Yearly Archive October 10, 2006

Ecology & Environment

Ecology is a science to study organisms living in an environment and interacting with it and among themselves. It gives importance to both living and non-living components that affect each other.

The following topics are covered in this section.

Click on the title to open. 

Animal Diversity (Non-Chordata)

THE NON-CHORDATES

THE NON-CHORDATES

Non-chordates are animals without a notochord. They are the most abundant and diversified of all animals living or extinct. That makes their study the most fascinating one. 

The following chapters appear in this section. Click on the title to open.

KNOW THESE FACTS (Non-Chordata)

 Echinodermata

Echinoderms can voluntarily and rapidly change the stiffness of their connective tissue, which is called mutable connective tissue. Their bodies can become stone hard or in holothurians it can become so soft that it may flow between fingers.

If attacked by a predator, brittle stars can break their arms at will and grow them again later. This is called Autotomy.

Brittle stars do not have intestine, anus, dermal branchiae, pedicellariae and ambulacral grooves.

Echinoderms have no brain or ganglia, and nerves are made of diffused neurons.

Sea urchins can harden or soften their spines at will.

Starfishes are slowest of predators that take 4-8 hours to kill and consume a mollusc prey.

Aristotle’s Lantern is actually a set of masticatory jaws of sea urchins for feeding on algae from rocks.

Pelagothuria is a pelagic holothurian echinoderm that can swim like a jelly fish with the help of webbed papillae.

 Mollusca

Mollusca means soft bodied, although it includes animals having hard shell.

Neopilina galatheae, collected from 3500 m depth is a connecting link between Annelida and Mollusca.

Brachystomia is a tiny shelled snail that sucks blood of clams.

Conus is a predatory snail that lures a fish by a bait (its worm-like modified proboscis) and stings fish’s tongue when it tries to eat the bait. The paralysed fish is then swallowed by the snail.

Foot of sea butterflies (Pteropods) is modified into wing-like parapodia which are used for active swimming.

Giant clam (Tridacna maxima), found in the coral reefs of Indo-pacific region, is 1.5 m long and weighs 225 kg.

Entovalva is the only parasitic bivalve mollusc that lives inside the gut of sea cucumbers. Entochoncha is a worm-like parasitic gastropod that also lives in the body cavity of sea cucumbers.

Glochidium larva of bivalves is parasitic on the gills of fishes.

Scallops (Pecten) can swim by using its valves as wings.

Teredo and Bankia are wood-boring bivalves that damage boats.

Cephalopods have 3rd or 4th arm hectocotylized (or modified spoon-shaped) which is used to introduce sperms into the mantle cavity of female.

Squids, cuttle fishes and Octopus possess strong beak-like jaws often laced with poisonous saliva that makes them fierce predators of the sea.

Giant squids (Architeuthis; Mesonychoteuthes) of the Pacific are the largest invertebrates which are over 50 ft long and weigh more than 500 kg. They live at a depth of 2-3 kilometers in pacific ocean.

Giant Octopus (Octopus dofleini), which inhabits pacific ocean, has a arm-span of ten meters.

Cephalopods swim by a faster jet propulsion method.

Cephalopods’ brain is more advanced than any other invertebrates that makes octopus the most intelligent invertebrate that can carry out complex tasks.

Cephalopod eyes are strikingly similar to vertebrate eyes but have evolved independently, which a strange coincidence.

Argonauta is a cousin of octopus but secretes an external shell around the body.

Largest eye in the animal kingdom, having a diameter of 12 inches, belongs to the giant squid (Mesonychoteuthis). Its lens is the size of a tennis ball.

Snails are born bilaterally symmetrical but within 15 minutes they become spirally coiled by torsion.

Pearl oysters secrete pearl around any object that is trapped in their mantle cavity and causes irritation.

Arthropoda

Arthropods are the most successful of all animals on earth. They also make more that 80% of animal species.

Japaneses spider crab (Macrocheira kaempferi) is the largest living arthropod. Its legs are 5-6 feet long.

Trilobites were the earliest arthropods which have all become extinct. Over 4000 species of fossil trilobites are known today.

More than 1,000 species of sea spiders (Pycnogonida) live up to 6,000 m depth and feed on cnidarians and worms.

Giant water scorpions (Eurypterida) grew up to 3 meter length and were the top predators of the Paleozoic era.

Giant centipedes (Scolopendra) can attain a length of 30 cm and their bite can be fatal to humans.

Tracheal system of insects is a unique respiratory system that conveys oxygen directly to the muscles where it is needed. Therefore, there is no need of respiratory pigment in the blood of insects.

Compound eyes are unique innovation of arthropods. The eye is made of thousands of ommatidia, each of which functions independently. Compound eye is superior because it gives 360 degrees of visual field, a much sharper vision and more depth of field at higher magnification, and detects movement of predators no matter how fast it is.

Insects are the most abundant and most successful of all creatures on earth; they make three-fourth of all animal species and also the most species that survived successive mass extinctions.

Male and female scorpions have a honeymoon dance called “Promenade a deux”, after which female kills and devours the male. Similar phenomenon is seen among spiders, in which male is much smaller than the female.

Termites are the earliest social animals, which developed a well organised social system and communication, with division of labour among castes for specific duties. Other insects having advanced social life are ants, honey bees and wasps.

ANNELIDA

Lobatocerebrum and Jennaria (Rhynchocoela) are marine worms that are intermdediate between flatworms and annelida.

Washington giant earthworm (Driloleirus americanus) is one meter long; the Australian giant earthworm (Megascolides australis) is 3 meter long and the South African Microchaetus rappi is 20 feet long earthworm.

Clamworms feed by everting out their entire pharynx which has jaws at the bottom.

Earthworms burrow in mud by producing hydraulic skeleton by pumping coelomic fluid that makes the anterior region stone hard for burrowing.

Amazon leech (Haementaria) is 30 cm long. Leeches do not have true blood vascular system.

Leech has ten eyes but cannot see properly and finds the host by smell.

Some annelids are parasitic on other animals, such as Ichthyotomus is a parasite of fishes and Histriobdella is a parasite in the gill chamber of crustaceans.

HELMINTHS

Each gravid segment of tape worm carries about one hundred thousand eggs and hundreds of these proglottids are produced each day.

Hydated cyst of the dog tapeworm (Echinococcus) can grow to the size of a football in human tissues and it carries poisonous fluid.

Round worms (Nematodes) grow by enlargement of cells and not by multiplication of cells. Mitosis stops in nematodes after they hatch from eggs.

A single Ascaris can lay about 200,000 eggs daily and about 30 million in its lifetime.

Roundworm and hookworm larvae take a tour of all body organs before they reach intestine to become adult parasites.

COELENTERATA

Palytoxin obtained from the Hawaiian cnidarian, Palythoa toxica is more toxic than batrachotoxin of dart frog and is used to smear arrow tips.

Sea wasps (Cubozoa) are like small jelly fishes but swim very fast and their sting can kill a man in 15 minutes.

Hydra cannot digest starch.

Jellyfishes are named so because of the presence of enormous jelly-like mesogloea in their bodies.

The north Atlantic sea blubber, Cyanea capillata, is the largest jelly fish with a diameter of two metres.

Corals cannot grow beyond a depth of 50 metres in the sea.

The great barrier reef of Australia is over 1200 miles long and 70 miles wide.

Most of the coral reefs are in the Indo-Pacific region.

Sponges possess such extraordinary power of regeneration that even if they are crushed, mashed and strained through a cloth, the cells still rearrange themselves to form a complete sponge.

In asexually reproducing species, offspring always have more deleterious mutations than the parents. This is called Muller’s Ratchet.

Systematics & Taxonomy

Systematics is the study of the diversity of animals and plants and their evolutionary relationships. Taxonomy deals with the classification of organisms, giving them scientific names and categorizing them on scientific basis.

The following chapters are included in this category. Click on the title to open.

Geographical Distribution of Animals

Zoogeographyis the study of distribution of animals and plants on our planet, which occur in different regions of the world in a distinct pattern. The distribution of some animal species is so peculiar that it is difficult to explain their occurrence in a particular region. Zoogeography attempts to understand the complexities as well as the simplicity in the distribution of animals in the light of evolutionary and environmental influences.

The following chapters are given in this section. Click on the title to open.

Books on Zoogeography

Factors affecting dispersal

Means of dispersal

Theories of distribution 

The theory of Continental Drift 

Zoogeographical regions of the world 

Types of distribution

Wallace’s Line, Weber’s Line and Wallacea

Insular fauna

Fauna of African Region

Fauna of Australian Region

 Fauna of Nearctic Region

Fauna of Neotropical Region

Fauna of Palaearctic Region

Fauna of Oriental Region

American Marsupials

Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy

Comparative Anatomy is to make a comparative study of the anatomy of an organ in different groups of vertebrates and try to derive the evolutionary significance from it, and to understand as to why an organ evolved the way it is present now. Genetic and environmental forces are responsible for the development of an organ, on which then natural selection operates to determine its survival or elimination. The following chapters are given here.

Click on the title to open.

Know these facts

*All mammals have 7 cervical vertebrae except 6 in manatee, 8 in ant bear (Tamandua) and 9 in sloth (Bradypus).

*Elephants can hear infrasonic sounds of 14 hertz. from hundreds of km and whales can hear ultrasonic sounds of 123,000 hertz from thousands of km.

*Each second brain receives 100 billion impulses and fires 5000 commands but we are conscious of one millionth activity of our brain.

*Human brain loses about 100,000 neurons each day but the loss is insignificant because of the presence of billions of neurons in brain.

*Snakes auditory lobes are highly enlarged to hear faint sounds received through ground as they possess no external ear.

* Other than mammals, in all vertebrates spinal cord has more control over body functions than the brain.

*In humans brain is marvelously packed as 1800 sq cm of brain surface area is packed in only 15% of skull space.

*Nerve impulse travels in our body @ 400 km per hour.

*Crab eating frog (Rana cancerivora) is the only amphibian that can survive in the intertidal marine water.

*Monotremes and marsupials do not possess a prostate gland.

*In sharks and caecilian kidney is called opisthonephros because it extends up to the posterior end of the body.

*Birds have only the left ovary and oviduct.

*Systolic blood pressure decreases in arteries from 130 mmHg in systemic arch, 30 mmHg in arterioles, 20 mmHg in capillaries, 12 mmHg in venules, 5 mmHg in smaller veins and zero mmHg in larger veins.

*Aortic blood pressure in giraffe is 260/160 to supply brain sitting on top of the long neck, but in brain it is only 120/70.

*Largest RBCs (75 microns) are found in the urodele, Amphiuma, and the smallest (2.5 microns) in the musk deer.

*Whales store air in huge nasal chambers and not in lungs.

*Elephant’s trunk has 40,000 muscles.

*No animal breathes free air. Oxygen from air must diffuse through fluid to the blood and hence a water film is necessary over the respiratory surface in all animals.

*Sharks jaws are loosely attached to the skull, so that when shark bites its jaws come out of the oral cavity to seize prey.

*Plethodont salamanders possess a tongue that is three-fourth the length of the body.

*Tongue of an elephant weighs 12 kg while that of a whale weighs 1500 kg and 50 persons can stand on it.

*Incisors of rodents and elephants continue to grow throughout life. A single tusk of an African elephant weighs about 100 kg.

*In hind gut fermenters such as horses, elephants and rabbits, large amount of food eaten goes undigested and hence they must eat large quantities to obtain enough nutrients.

*Gastric juices in snake’s stomach are so strong that they dissolve even the bones of the swallowed prey.

*In humans intestine is 28 feet long whereas in cow it is 165 feet long.

*Batrachotoxin and bufotoxin are such potent poisons secreted by frogs and toads that only 200 microgram can kill a man.

*Penguins breed in Antarctic and hatch their eggs at minus 50 degrees.

*Density of sweat glands is highest in the skin of Indians (738/sq cm) followed by Negros (709/sq cm), while in Europeans it is only 550/sq cm.

*The American pronghorn(Antilocapra americana) is the only antelope that sheds its horn annually.

*Antlers are found only in male deer and are shed after breeding season is over. Reindeers are the only deers that possess permanent antlers in both males and females.

In echidna and duckbilled platypus both male and female possess active mammary glands and feed young babies.

Sharks retain 100 times more urea in blood as compared to mammals. Their organs cannot function without such a high amount of urea in body.

Humans can sweat away as much as 3 litres of water per hour in summer. A person can collapse if loss of body fluid is 10% of body weight.

Biological Instruments And Techniques

A variety of instruments and techniques are used in biological studies, some of them are quite complex in nature. Scientific progress is directly related to the advancement in techniques and modern instruments. A knowledge of their working principles is necessary to make optimal use of them. The following instruments are described here.

Click on the title to open.

Spectrophotometer

Gel Electrophoresis

PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)

ELISA

Blotting techniques

FISH (Fluorescent in situ Hybridization)

Chromosome painting

Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)

Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)

Microtomy

My Blog

  MY BLOG  

   (Dr. Chandra)  

            The fact that is least realised by the students is that competitive examinations are considerably different from the house examinations of colleges and universities, where they manage to score heavily but fail to do so in the competitives. The primary reason for this happens to be that they continue with the same approach that they have been accustomed to during their academic carrier. The methods of preparation, making of notes, memorising material, writing of answers and handling the diagrams, essentially remains the same which is not adequate. A different approach is therefore needed to do well in these examinations.