Basis of Classification

Animals are classified based on:

  • Level of organisation: Cellular, tissue, organ, organ system.
  • Symmetry: Asymmetrical, radial, bilateral.
  • Body cavity: Acoelomate, pseudocoelomate, coelomate.
  • Segmentation: Metameric or non-segmented.
  • Notochord: Present (Chordata) or absent (Non-chordata).

Body Plans

Cell-tissue level: Cells arranged as tissues (Cnidaria). Organ level: Tissues grouped into organs (Platyhelminthes). Organ system level: Organs work in systems (Annelida to Chordata).

Phylum Porifera

  • 'Pore-bearing' (pores = ostia).
  • Aquatic, mostly marine, sessile.
  • Cellular level of organisation, asymmetrical.
  • Body with canal system (water flow for nutrition and respiration).
  • Skeleton of spicules (calcium/silica) or spongin fibres.
  • Examples: Sycon, Spongilla (freshwater), Euspongia (bath sponge).

Phylum Cnidaria (Coelenterata)

  • Aquatic, mostly marine.
  • Radial symmetry, tissue level organisation.
  • Nematocysts (stinging cells) on tentacles for capture and defence.
  • Diploblastic (two germ layers: ectoderm and endoderm).
  • Polymorphism (some exist as polyp and medusa forms).
  • Examples: Hydra, Aurelia (jellyfish), Corals, Obelia.

Phylum Platyhelminthes

  • Flatworms with dorsoventrally flattened body.
  • Bilateral symmetry, triploblastic, acoelomate.
  • Organ level organisation.
  • Many are parasitic, with hooks and suckers.
  • Flame cells for excretion.
  • Examples: Taenia (tapeworm), Fasciola (liver fluke), Planaria.

Phylum Aschelminthes (Nematoda)

  • Roundworms, pseudocoelomate.
  • Bilateral symmetry, triploblastic.
  • Complete digestive tract (mouth and anus).
  • Mostly parasitic, some free-living.
  • Examples: Ascaris (roundworm), Wuchereria (filarial worm), Ancylostoma (hookworm).

Phylum Annelida

  • Segmented worms (metameric segmentation).
  • Bilateral symmetry, triploblastic, coelomate.
  • Closed circulatory system.
  • Nephridia for excretion.
  • Examples: Earthworm (Pheretima), Leech (Hirudinaria), Nereis.

Phylum Arthropoda

  • Largest phylum (over 80% of all known species).
  • Jointed appendages, chitinous exoskeleton.
  • Bilateral symmetry, triploblastic, coelomate.
  • Open circulatory system (blood = haemolymph).
  • Body divided into head, thorax, abdomen (in insects).
  • Examples: Cockroach (Periplaneta), Butterfly, Scorpion, Crab, Millipede.

Important Classes

  • Insecta: 3 body parts, 6 legs, 2 antennae, wings often present.
  • Arachnida: 2 body parts, 4 pairs of legs (Spiders, Scorpions).
  • Crustacea: Mostly aquatic (Crabs, Prawns, Daphnia).

Phylum Mollusca

  • Second largest phylum after Arthropoda.
  • Soft-bodied, muscular foot, visceral mass, mantle (secretes shell).
  • Bilateral symmetry, coelomate.
  • Radula (rasping organ) in mouth.
  • Examples: Pila (snail), Unio (pearl oyster), Octopus, Sepia (cuttlefish).

Phylum Echinodermata

  • Spiny-skinned (endoskeleton of calcareous ossicles).
  • Aquatic, marine, free-living.
  • Radial symmetry (pentaradial in adults).
  • Water vascular system with tube feet for locomotion.
  • Examples: Starfish (Asterias), Sea urchin (Echinus), Sea cucumber, Brittle star.

Phylum Hemichordata

  • Worm-like, with proboscis, collar, trunk.
  • Stomochord (not true notochord).
  • Examples: Balanoglossus.
  • Now considered separate from Chordata by many taxonomists.

Phylum Chordata

Four Key Characteristics

  1. Notochord: Rod-like structure at some stage.
  2. Dorsal hollow nerve cord.
  3. Pharyngeal gill slits at some stage.
  4. Post-anal tail.

Subphyla

Urochordata (Tunicates): Notochord present only in larval tail. Example: Ascidia, Salpa.

Cephalochordata: Notochord extends to head. Example: Branchiostoma (Amphioxus/Lancelet).

Vertebrata: Notochord replaced by vertebral column in adults.

Vertebrata Classes

Cyclostomata: Jawless, scaleless. Examples: Lamprey, Hagfish.

Pisces (Fish): Aquatic, gills, scales, fins.

  • Chondrichthyes (Cartilaginous): Shark, Ray.
  • Osteichthyes (Bony fish): Rohu, Carp, Salmon.

Amphibia: Dual life (water and land), moist skin. Examples: Frog, Salamander.

Reptilia: Dry scaly skin, lay amniotic eggs on land. Examples: Lizard, Snake, Turtle, Crocodile.

Aves (Birds): Feathers, forelimbs as wings, warm-blooded, beak. Examples: Pigeon, Eagle, Sparrow.

Mammalia: Mammary glands, hair, warm-blooded, diaphragm. Examples: Human, Whale, Bat, Elephant.

Comparison Table: Non-Chordates vs Chordates

FeatureNon-ChordatesChordates
NotochordAbsentPresent
Nerve cordVentral, solidDorsal, hollow
Pharyngeal slitsAbsentPresent
Post-anal tailAbsentPresent
HeartDorsalVentral

Worked Examples

Example 1: Which phylum has the largest number of species? Give examples. Solution: Arthropoda (cockroach, butterfly, crab, scorpion). Jointed appendages, exoskeleton, open circulation.

Example 2: Differentiate between cartilaginous and bony fish. Solution: Cartilaginous: skeleton of cartilage, no air bladder. Bony fish: skeleton of bone, air bladder present.

Common Mistakes

  1. Porifera vs Cnidaria: Porifera has canal system, Cnidaria has nematocysts.
  2. Pseudocoelom vs true coelom: Pseudocoelom (Aschelminthes) is not lined by mesoderm. True coelom (Annelida and above) is lined by mesoderm.
  3. Hemichordata vs Chordata: Hemichordata lacks true notochord.
  4. Amphibia vs Reptilia: Amphibians need water for reproduction; reptiles lay amniotic eggs on land.

ISC Exam Focus

  • Theory (70%): Phylum characteristics, chordate features, classification basis.
  • Application (30%): Identifying organisms' phylum, distinguishing features.
  • ISC frequently asks: "Give the characteristic features of ..." and "Differentiate between ...".

Self-Test Questions

Q1: Write four key features of Chordata. Answer: Notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal gill slits, post-anal tail.

Q2: Name the phylum with jointed appendages and give two examples. Answer: Arthropoda. Examples: Cockroach, Butterfly, Crab.

Q3: Differentiate between Pseudocoelom and Coelom. Answer: Pseudocoelom: not fully lined by mesoderm. Coelom: completely lined by mesoderm.

Q4: Give two examples each of Pisces, Amphibia, and Reptilia. Answer: Pisces: Shark, Rohu. Amphibia: Frog, Salamander. Reptilia: Lizard, Snake.

Q5: What are the characteristic features of Mammalia? Answer: Mammary glands, hair, warm-blooded, diaphragm, four-chambered heart.

Q6: Which organisms are called 'Amphibians of the animal kingdom' and why? Answer: Amphibia (frogs). They live in water as larvae and on land as adults.

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