1. Levels of Organisation
Animals show different levels of structural organization:
- Cellular level: Cells are loosely arranged; no true tissues (e.g., Porifera).
- Tissue level: Cells group to form tissues (e.g., Cnidaria).
- Organ level: Tissues form organs with specific functions (e.g., Platyhelminthes).
- Organ system level: Organs form systems for physiological processes (e.g., Annelida onwards).
2. Symmetry
Symmetry is the arrangement of body parts:
- Asymmetrical: No definite shape or plane of symmetry (e.g., Sponges).
- Radial symmetry: Body can be divided into equal halves along multiple planes (e.g., Cnidarians, Echinoderms in adults).
- Bilateral symmetry: Body can be divided into two mirror halves in one plane (e.g., Platyhelminthes to Chordates).
3. Germ Layers (Embryonic Layers)
Animals form different numbers of germ layers during embryogenesis:
- Diploblastic: Two germ layers – ectoderm and endoderm (e.g., Cnidaria).
- Triploblastic: Three germ layers – ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm (e.g., Platyhelminthes to Chordata).
4. Body Cavity (Coelom)
Coelom is the body cavity between the body wall and gut wall:
- Acoelomates: No coelom (e.g., Platyhelminthes).
- Pseudocoelomates: False coelom derived from blastocoel (e.g., Aschelminthes).
- Coelomates: True coelom lined by mesoderm (e.g., Annelida to Chordata).
5. Segmentation
Body division into repeated segments:
- Absent in lower phyla.
- Present in Annelids, Arthropods, and Chordates.
- Segmentation allows greater flexibility and specialization of body parts.
6. Notochord
- A flexible rod-like structure that supports the body in embryonic stages.
- Non-chordates: Lack notochord (Porifera to Echinodermata).
- Chordates: Possess a notochord (at least during embryonic stage).
7. Other Criteria
- Digestive system: Incomplete (one opening) or complete (two openings).
- Circulatory system: Open (blood not enclosed in vessels) or closed.
- Reproduction: Sexual or asexual; internal or external fertilization.
- Habitat and mode of life: Aquatic, terrestrial, parasitic, etc.
Classification of Animal Kingdom
1. Phylum: Porifera (Sponges)
- Aquatic, mostly marine; simplest multicellular animals.
- Body is asymmetrical or radially symmetrical.
- Cellular level of organization; no tissues or organs.
- Body has pores (ostia) for water transport — canal system.
- Skeleton made of spicules or spongin fibers.
- Digestion is intracellular; respiration and excretion by diffusion.
- Examples: Sycon, Spongilla, Euspongia (bath sponge).
2. Phylum: Cnidaria (Coelenterata)
- Aquatic, mostly marine; radially symmetrical.
- Diploblastic with tissue-level organization.
- Body has a central gastrovascular cavity and a single opening (incomplete digestive system).
- Stinging cells (cnidocytes) present on tentacles for defense and prey capture.
- Two body forms: polyp (sessile) and medusa (free-swimming).
- Show alternation of generation (metagenesis).
- Examples: Hydra, Jellyfish (Aurelia), Sea anemone (Adamsia), Obelia.
3. Phylum: Ctenophora (Comb jellies)
- Marine, radially symmetrical, transparent, and gelatinous animals.
- Diploblastic with tissue-level organization.
- Eight rows of ciliated comb plates for locomotion.
- Show bioluminescence (light production).
- Digestion is extracellular and intracellular.
- Reproduction is sexual and hermaphroditic; external fertilization.
- Examples: Pleurobrachia, Ctenoplana.
4. Phylum: Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)
- Mostly parasitic; dorsoventrally flattened, bilaterally symmetrical.
- Triploblastic and acoelomate.
- Organ-level of organization; no segmentation.
- Incomplete digestive system; some lack it.
- Flame cells help in excretion and osmoregulation.
- Mostly hermaphroditic; show high regeneration ability.
- Examples: Planaria, Fasciola (liver fluke), Taenia (tapeworm).
5. Phylum: Aschelminthes (Nematoda or Roundworms)
- Cylindrical, unsegmented, bilaterally symmetrical, pseudocoelomates.
- Triploblastic with organ-system level of organization.
- Complete digestive system (mouth and anus present).
- Body covered with tough cuticle.
- Sexes separate (dioecious); sexual dimorphism present.
- Many are parasitic; others are free-living.
- Examples: Ascaris, Wuchereria (filarial worm), Ancylostoma (hookworm).
6. Phylum: Annelida (Segmented worms)
- Bilaterally symmetrical, triploblastic, coelomates.
- Metameric segmentation (repeated body segments).
- Closed circulatory system.
- Nephridia for excretion and osmoregulation.
- Nervous system is ladder-like.
- Locomotion by setae/parapodia.
- Examples: Earthworm (Pheretima), Leech (Hirudinaria), Nereis.
7. Phylum: Arthropoda
- Largest phylum; jointed legs (arthro = joint, poda = foot).
- Segmented body with exoskeleton made of chitin.
- Open circulatory system; haemocoel present.
- Compound eyes and sensory antennae.
- Respiratory organs: gills, tracheae, or book lungs.
- Sexes separate; high reproductive capability.
- Examples: Insects (Apis), Crab, Prawn, Scorpion, Cockroach.
8. Phylum: Mollusca
- Soft-bodied, unsegmented animals with bilateral symmetry.
- Body has head, foot, and visceral mass.
- Mantle secretes calcium carbonate shell.
- Coelomate with open circulatory system (except octopus).
- Respiration via gills (ctenidia) or lungs (in terrestrial forms).
- Kidney-like organ for excretion (metanephridia).
- Examples: Snail (Pila), Octopus, Unio, Sepia.
9. Phylum: Echinodermata
- Exclusively marine; spiny-skinned animals.
- Adult forms show radial symmetry; larvae are bilaterally symmetrical.
- Endoskeleton made of calcium carbonate.
- Water vascular system for locomotion, feeding, respiration.
- No excretory system; coelomate.
- Regeneration ability present.
- Examples: Starfish (Asterias), Sea urchin, Sea cucumber, Antedon.
10. Phylum: Chordata
- Notochord present at some stage.
- Dorsal, hollow nerve cord; pharyngeal slits; post-anal tail.
- Bilaterally symmetrical, triploblastic, coelomates.
- Closed circulatory system; well-developed systems.
- Subdivided into Protochordata and Vertebrata.
- Vertebrates have a backbone and cranium.
- Examples: Amphioxus, Frog, Fish, Birds, Humans, Reptiles.
Comparative Table of Animal Phyla
Characteristic | Porifera | Cnidaria | Ctenophora | Platyhelminthes | Aschelminthes | Annelida | Arthropoda | Mollusca | Echinodermata | Chordata |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Body Symmetry | Asymmetrical / Radial | Radial | Radial | Bilateral | Bilateral | Bilateral | Bilateral | Bilateral | Radial (adult), Bilateral (larva) | Bilateral |
Germ Layers | Diploblastic | Diploblastic | Diploblastic | Triploblastic | Triploblastic | Triploblastic | Triploblastic | Triploblastic | Triploblastic | Triploblastic |
Body Organisation | Cellular | Tissue | Tissue | Organ | Organ-system | Organ-system | Organ-system | Organ-system | Organ-system | Organ-system |
Coelom | Absent | Absent | Absent | Acoelomate | Pseudocoelomate | Coelomate | Coelomate | Coelomate | Coelomate | Coelomate |
Segmentation | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Present | Present | Absent | Absent | Present in some |
Notochord | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Present |
Digestive System | Absent / Incomplete | Incomplete | Complete | Incomplete | Complete | Complete | Complete | Complete | Complete | Complete |
Circulatory System | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Closed | Open (mostly) | Open (except cephalopods) | Absent | Closed |
Respiratory System | Diffusion | Diffusion | Diffusion | Diffusion | Diffusion | Diffusion / Gills | Gills / Trachea / Book lungs | Gills / Lungs | Tube feet / Diffusion | Gills / Lungs |
Excretory Structures | Absent | Absent | Absent | Flame cells | Renette cells | Nephridia | Malpighian tubules / Green glands | Metanephridia | Absent | Kidneys |
Nervous System | Absent / Simple | Nerve net | Diffused | Ladder-like | Ring + Nerves | Ganglia + Nerve cord | Brain + Nerves | Ganglia | Nerve ring | Dorsal hollow nerve cord |
Reproduction | Asexual (budding), Sexual | Sexual, asexual | Sexual | Hermaphrodite | Dioecious | Mostly hermaphrodite | Mostly dioecious | Dioecious / Hermaphrodite | Sexual | Dioecious (mostly) |
Locomotion | Sessile (canal system) | Tentacles | Ciliary combs | Cilia / muscular | Muscle / body wall | Setae / parapodia | Jointed appendages | Foot | Tube feet | Fins / Limbs |
Habitat | Aquatic | Aquatic | Marine | Mostly parasitic | Parasitic / free-living | Aquatic / terrestrial | All habitats | Mostly aquatic | Marine | Aquatic / Terrestrial |
Special Features | Canal system, Spicules | Cnidocytes | Bioluminescence | Flat body, Flame cells | Pseudocoelom | Metamerism | Exoskeleton, jointed legs | Shell, Mantle | Water vascular system | Notochord, Vertebral column |
Examples (NCERT) | Spongilla, Euspongia | Hydra, Aurelia | Pleurobrachia | Taenia, Fasciola | Ascaris, Wuchereria | Pheretima, Leech | Cockroach, Apis | Pila, Sepia | Asterias, Antedon | Frog, Birds, Humans |
Subphylum 1: Urochordata (Tunicata)
- Habitat: Exclusively marine animals, mostly found attached to submerged surfaces like rocks or ship bottoms.
- Notochord: Present only in larval tail; lost in adult stage — hence “Uro” (tail) chordates.
- Body Covering: Adult body is enclosed in a tunic made of tunicin (cellulose-like).
- Symmetry: Bilateral in larvae, may appear asymmetrical in adults.
- Nervous System: Larvae have a dorsal nerve cord; adults have a reduced nerve ganglion.
- Circulatory System: Open type; heart shows a unique reversible flow of blood.
- Digestive System: Complete with large pharyngeal basket with gill slits for filter feeding.
- Excretion: Via nephrocytes; simple excretory organs.
- Reproduction: Mostly hermaphroditic with external fertilization. Asexual reproduction (budding) also occurs in some.
- Special Feature: Exhibits retrogressive metamorphosis—larva is more advanced than adult.
- Examples: Ascidia, Salpa, Herdmania (NCERT).
Subphylum 2: Cephalochordata
- Habitat: Marine, burrow in sandy ocean bottoms.
- Notochord: Extends throughout life and the whole length of the body, including the head — “Cephalo” means head.
- Symmetry: Bilateral symmetry; fish-like body shape.
- Level of Organization: Organ-system level; well-developed systems.
- Circulatory System: Closed type; no true heart but vessels contract to pump blood.
- Nervous System: Dorsal tubular nerve cord with a cerebral vesicle.
- Digestive System: Complete; pharynx with numerous gill slits for filter feeding.
- Respiration: By pharyngeal gill slits; no lungs or gills.
- Excretion: Protonephridia-like structures for excretion.
- Reproduction: Sexes are separate (dioecious); external fertilization.
- Special Feature: Considered a living link between invertebrates and vertebrates.
- Example: Branchiostoma (NCERT), also known as Amphioxus or Lancelet.
Subphylum 3: Vertebrata
- Notochord: Present in embryonic stage; replaced by vertebral column (backbone) in adults.
- Endoskeleton: Internal skeleton made of cartilage or bone; protects and supports the body.
- Nervous System: Highly developed; brain enclosed in a cranium, connected to a dorsal spinal cord.
- Circulatory System: Closed type with a chambered heart (2–4 chambers depending on class).
- Respiration: Gills (in aquatic forms), lungs (in terrestrial), or both (amphibians).
- Excretion: Pair of kidneys that remove nitrogenous waste (urea, uric acid, or ammonia).
- Reproduction: Mostly sexual; sexes separate (dioecious); internal or external fertilization.
- Body Structure: Triploblastic, coelomate, bilaterally symmetrical, and segmented.
- Vertebral Column: Forms the main axial support, replacing notochord function.
- Classes: Vertebrata is divided into two superclasses:
- Agnatha (jawless; e.g., Petromyzon)
- Gnathostomata (jawed vertebrates: Pisces to Mammalia)
- Special Feature: Presence of paired appendages (fins or limbs), high cephalization.
- Examples: Frog, Pigeon, Shark, Human, Lizard (depending on class).
Chordata
│
├──► 1. Urochordata (Tunicata)
│ • Notochord in larval tail only
│ • Marine, sessile adults
│ • Retrogressive metamorphosis
│ • Ex: Ascidia, Salpa, Herdmania
│
├──► 2. Cephalochordata
│ • Notochord extends from head to tail
│ • Persistent throughout life
│ • Fish-like, burrowing marine animals
│ • Ex: Branchiostoma (Amphioxus)
│
└──► 3. Vertebrata
• Notochord replaced by vertebral column
• Well-developed brain and organ systems
• Cranium and endoskeleton present
• Divided into:
├──► Agnatha (jawless) – Ex: Petromyzon
└──► Gnathostomata (jawed vertebrates)
├──► Pisces (fishes)
├──► Amphibia
├──► Reptilia
├──► Aves (birds)
└──► Mammalia
Class: Cyclostomata
- Habitat: Exclusively marine but migrate to freshwater for spawning.
- Body Form: Elongated, cylindrical, eel-like body without paired appendages.
- Skeleton: Cartilaginous endoskeleton; notochord is persistent throughout life.
- Jaws and Fins: Jawless vertebrates; paired fins absent — hence grouped under Agnatha (jawless).
- Mouth: Circular, sucking mouth with keratinized teeth — hence called “Cyclostomes.”
- Respiration: 6–15 pairs of gill slits for aquatic respiration.
- Skin: Soft, scaleless, slimy; aids in defense and locomotion.
- Circulatory System: Closed type with a two-chambered heart.
- Nervous System: Brain with dorsal nerve cord protected by cranium and vertebral column.
- Excretion: Paired kidneys remove nitrogenous waste (ammonia).
- Reproduction: Dioecious; fertilization external; development indirect with larval stage.
- Special Feature: Show characteristics of both invertebrates and vertebrates.
- Examples (NCERT): Petromyzon (lamprey), Myxine (hagfish).
Superclass: Pisces
(Jawed aquatic vertebrates — Gnathostomata)
Class 1: Chondrichthyes (Cartilaginous Fishes)
- Skeleton: Entirely cartilaginous.
- Body: Streamlined for swift movement.
- Mouth: Ventral; teeth are modified placoid scales.
- Gill Slits: 5–7 pairs, uncovered (no operculum).
- Scales: Tough placoid scales reduce drag.
- Buoyancy: No air bladder; must swim to avoid sinking.
- Fertilization: Internal; many are viviparous.
- Heart: Two-chambered.
- Sexes: Separate (dioecious).
- Examples (NCERT): Scoliodon (dogfish), Trygon (stingray), Carcharodon (great white shark).
Class 2: Osteichthyes (Bony Fishes)
- Skeleton: Made of bone.
- Body: Streamlined; fins used for movement.
- Mouth: Usually terminal (at front).
- Gill Slits: Covered by operculum.
- Scales: Covered with cycloid or ctenoid scales.
- Buoyancy: Have air bladder for balance.
- Fertilization: Mostly external; many are oviparous.
- Heart: Two-chambered.
- Sexes: Dioecious.
- Examples (NCERT): Rohu, Catla, Clarias (magur), Betta (fighting fish), Hippocampus (seahorse).
Superclass: Tetrapoda
(Four-limbed vertebrates – Gnathostomata)
Class: Amphibia
- Habitat: Dual life – aquatic and terrestrial.
- Skin: Moist, glandular, without scales; respiration also through skin.
- Limbs: Two pairs; used for locomotion.
- Respiration: By gills, lungs, and skin.
- Heart: Three-chambered (two atria + one ventricle).
- Ears: Tympanum present.
- Fertilization: External; oviparous; development indirect.
- Examples (NCERT): Bufo (toad), Rana (frog), Hyla (tree frog), Salamandra, Ichthyophis (limbless amphibian).
Class: Reptilia
- Habitat: Primarily terrestrial.
- Skin: Dry, scaly (epidermal scales), impermeable to water.
- Limbs: Two pairs; claws present in most.
- Respiration: Exclusively through lungs.
- Heart: Mostly 3-chambered; crocodiles have 4-chambered heart.
- Fertilization: Internal; oviparous with shelled eggs.
- Temperature Regulation: Cold-blooded (poikilothermic).
- Examples (NCERT): Chelone (turtle), Testudo (tortoise), Chameleon, Calotes (garden lizard), Crocodilus.
Class: Aves (Birds)
- Body: Streamlined; modified forelimbs as wings.
- Skeleton: Light bones with air cavities (pneumatic).
- Skin: Covered with feathers; oil glands at tail base.
- Respiration: Lungs with air sacs – efficient system.
- Heart: Four-chambered.
- Excretion: Uricotelic (excrete uric acid); no urinary bladder (except ostrich).
- Fertilization: Internal; oviparous; parental care common.
- Temperature Regulation: Warm-blooded (homeothermic).
- Examples (NCERT): Corvus (crow), Columba (pigeon), Struthio (ostrich), Psittacula (parrot), Neophron (vulture).
Class: Mammalia
- Habitat: Terrestrial, aquatic, aerial, and arboreal.
- Skin: Hair-covered; sweat and sebaceous glands present.
- Mammary Glands: Present; nourish young with milk.
- Limbs: Adapted for walking, swimming, flying, etc.
- Teeth: Thecodont, heterodont, and diphyodont.
- Heart: Four-chambered.
- Respiration: Lungs; diaphragm aids breathing.
- Temperature Regulation: Warm-blooded.
- Reproduction: Internal fertilization; mostly viviparous (except platypus and echidna).
- Excretion: Ureotelic; kidneys excrete urea.
- Examples (NCERT): Oryctolagus (rabbit), Macropus (kangaroo), Panthera leo (lion), Homo sapiens.
NEET 2025: Animal Kingdom – Most Important Topics (Brief Points)
1. Basis of Classification
- Levels: Cellular, tissue, organ, organ-system
- Symmetry: Radial vs. Bilateral
- Germ layers: Diploblastic vs. Triploblastic
- Coelom: Acoelomate / Pseudocoelomate / Coelomate
- Notochord: Present (Chordates) / Absent (Non-chordates)
2. Unique Features of Phyla (Porifera to Echinodermata)
- Porifera: Canal system, choanocytes
- Cnidaria: Cnidoblasts, polyp-medusa
- Ctenophora: Comb plates, bioluminescence
- Platyhelminthes: Flame cells, flat body
- Aschelminthes: Pseudocoelom, unsegmented roundworms
- Annelida: Metamerism, closed circulation
- Arthropoda: Jointed appendages, chitinous exoskeleton
- Mollusca: Mantle, radula, muscular foot
- Echinodermata: Water vascular system, radial symmetry in adult
3. Subphyla of Chordates
- Urochordata: Notochord in tail (larva only)
- Cephalochordata: Notochord throughout life
- Vertebrata: Notochord replaced by vertebral column
4. Class Cyclostomata
- Jawless, sucking mouth, no paired fins
- Example: Petromyzon, Myxine
5. Superclass Pisces (Fishes)
- Chondrichthyes: Cartilage skeleton, ventral mouth, internal fertilization (Shark, Trygon)
- Osteichthyes: Bony skeleton, air bladder, external fertilization (Rohu, Catla)
6. Superclass Tetrapoda
- Amphibia: Moist skin, lungs + skin respiration, 3-chambered heart (Frog)
- Reptilia: Dry scales, lungs only, mostly 3-chambered heart (Lizard, Crocodile)
- Aves: Feathers, hollow bones, 4-chambered heart, uricotelic (Pigeon, Ostrich)
- Mammalia: Hair, mammary glands, diaphragm, viviparous (Human, Rabbit)
7. NCERT Examples & Matching
- Match phylum/class with examples
- Focus on Ascidia, Herdmania, Amphioxus, Petromyzon, Frog, Lizard, Pigeon, Rabbit etc.