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LESSON 1 INTRO TO ZOOLOGY

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INTRODUCTION TO
ZOOLOGY
NSELEC 2 WEEK 1
PREPARED BY: CHRIST JOHN S. SABERON
COLLEGE OF ARTS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
BESTLINK COLLEGE OF THE PHILIPPINES
HISTORY OF ZOOLOGY
Zoology is the branch of biology
concerned with the study of
animals and animal kingdom. It is
also known as animal biology.
The study of zoology includes the
interaction of animal kingdom in
their
ecosystems
such
as
classification, habits, structure,
embryology,
distribution,
evolution, and extinct species.
An ancient Greek philosopher,
Aristotle, was a first-person to broadly
classify the living things in the 4th
century BC. Firstly he divided living
things into animals and plants and
then continued with his further
classifications.
Aristotle divided animals into two
classes: one with red-blood and
another without such as insects and
crustaceans.
Then,
he
further
classified creatures into those who
were able to walk, flow and swim.
The classification by Aristotle was followed
until the 16th century, during the Age of
Enlightenment, scientists finally began to
research closely. Now, zoology has become
much more complex, where the living things
are divided into five kingdoms, in which
animal kingdom themselves divided into
several smaller categories of Phylum, Class,
Order, Family, Genus and, finally, Species.
These developments were synthesized in Charles
Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural
selection. In the year 1859, Charles Robert
Darwin presented the theory of organic
evolution along with its observational evidence.
MAJOR BRANCHES OF ZOOLOGY
• Anthrozoology- Study of past, present and
future interactions between animals and
human beings
• Archaeozoology or Zooarchaeology- Study of
dead animals
• Arachnology- Branch of biology that deals
with the study of spiders, scorpions or other
arachnids
• Carnicology- Study of Crustaceans
• CetologyStudy
of
marine
mammals
(Dolphins, Whales, Porpoises)
• Embryology- Study of egg fertilization, embryos
and fetuses
• Entomology- Study of insects
• Ethology- Study of the behavior of animals to
interpret their effects on evolution
• Herpetology- Study of reptiles and amphibians
• Histology- Study of anatomy of cells and tissues
of animals
• Ichthyology- Study of Fishes
• Mammalogy/ Mastology- Study of Mammals
• Malacology- Study of animal forms with shells
(Snails, Octopus, Slugs)
• Morphology- Study of form and specific
structures of animal organisms
• Ornithology- This branch of zoology concerns
the study of birds.
• Primatology- Study of primates (apes, gorillas,
monkeys, prosimians)
• Taxonomy- This field studies, groups and
formulates nomenclature rules of animals on
the basis of common characteristics.
• Zoography(Descriptive Zoology)- Study of
animals and their respective habitats
• Zootomy Study of animal anatomy
EVOLUTION
Evolution is change in the heritable
characteristics
of
biological
populations
over
successive
generations. These characteristics
are the expressions of genes that
are passed on from parent to
offspring
during
reproduction.
Different characteristics tend to exist
within any given population as a
result
of
mutation,
genetic
recombination and other sources of
genetic variation.
The critical evaluation of these implications can help to understand the
impact of this theory on our life. Finally, phenotype and inheritance
patterns are influenced by environmental changes.
EVOLUTION THEORIES
John Baptise Lamarck (1801)
It states that organisms change their behavior as
the environment change. If organisms’ organs are
used more frequently, it will develop in their lifetime.
• Theory of Use and Disuse- explains that the parts
of an organism that the organism uses most will
undergo hypertrophy and will become more
developed.
• Theory of Transition of Acquired CharacteristicsThe inheritance of such a characteristic means its
reappearance in one or more individuals in the
next or in succeeding generations.
EVOLUTION THEORIES
Darwin’s theory of evolution
following fundamental ideas.
entails
the
• Species (populations of interbreeding
organisms) change over time and space.
• All organisms share common ancestors with
other organisms. Over time, populations
may divide into different species, which
share a common ancestral population.
• Evolutionary change is gradual and slow in
Darwin’s view.
Extinct
predecessors
of modern
whales. Small
changes over
time adapted
the now extinct
land mammal
Pakicetus to life
in water. Over
time these
changes made
it more whalelike.
Natural selection is the process through which populations of living organisms
adapt and change. Individuals in a population are naturally variable, meaning
that they are all different in some ways. This variation means that some individuals
have traits better suited to the environment than others.
PROKARYOTIC CELL DIVISION
Prokaryotic cell division is the
process responsible for the
production of daughter cells
from a parent, prokaryotic
cell. And, this process is
known as binary fission, which
proceeds through three steps.
They are DNA replication,
chromosome segregation,
and separation into daughter
cells.
EUKARYOTIC CELL DIVISION
Eukaryotic cell division is the process
responsible for the production of
daughter cells in eukaryotes.
Generally, eukaryotic cells contain
multiple chromosomes packed inside
the
nucleus.
Therefore,
DNA
replication of eukaryotes occurs
during the growth phase of their cell
cycle. Also, this occurs inside the
nucleus. Moreover, the two stages of
eukaryotic cell division are the
nuclear division and cytokinesis.
ANIMAL HOMEOSTATIC MECHANISM
The term ‘homeostasis’ was coined by
American physiologist Walter Cannon,
and is linked to Bernard’s notion of the
physiological stability of the internal
environment.
In 1932, Cannon defined homeostasis
as
the
series
of
physiological
processes that are involved in the
regulation and maintenance of the
state of an organism in the face of
any disturbance.
The homeostatic processes involve a
series
of
internal
sensors
(sensory
receptors) that can detect any kind of
deviation from an optimal physiological
state, and, at the same time, to initiate
the appropriate actions to correct these
alterations. This optimal state can be
maintained.
Homeostasis includes both physiological
and ethological mechanisms: sweating,
panting (physiological thermoregulation),
occultation, fur (ethological responses to
cold),
etc.
In
short,
homeostatic
mechanisms are essential for animals, as
they regulate and maintain the organism
in optimum conditions, even when they
face adversity
THE IMPORTANCE OF MAINTAINING A
CONSTANT INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
The cells that form the organs and tissues
of animals are immersed in a liquid
medium, a fluid compartment that
Claude Bernard, father of modern
physiology, called ‘internal environment’.
The internal environment refers, mainly, to
extracellular fluid (ECF), a section that
separates blood from cells, which is, in
turn, composed by interstitial fluid, plasma
liquid and lymph, fluids that are crucial in
the
performance
of
physiological
functions.
METHODS OF HOMEOSTATIC
REGULATION
Reactive Homeostasis
Reactive homeostasis is a direct response
to the changes that take place in the
internal environment (a variation in pH, for
example); that is, it occurs when an internal
parameter of the organism is subject to a
variation that must be corrected. An
example of reactive homeostasis is the
moment when an animal drinks as a
response to a dehydration caused by
excessive panting or heavy sweating.
METHODS OF HOMEOSTATIC
REGULATION
Predictive Homeostasis
The internal oscillating mechanisms act as true
chronometers,
which
can
prepare
a
physiological response to external environmental
changes in advance. This early preparation is
known as ‘predictive homeostasis’ , a term
proposed by Martin Moore-Ede.
Predictive homeostasis is a response to changes
in the external environment. It’s anticipatory,
meaning that it allows to predict the
appearance of an environmental stimulus, and
to anticipate a proper response to any
disturbance.
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