, consisting of two strands of actin and
one strand of regulatory protein.
 Thick filaments, staggered arrays of myosin molecules.
 The functional unit of the myofibril is a sarcomere.
Muscles

 Actin and myosin are contractile


proteins.
Muscle Contraction
 Striated muscle contraction is explained by the sliding
filament hypothesis.
 Actin & myosin filaments become linked together by
cross bridges (myosin heads), which act as levers to
pull the filaments past each other.
 Z-lines pulled closer together, sarcomere shortens.
Muscle Contraction

 Muscles contract in response to nerve


stimulation.
 Skeletal muscles are innervated by
motor neurons whose cell bodies are in
the spinal cord.
Muscle Contraction

 One motor neuron has many terminal


branches that may innervate many
muscle fibers.
 A motor unit includes the motor neuron
and all the fibers it innervates.
The Neuromuscular Junction

 The place where a motor axon


terminates on a muscle fiber is called the
neuromuscular junction.
 The synaptic cleft is a small gap that
separates the nerve fiber & muscle fiber.
 Acetylcholine is stored in synaptic
vesicles in the neuron.
The Neuromuscular Junction

 When a nerve impulse arrives, acetylcholine


is released into the cleft starting a wave of
depolarization in the muscle fiber.
Excitation-Contraction Coupling

 In the resting state, muscle shortening


does not occur because thin tropomyosin
strands on the actin myofilaments lie in a
position that prevents the myosin heads
from attaching to actin.
Excitation-Contraction Coupling
 When the muscle is
stimulated, calcium
ions are released
that bind to troponin.
 This causes a
change in shape
that causes the
tropomyosin to
move out of the
way exposing
binding sites on the
actin molecule.
Energy for Contraction

 Energy for muscle contraction comes


from ATP.
 ATP is synthesized during aerobic
metabolism.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJ309LfHQ3M
Energy for Contraction

 During prolonged exercise, blood flow


can’t supply oxygen fast enough for
aerobic metabolism to continue.
 Anaerobic glycolysis is not as efficient,
but still produces some ATP.
 An oxygen debt builds up because the
accumulated lactic acid must be oxidized.
Fast and Slow Fibers
 Skeletal muscles consist of different types of
fibers.
 Slow oxidative fibers (red muscles) specialized for
slow, sustained contractions.
 Maintaining posture
 Fast glycolytic fibers (white muscles) lack an
efficient blood supply and function anaerobically.
 Running muscles in cats.
 Fast oxidative fibers have an efficient blood
supply and function aerobically for fast, sustained
activities.
 Wing muscles in migratory birds.
Importance of Tendons

 When mammals walk, kinetic energy is stored


in the tendons.
 The tendon stretches, then recoils extending
the foot while the muscle is contracted,
propelling the leg forward.

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