BIO 370 — Vertebrate Zoology
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Vertebrate Diversity
Invertebrate Chordates

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Phylum Chordata

Characteristics

  • Presence of notochord (internal supporting rod) at some stage in life
  • Pharyngeal gill slits
  • Post-anal tail
  • Segmented muscles
  • Dorsal hollow nerve cord

Stem Chordates — Extinct Groups

Characteristics

  • Pikaia is superficially similar to Cephalochordates
    • Note segmented muscles, well-developed caudal fin
    • Sensory tentacles
    • Formerly thought to be a cephalochordate, Pikaia now thought to be a stem-chordate
  • Ausia is usually interpreted as a tunicate (but could be a sponge or coral)
    • If so, it would be the only chordate fossil known from the Ediacaran
    • It stood about 5 cm tall
Pikaia
Pikaia gracilens model; Cambrian (Burgess Shale)

Pikaia
Pikaia gracilens fossil cast; Cambrian Period, 505 mya; Burgess Shale, BC, Canada
Pikaia
Model of Ausia fenestrata, a possible early tunicate; Ediacaran Period, 570-553 Ma; Namibia

Possible Chordates — Vetulicolia

Characteristics

  • Known only from the Cambrian Period
  • Relationships uncertain: may be stem-tunicates, basal chordates, non-chordate deuterostomes or even arthropod relatives
  • Large bulbous anterior with mouth, possible gill openings
  • Posterior tail with segmented muscles?
vetulicolian models
Models of three vetulicolians, from left to right: Vetulicola, Xidazoon, and Skeemella (Skeemella is from the Wheeler Shale of Utah [middle Cambrian], while the other 2 are from the Cheng Jiang fauna of China [early Cambrian]). Cricket for scale (2cm long without legs)

Subphylum Cephalochordata — Lancelets

Characteristics
  • Elongate, laterally flattened, fish-like animals
  • Tail and notochord persist throughout life
  • Presence of tail (caudal) fin
  • Notochord extends anteriorly past nerve cord
  • Muscles segmented into myomeres
  • Burrow in marine sediments
Lancelet Specimen
Lancelet (aka Amphioxus), Branchiostoma lanceolatum, preserved specimen
Lancelet
Lancelet (aka Amphioxus), Branchiostoma lanceolatum, stained whole mount
See also labeled photo.
Lancelet cross section
Lancelet (aka Amphioxus), Branchiostoma lanceolatum, stained cross section from mid-pharynx
See also labeled photo.

Subphylum Urochordata — Tunicates

Characteristics

  • Notochord, dorsal nerve cord, and tail only present in larval stage in most
  • Adults usually soft-bodied sac-like, sessile filter feeders
  • Have 2 prominent openings: siphons
  • A few are pelagic either with (larvaceans) or without tail
Ascidian Larva
Ascidian "Tadpole" Larva, stained whole mount
See also labeled photo.
Mangrove Tunicate
Mangrove Tunicate, Ecteinascidia sp., stained whole mount.
See also labeled photo (2 views shown)
Larvacean
Larvacean, Oikopleura sp.?, stained whole mount.
See also labeled photo
Club-Shaped Ascidian
Club-shaped Ascidians, Euherdmania claviformis; La Jolla, CA.
Tunicates
Tunicate, possibly Pyura sp.
Sea Peach
Sea Peach, Halocynthia aurantium
Stalked Sea Squirt
Stalked Sea Squirt, Styela clava
Pyrosome
Pyrosome colony, Pyrosoma atlanticum, a colonial, pelagic tunicate (preserved specimen)
Social Tunicate
Social Tunicate, Metandrocarpa taylori; La Jolla, CA.
Star Tunicate
Pacific Star Tunicate, Botryllus sp.; a colonial form; La Jolla, CA.
Sea Pork
Sea Pork, Aplidium sp.; a colonial form: each small orange spot is a single individual; La Jolla, CA.
Didemnum
Colonial Tunicate, probably Didemnum sp.; La Jolla, CA.

Subphylum Vertebrata — Stem Vertebrates

Vertebrate Characteristics

  • Brain enclosed in cartilagenous or bony cranium
  • Fewer pharyngeal gill slits (used for respiration instead of feeding)
  • Notorcord supplemented by or replaced with segmented vertebrae in most
  • Larger, more complex brain and sense organs
  • More complex visceral organs
  • Includes fishes (jawless, cartilagenous, and bony), amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals
  • Sometimes alternatively called the Craniata (with Vertebrata excluding the hagfishes)
Haikoulela Fossil
Haikouella lanceolata fossil; Early Cambrian, 520 mya (Yunnan, China); The fish-like shape and segmented muscles are visible in these poorly preserved fossils
Haikoulela & Yunnanozoan model
Models of the most basal craniates, Yunnanozoon lividum (upper left; ≈2cm long) and Haikouella lanceolata (lower right; ≈3 cm long); both Cambrian Period, China
Metaspriggina model
Metaspriggina walcotti model (Middle Cambrian Period, Burgess Shale). It was likely a stem vertebrate, probably more closely related to crown-group vertebrates than Yunnanozoon lividum and Haikouella lanceolata. About 10 cm long.
Myllokunmingia model
Myllokunmingia fengjiaoa model (Early Cambrian Period, China). It is generally considered a true vertebrate (craniate) since it has a cartilagenous cranium (skull). About 3 cm long.
This page last updated 30 December 2021 by Udo M. Savalli ()
Images and text © Udo M. Savalli. All rights reserved.