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Kingdom Animalia 3
                                       BFT 1023
                                       Chapter 9




                     By


        Dr. Md. Shafiqur Rahman
Faculty of Agro Industry and Natural resources
                     UMK
Characteristics of Echinodermata
1)Possess 5-rayed symmetry, mostly
radial, sometimes bilateral.
2)Body has more than two cell layers, tissues
and organs.
3)Body cavity a true coelom.
4)Most possesses a through gut with an anus.
5)Body shape highly variable, but with no head.
6)Nervous system includes a circum-
oesophageal ring.
7)Has a poorly defined open circulatory system.
Echinodermata
Echinoderms are characterized by radial
  symmetry, several arms (5 or more,
  mostly grouped 2 left - 1 middle - 2
  right) radiating from a central body (=
  pentamerous). The body actually
  consists of five equal segments, each
  containing a duplicate set of various
  internal organs.
Echinodermata


They have no heart, brain, nor eyes, but
 some brittle stars seem to have light
 sensitive parts on their arms. Their
 mouth is situated on the underside and
 their anus on top (except feather stars,
 sea cucumbers and some urchins).
Echinodermata


Echinoderms have tentacle-like structures
  called tube feet with suction pads
  situated at their extremities. These tube
  feet are hydraulically controlled by a
  remarkable vascular system.
Echinodermata
This system supplies water through canals
 of small muscular tubes to the tube
 feet. As the tube feet press against a
 moving object, water is withdrawn from
 them, resulting in a suction effect.
 When      water      returns    to     the
 canals, suction is released. The resulting
 locomotion is generally very slow.
Ecology and range of Echinoderms


Echinoderms are exclusively marine. They
  occur in various habitats from the
  intertidal zone down to the bottom of
  the deep sea trenches and from sand to
  rubble to coral reefs and in cold and
  tropical seas.
Behavior of Echinoderms


Some echinoderms are carnivorous (for
  example starfish) others are detritus
  foragers (for example some sea
  cucumbers) or planktonic feeders (for
  example basket stars).
Echinodermata
8)Possesses a water vascular system, which
hydraulically operates the tube feet or feeding
tentacles.
9)Without excretory organs.
10)Normally possesses a sub epidermal system
of calcareous plates
11)Reproduction normally sexual and
gonochoristic.
12)Feeds on fine particles in the water, detritus
or other animals.
13)All live marine environments.
Echinodermata


The Echinodermata are Spiny-skinned
 animals       such     as      Feather
 Stars, Starfish, Sea Urchins, Brittle
 Stars, Sea Cucumbers, Sand Dollars and
 Sea Lilies.
Echinodermata
They are one of the best known and most
 loved groups of invertebrates. They are
 popular as symbols because of their
 unique shapes and beautiful colours.
 They are also one of the most
 evolutionarily advanced phyla, yet they
 are totally unique in many ways.
Class Asteroidea
Starfish, or Sea Stars are often a pest of
  commercial clam and oyster beds, a single
  Starfish my eat over a dozen oysters or young
  clams every day. The now infamous Crown-
  of-Thorns Starfish (Acanthaster planci) has
  caused serious damage to many coral reefs
  around the world, e.g. Asterias, Pisaster,
  Astropecten.
Adult Sea Star
Sea Star
Common Sea Star
Sea Star
Class Ophiuroidea

Brittle stars, star shaped echinoderms with
  arms distinct from the central disc; tube feet
  absent or reduced to censory organs. There
  are about 2000 species. e.g. Ophioderma
  (brittle star), Gorgonocephalus (Pacific basket
  star)
Giant Green Brittle Star
Giant Brittle Star




 Ophiocomina nigra
Basket Star




Basket Star (Gorgonocephalus
Caputomedusae)
Class Echinoidea

Sea urchins, heart urchins, and sand dollars.
  Echinoderms with a rigid test of focused
  skeletal plates. Body covered with movable
  spines. Five rows of the tube feet (bearing
  sucker) around the test. About 950 species.
Sea Urchin
Sea Urchins
Heart Urchin




The common heart urchin
Sand Dollar
Sand dollar




A sand dollar digging into the sand on the Playa Novillero
beach at low tide on the pacific coast of Mexico
Class Crinoidea


Sea Lilies, basket stars. Flower like echinoderms
  with a central calyx and five (or multiples of
  five) branching arms. Some species attach to
  the sea bottom by a stalk. About 625 species.
  e.g. Cerocrinus (crinoid).
Class Crinoidea




   Sea Lilies
Class Crinoidea




   Basket star
Class Holothuroidea

Sea Cucumbers. Non sessile soft bodied
  animals having a flexible body wall with
  many tiny, embeded calcareous ossicles; no
  spines or arms. Body elongated in the oral-
  aboral axis to a cucumber pickle like form.
  About 1200 species. e.g. Thyone, cucumaria.
Class Holothuroidea




   Sea Cucumber
Class Holothuroidea




   Sea cucumber
Biology

The body wall of echinoderms consists of three
  layers. The outer layer, called the
  epidermis, is only a single layer of cells which
  covers the entire animal including its various
  spines. The third layer is also a single layer of
  cells the main difference being that these
  cells are ciliated. This layer encloses the the
  animal's coelom separating the animals guts
  from its skin. It is called the 'coelomic lining'
Echinodermata


The middle layer is much thicker and is
 called the dermis. It is composed of
 connective tissue and contains the
 exoskeleton
Reproduction and life cycle


Echinoderms are fairly advanced invertebrates.
  This is evident in their embryology, which is
  similar to that of the vertebrates. Most
  species of echinoderms are diecious,
  meaning there are separate male and female
  individuals.
Reproduction and life cycle


Although reproduction is usually sexual,
  involving   fertilization  of    eggs    by
  spermatozoa,       several    species    of
  echinoderms, such as sea stars and sea
  cucumbers, can also reproduce asexually.
Reproduction and life cycle


Asexual reproduction in echinoderms
 usually involves the division of the body
 into two or more parts and the
 reproduction of missing body parts.
Reproduction and life cycle


Successful fission and regeneration require a
  body wall that can be torn and an ability to
  seal      resultant    wounds.     Successful
  regeneration also requires that certain body
  parts be present in the lost pieces. For
  example, many sea stars can regenerate a
  lost portion only if some part of the central
  disk is present.
Sexual reproduction
Sexual reproduction involves the external
  fertilization of eggs by spermatozoa. The
  fertilized eggs develop into planktonic
  larvae. The larvae typically go through
  two stages, called bipinnaria and
  brachiolaria.
Sexual reproduction

They are bilaterally symmetrical and have
  bands of cilia used in swimming and feeding.
  As the larvae gradually metamorphose into
  adults, a complex reorganization and
  degeneration of internal organs occurs.
Sexual reproduction


The left side of the larva becomes the oral
 surface of the adult, which faces
 down, and the right side becomes the
 aboral surface, which faces up. The
 larvae settle to the sea floor and adopt
 their distinctive adult radial symmetry.
Classification

1) Class: Asteroidea--Starfish or Sea Stars (Six-
  rayed Starfish--Leptasterias hexactis)--sea
  stars have fairly developed senses of
  smell, touch, and taste. They also can
  respond to the presence of light. They
  normally eat small prey whole, but they have
  to extrude their stomachs to digest larger
  prey outside their bodies.
The common starfish
The common Starfish
(2) Class: Ophiuroidea--Brittle Stars (Daisy
  Brittle     Star--Ophiopholis        aculeata)
  Another picture of a Brittle Star -found in all
  oceans (but mainly in the tropics). The group
  includes about 2000 species, varying in color.
  They eat decaying matter and microscopic
  organisms that are found on soft muddy
                    bottoms.
(3) Class: Echinoidea- Sea Urchins-they
  locomote using short to long, movable
  spines. Between their spines are small,
  pincerlike organs called pedicellariae which
  they use to clean and defend themselves. The
  pedicellariae also contain a powerful toxin.
Phylum Chordata

All chordates have a dorsal hollow
nerve tube, a notochord, and
pharyngeal gill slits. All vertebrates
(members of a subphylum of chordata)
have a backbone (spinal column) and a
closed circulatory system.
All chordates have the following characteristics
          at some point in their lives :


1. The notochord is an elongate, rod-like,
  skeletal structure dorsal to the gut tube
  and ventral to the nerve cord. The
  notochord should not be confused with
  the backbone or vertebral column of
  most adult vertebrates
The notochord appears early in
 embryogeny and plays an important
 role in promoting or organizing the
 embryonic development of nearby
 structures. In most adult chordates the
 notochord disappears or becomes highly
 modified
The nerve cord of chordates develops dorsally
in the body as a hollow tube above the
notochord. In most species it differentiates in
embryogeny into the brain anteriorly and
spinal cord that runs through the trunk and
tail. Together the brain and spinal cord are
the central nervous system to which
peripheral sensory and motor nerves
connect.
The visceral (also called pharyngeal or gill)
 clefts and arches are located in the
 pharyngeal part of the digestive tract
 behind the oral cavity and anterior to
 the esophagus. The ventral wall of the
 pharynx which produces mucus to
 gather food particles.
Chordates are well represented in marine,
 freshwater and terrestrial habitats from
 the Equator to the high northern and
 southern latitudes. The oldest fossil
 chordates are of Cambrian age
The smallest chordates (e.g. some of the
 tunicates and gobioid fishes) are mature
 at a length of about 1 cm, whereas the
 largest animals that have ever existed
 are chordates: some sauropod dinosaurs
 reached more than 20 m and living blue
 whales grow to about 30 m.
• Classification:
• Kingdom: Animalia
• Phylum: Chordata
  The Phylum Chordata contains the following
  subgroups:
  – Subphylum: Tunicata (tunicates)
  – Subphylum: Cephalochordata (lancelets)
  – Subphylum: Vertebrata (vertebrates)
Classification
Subphylum Tunicata (Tunicates or Sea
  squirts)
Animals with a well developed notochord
  and dorsal nerve cord in the free-
  swimming larva; specializes adults;
  sessile or planktonic, and lacking a
  notochord and dorsal nerve cord.
e.g. Molgula (sea grape)
Sea Squirt (Polycarpa), Tunicates
Sea Squirts (Tunicates)
Sub phylum Cephalochordata (Lancelets)
Elongate, fishlike chordates with a
  persistent notochord and dorsal nerve
  cord.
e.g. Branchio-stoma (Amphioxus).
Cephalochordata (lancelts)
Subphylum Vertebrata (Vertebrates)



Chordates with
a backbone
skull
brain
and kidneys.
Chordates
Class Agnatha: Members of the class Agnatha
  are jawless fish. Examples include lampreys
  and hag
Members of the Class Chondrichthyes have
  skeletons made of cartilage, placoid scales,
  and lack gill covers. Examples include sharks
  and rays. fish.
Classification of vertebrates

                    Vertebrates




Fish   Amphibians      Reptiles   Birds   Mammals




                                                    Next
Fish
       (Live in water)                  • Lay eggs in water
                                        • Cold - blooded

                                  Fin




Streamlined
body

                                                 Gill



Back
                   Slimy scales                               !   More...
Characteristic of fish
Fish are aquatic vertebrates that have
vertebral column called spine. A classic fish
is a torpedo shaped. The fish contains head
containing a brain and sensory organs, a
trunk with a muscular wall surrounding a
cavity with the internal organs and a
muscular post-anal tail. The following are
the general characteristic that all the fish
species posses:
Amphibians
  (Live both on land and in water)

 Breathe                         Wet, slimy skins
 with                            and no scales
 lung




                                    • Lay eggs in water
                                    • Cold - blooded


                    Four limbs
Back
Amphibians are cold-blooded animals,
meaning they do not have a constant
body temperature but instead take on
the temperature of their environment.
They have moist, scaleless skin that
absorbs water and oxygen, but that
also makes them vulnerable to
dehydration (loss of bodily fluids).
Reptiles
                            Breathe with lung




                           • Lay eggs on land
                           • Cold - blooded
         Hard dry scales



Back
Reptiles are cold-blooded animals with
scales covering their skin. Most of them
are tetrapods, with four legs or leg-like
appendages. It is believed that reptiles
started evolving around 330 million years
ago and developed many abilities. They
are considered as the first animals on
land with the ability to live and multiply
on land.
Birds
                           Breathe with lung




                          Beak




                             • Lay eggs on land
                             • Warm - blooded

       Feathers   Wings



Back                                              !   More...
Birds are vertebrates, which means
that they are among those animals
that posess a backbone. They range
in size from the minute Cuban Bee
Hummingbird       (Calypte    helena)
(length 8cm/3.5inch) to the grand
Ostrich (Struthio camelus) length
upto     9   ft.2inch.    Birds   are
endothermic
Hummingbird
Mammals
                             Hair


                              Breathe with lung




                             • Embryo is developed
                               inside mother’s body
                             ( viviparous)

                             • Warm - blooded


            Mammary glands

Back                                                  !   More...
BAT            DUCK     TOAD




      TURTLE          SHARK
Mammal Characteristics
All mammals are warm blooded.
Most young are born alive.
They have hair or fur on their bodies.
Every mammal is a vertebrate.
All mammals have lungs to breathe
air.
Mammals feed milk to their babies.
Bat, duck, toad, turtle & shark




         With wings                            Without wings




With                  Without            With scale          Without scale
feathers              feather


                                                             Amphibians

 Birds                Mammals      With fins      Without
                                                  fin


                                      fish        reptiles


  Back                                                                    End

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Kingdom animalia

  • 1. Kingdom Animalia 3 BFT 1023 Chapter 9 By Dr. Md. Shafiqur Rahman Faculty of Agro Industry and Natural resources UMK
  • 2. Characteristics of Echinodermata 1)Possess 5-rayed symmetry, mostly radial, sometimes bilateral. 2)Body has more than two cell layers, tissues and organs. 3)Body cavity a true coelom. 4)Most possesses a through gut with an anus. 5)Body shape highly variable, but with no head. 6)Nervous system includes a circum- oesophageal ring. 7)Has a poorly defined open circulatory system.
  • 3. Echinodermata Echinoderms are characterized by radial symmetry, several arms (5 or more, mostly grouped 2 left - 1 middle - 2 right) radiating from a central body (= pentamerous). The body actually consists of five equal segments, each containing a duplicate set of various internal organs.
  • 4. Echinodermata They have no heart, brain, nor eyes, but some brittle stars seem to have light sensitive parts on their arms. Their mouth is situated on the underside and their anus on top (except feather stars, sea cucumbers and some urchins).
  • 5. Echinodermata Echinoderms have tentacle-like structures called tube feet with suction pads situated at their extremities. These tube feet are hydraulically controlled by a remarkable vascular system.
  • 6. Echinodermata This system supplies water through canals of small muscular tubes to the tube feet. As the tube feet press against a moving object, water is withdrawn from them, resulting in a suction effect. When water returns to the canals, suction is released. The resulting locomotion is generally very slow.
  • 7. Ecology and range of Echinoderms Echinoderms are exclusively marine. They occur in various habitats from the intertidal zone down to the bottom of the deep sea trenches and from sand to rubble to coral reefs and in cold and tropical seas.
  • 8. Behavior of Echinoderms Some echinoderms are carnivorous (for example starfish) others are detritus foragers (for example some sea cucumbers) or planktonic feeders (for example basket stars).
  • 9. Echinodermata 8)Possesses a water vascular system, which hydraulically operates the tube feet or feeding tentacles. 9)Without excretory organs. 10)Normally possesses a sub epidermal system of calcareous plates 11)Reproduction normally sexual and gonochoristic. 12)Feeds on fine particles in the water, detritus or other animals. 13)All live marine environments.
  • 10. Echinodermata The Echinodermata are Spiny-skinned animals such as Feather Stars, Starfish, Sea Urchins, Brittle Stars, Sea Cucumbers, Sand Dollars and Sea Lilies.
  • 11. Echinodermata They are one of the best known and most loved groups of invertebrates. They are popular as symbols because of their unique shapes and beautiful colours. They are also one of the most evolutionarily advanced phyla, yet they are totally unique in many ways.
  • 12. Class Asteroidea Starfish, or Sea Stars are often a pest of commercial clam and oyster beds, a single Starfish my eat over a dozen oysters or young clams every day. The now infamous Crown- of-Thorns Starfish (Acanthaster planci) has caused serious damage to many coral reefs around the world, e.g. Asterias, Pisaster, Astropecten.
  • 17. Class Ophiuroidea Brittle stars, star shaped echinoderms with arms distinct from the central disc; tube feet absent or reduced to censory organs. There are about 2000 species. e.g. Ophioderma (brittle star), Gorgonocephalus (Pacific basket star)
  • 19. Giant Brittle Star Ophiocomina nigra
  • 20. Basket Star Basket Star (Gorgonocephalus Caputomedusae)
  • 21. Class Echinoidea Sea urchins, heart urchins, and sand dollars. Echinoderms with a rigid test of focused skeletal plates. Body covered with movable spines. Five rows of the tube feet (bearing sucker) around the test. About 950 species.
  • 24. Heart Urchin The common heart urchin
  • 26. Sand dollar A sand dollar digging into the sand on the Playa Novillero beach at low tide on the pacific coast of Mexico
  • 27. Class Crinoidea Sea Lilies, basket stars. Flower like echinoderms with a central calyx and five (or multiples of five) branching arms. Some species attach to the sea bottom by a stalk. About 625 species. e.g. Cerocrinus (crinoid).
  • 28. Class Crinoidea Sea Lilies
  • 29. Class Crinoidea Basket star
  • 30. Class Holothuroidea Sea Cucumbers. Non sessile soft bodied animals having a flexible body wall with many tiny, embeded calcareous ossicles; no spines or arms. Body elongated in the oral- aboral axis to a cucumber pickle like form. About 1200 species. e.g. Thyone, cucumaria.
  • 31. Class Holothuroidea Sea Cucumber
  • 32. Class Holothuroidea Sea cucumber
  • 33. Biology The body wall of echinoderms consists of three layers. The outer layer, called the epidermis, is only a single layer of cells which covers the entire animal including its various spines. The third layer is also a single layer of cells the main difference being that these cells are ciliated. This layer encloses the the animal's coelom separating the animals guts from its skin. It is called the 'coelomic lining'
  • 34. Echinodermata The middle layer is much thicker and is called the dermis. It is composed of connective tissue and contains the exoskeleton
  • 35. Reproduction and life cycle Echinoderms are fairly advanced invertebrates. This is evident in their embryology, which is similar to that of the vertebrates. Most species of echinoderms are diecious, meaning there are separate male and female individuals.
  • 36. Reproduction and life cycle Although reproduction is usually sexual, involving fertilization of eggs by spermatozoa, several species of echinoderms, such as sea stars and sea cucumbers, can also reproduce asexually.
  • 37. Reproduction and life cycle Asexual reproduction in echinoderms usually involves the division of the body into two or more parts and the reproduction of missing body parts.
  • 38. Reproduction and life cycle Successful fission and regeneration require a body wall that can be torn and an ability to seal resultant wounds. Successful regeneration also requires that certain body parts be present in the lost pieces. For example, many sea stars can regenerate a lost portion only if some part of the central disk is present.
  • 39. Sexual reproduction Sexual reproduction involves the external fertilization of eggs by spermatozoa. The fertilized eggs develop into planktonic larvae. The larvae typically go through two stages, called bipinnaria and brachiolaria.
  • 40. Sexual reproduction They are bilaterally symmetrical and have bands of cilia used in swimming and feeding. As the larvae gradually metamorphose into adults, a complex reorganization and degeneration of internal organs occurs.
  • 41. Sexual reproduction The left side of the larva becomes the oral surface of the adult, which faces down, and the right side becomes the aboral surface, which faces up. The larvae settle to the sea floor and adopt their distinctive adult radial symmetry.
  • 42. Classification 1) Class: Asteroidea--Starfish or Sea Stars (Six- rayed Starfish--Leptasterias hexactis)--sea stars have fairly developed senses of smell, touch, and taste. They also can respond to the presence of light. They normally eat small prey whole, but they have to extrude their stomachs to digest larger prey outside their bodies.
  • 45. (2) Class: Ophiuroidea--Brittle Stars (Daisy Brittle Star--Ophiopholis aculeata) Another picture of a Brittle Star -found in all oceans (but mainly in the tropics). The group includes about 2000 species, varying in color. They eat decaying matter and microscopic organisms that are found on soft muddy bottoms.
  • 46. (3) Class: Echinoidea- Sea Urchins-they locomote using short to long, movable spines. Between their spines are small, pincerlike organs called pedicellariae which they use to clean and defend themselves. The pedicellariae also contain a powerful toxin.
  • 47. Phylum Chordata All chordates have a dorsal hollow nerve tube, a notochord, and pharyngeal gill slits. All vertebrates (members of a subphylum of chordata) have a backbone (spinal column) and a closed circulatory system.
  • 48. All chordates have the following characteristics at some point in their lives : 1. The notochord is an elongate, rod-like, skeletal structure dorsal to the gut tube and ventral to the nerve cord. The notochord should not be confused with the backbone or vertebral column of most adult vertebrates
  • 49. The notochord appears early in embryogeny and plays an important role in promoting or organizing the embryonic development of nearby structures. In most adult chordates the notochord disappears or becomes highly modified
  • 50. The nerve cord of chordates develops dorsally in the body as a hollow tube above the notochord. In most species it differentiates in embryogeny into the brain anteriorly and spinal cord that runs through the trunk and tail. Together the brain and spinal cord are the central nervous system to which peripheral sensory and motor nerves connect.
  • 51. The visceral (also called pharyngeal or gill) clefts and arches are located in the pharyngeal part of the digestive tract behind the oral cavity and anterior to the esophagus. The ventral wall of the pharynx which produces mucus to gather food particles.
  • 52. Chordates are well represented in marine, freshwater and terrestrial habitats from the Equator to the high northern and southern latitudes. The oldest fossil chordates are of Cambrian age
  • 53. The smallest chordates (e.g. some of the tunicates and gobioid fishes) are mature at a length of about 1 cm, whereas the largest animals that have ever existed are chordates: some sauropod dinosaurs reached more than 20 m and living blue whales grow to about 30 m.
  • 54. • Classification: • Kingdom: Animalia • Phylum: Chordata The Phylum Chordata contains the following subgroups: – Subphylum: Tunicata (tunicates) – Subphylum: Cephalochordata (lancelets) – Subphylum: Vertebrata (vertebrates)
  • 55. Classification Subphylum Tunicata (Tunicates or Sea squirts) Animals with a well developed notochord and dorsal nerve cord in the free- swimming larva; specializes adults; sessile or planktonic, and lacking a notochord and dorsal nerve cord. e.g. Molgula (sea grape)
  • 58. Sub phylum Cephalochordata (Lancelets) Elongate, fishlike chordates with a persistent notochord and dorsal nerve cord. e.g. Branchio-stoma (Amphioxus).
  • 60. Subphylum Vertebrata (Vertebrates) Chordates with a backbone skull brain and kidneys.
  • 62. Class Agnatha: Members of the class Agnatha are jawless fish. Examples include lampreys and hag Members of the Class Chondrichthyes have skeletons made of cartilage, placoid scales, and lack gill covers. Examples include sharks and rays. fish.
  • 63. Classification of vertebrates Vertebrates Fish Amphibians Reptiles Birds Mammals Next
  • 64. Fish (Live in water) • Lay eggs in water • Cold - blooded Fin Streamlined body Gill Back Slimy scales ! More...
  • 65. Characteristic of fish Fish are aquatic vertebrates that have vertebral column called spine. A classic fish is a torpedo shaped. The fish contains head containing a brain and sensory organs, a trunk with a muscular wall surrounding a cavity with the internal organs and a muscular post-anal tail. The following are the general characteristic that all the fish species posses:
  • 66. Amphibians (Live both on land and in water) Breathe Wet, slimy skins with and no scales lung • Lay eggs in water • Cold - blooded Four limbs Back
  • 67. Amphibians are cold-blooded animals, meaning they do not have a constant body temperature but instead take on the temperature of their environment. They have moist, scaleless skin that absorbs water and oxygen, but that also makes them vulnerable to dehydration (loss of bodily fluids).
  • 68. Reptiles Breathe with lung • Lay eggs on land • Cold - blooded Hard dry scales Back
  • 69. Reptiles are cold-blooded animals with scales covering their skin. Most of them are tetrapods, with four legs or leg-like appendages. It is believed that reptiles started evolving around 330 million years ago and developed many abilities. They are considered as the first animals on land with the ability to live and multiply on land.
  • 70. Birds Breathe with lung Beak • Lay eggs on land • Warm - blooded Feathers Wings Back ! More...
  • 71. Birds are vertebrates, which means that they are among those animals that posess a backbone. They range in size from the minute Cuban Bee Hummingbird (Calypte helena) (length 8cm/3.5inch) to the grand Ostrich (Struthio camelus) length upto 9 ft.2inch. Birds are endothermic
  • 73. Mammals Hair Breathe with lung • Embryo is developed inside mother’s body ( viviparous) • Warm - blooded Mammary glands Back ! More...
  • 74. BAT DUCK TOAD TURTLE SHARK
  • 75. Mammal Characteristics All mammals are warm blooded. Most young are born alive. They have hair or fur on their bodies. Every mammal is a vertebrate. All mammals have lungs to breathe air. Mammals feed milk to their babies.
  • 76. Bat, duck, toad, turtle & shark With wings Without wings With Without With scale Without scale feathers feather Amphibians Birds Mammals With fins Without fin fish reptiles Back End