Animal, multicellular
organism that obtains energy by eating food. With over 2 million known species,
and many more awaiting identification, animals are the most diverse forms of
life on earth. They range in size from 30-m (100-ft) long whales to microscopic
organisms only 0.05 mm (0.002 in) long. They live in a vast range of habitats,
from deserts and Arctic tundra to the deep-sea
floor. Animals are the only
living things that have evolved nervous systems and sense organs that monitor
their surroundings. They are also the only forms of life that show flexible
patterns of behavior that can be shaped by past experience. The study of
animals is known as zoology.
Animals are multicellular
organisms, a characteristic they share with plants and many fungi. But they
differ from plants and fungi in several important ways. Foremost among these is
the way they obtain energy. Plants obtain energy directly from sunlight through
the process of photosynthesis, and they use this energy to build up organic
matter from simple raw materials. Animals, on the other hand, eat other living
things or their dead remains. They then digest this food to release the energy
that it contains. Fungi also take in food, but instead of digesting it
internally as animals do, they digest it before they absorb it.
Most animals start life
as a single fertilized cell, which divides many times to produce the thousands
or millions of cells needed to form a functioning body. During this process,
groups of cells develop different characteristics and arrange themselves in
tissues that carry out specialized functions. Epithelial tissue covers the
body’s inner and outer surfaces, while connective tissue binds it together and
provides support. Nervous tissue conducts the signals that coordinate the body
(see Nervous System), and muscle tissue–which makes up over two-thirds
of the body mass of some animals–contracts to make the body move. This
mobility, coupled with rapid responses to opportunities and hazards, is one
feature that distinguishes animals from other forms of life.
Some kinds of animal movement,
such as the slow progress of a limpet as it creeps across rocks, are so slow
that they are almost imperceptible. Others, such as the attacking dive of a
peregrine falcon or the leap of a flea, are so fast that they are difficult or
even impossible to follow. Many single-celled organisms can move, but in
absolute terms, animals are by far the fastest-moving living things on earth.
Animal life spans vary
from less than 3 weeks in some insects to over a century in giant tortoises.
Some animals, such as sponges, mollusks, fish, and snakes, show indeterminate
growth, which means that they continue to grow throughout life. Most, however,
reach a pre-defined size at maturity, at which point their physical growth
stops.
TYPES OF ANIMALS
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Like all living things,
animals show similarities and differences that enable them to be classified
into groups. Birds, for example, are the only animals that have feathers, while
mammals are the only ones that have fur. The scientific classification of
animals began in the late 18th century. At this time, animals were classified
almost entirely by external features, mainly because these are easy to observe.
But external features can sometimes be misleading. For example, in the past,
comparison of physical features led to whales being classified as fish and some
snakes being classified as worms.
Presently, animals are
classified according to a broader range of characteristics, including their
internal anatomy, patterns of development, and genetic makeup. These features
provide a much more reliable guide to an animal’s place in the living world.
They also help to show how different species are linked through evolution.
Scientists divide the animal kingdom into approximately 30 groups, each called
a phylum (plural phyla).
Vertebrates and Invertebrates
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One phylum of animals,
the chordates, has been more intensively studied than has any other, because it
comprises nearly all the world’s largest and most familiar animals as well as
humans. This phylum includes mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish
together with a collection of lesser-known organisms, such as sea squirts and
their relatives (see Tunicates). The feature uniting these animals is
that at some stage in their lives, all have a flexible supporting rod, called a
notochord, running the length of their bodies. In the great majority of
chordates, the notochord is replaced by a series of interlocking bones called
vertebrae during early development. These bones form the backbone, and they
give these animals their name—the vertebrates.
Vertebrates total about
40,000 species. Thanks to their highly developed nervous systems and internal
skeletons, they have become very successful on land, sea, and air. Yet
vertebrates account for only about 2 percent of animal species. The remaining
98 percent, collectively called invertebrates, are far more numerous and
diverse and include an immense variety of animals from sponges, worms, and
jellyfish to mollusks and insects. The only feature these diverse creatures
share in common is the lack of a backbone.
Some invertebrate phyla
contain relatively few species. An extreme example is the phylum Placozoa,
which contains just one species. Measuring less than 0.5 mm (0.02 in) across,
this unique animal was first discovered in 1883 in a saltwater aquarium in
Austria. Its flat body consists of just two layers of cells, making it the
simplest known member of the animal kingdom, although not the smallest. Another
minor phylum, the loriciferans, was classified in 1983 with the chance
discovery of a tiny organism dredged up in marine gravel. Several other species
of loriciferans have since been identified, but little is known about how they
live.
At the other end of the
spectrum, some invertebrate phyla contain immense numbers of species. These
major phyla include the annelids (segmented worms), with 12,000 known species;
the nematodes (roundworms), also with 12,000 known species; and the mollusks,
including bivalves, snails, and octopuses, with at least 100,000 species. The
arthropods, with about 1 million known species, include the insects, spiders,
and crustaceans. These figures include only species that have been described
and named, which are only a portion of those that actually exist. Some
biologists estimate that the total number of nematode species may be as high as
a quarter of a million, while the total number of arthropods could exceed 10
million.
Compared to vertebrates,
most invertebrates are animals of modest dimensions. Giant squids, which are
the largest invertebrates, can exceed 18 m (60 ft) in length, but the great
majority of invertebrate animals are less than 2.5 cm (1 in) long. Their small
size enables them to exploit food sources and infiltrate habitats that larger
animals cannot use, but it also leaves them exposed to changing environmental
conditions. This is not often a problem in the sea, but it can create
difficulties on land. Land-dwelling invertebrates have to cope with the
constant threat of drying out, and most of them quickly become inactive in low
temperatures.
Cold-blooded and Warm-blooded
Animals
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On land, some invertebrates
manage to overcome the problem of cold by using muscles to warm themselves. For
example, many large moths and bumblebees use a special form of shivering to
raise their body temperature to 35°C (95°F) before they take off, which allows
them to fly in cool weather. Bees also maintain warm conditions in their nests,
which speeds up the development of their young. But in invertebrates as a
whole, temperature regulation is very unusual. In vertebrates, on the other
hand, it has developed to a high degree.
Vertebrates are customarily
divided into cold-blooded and warm-blooded animals, but these labels are not
very precise. Biologists normally use the terms ectoderm and endoderm
to describe temperature regulation more accurately. An ectoderm is an animal
whose temperature is dictated by its surroundings, while an endoderm is one
that keeps its body at a constant warm temperature by generating internal heat.
Reptiles, amphibians,
and fish are ectoderms. Although they do not maintain a constant warm
temperature, some of these animals do manage to raise their body temperature
far above that of their surroundings. They do this by behavioral means, such as
basking in direct sunshine when the surrounding air is cool. Mammals and birds
are endoderms. These animals generate heat through their metabolic processes,
and they retain it by having insulating layers of fat, fur, or feathers.
Because their bodies are always warm, they can remain active in some of the
coldest conditions on earth.
ANIMAL HABITATS
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Few parts of Earth’s surface
are entirely devoid of animal life. Animals cannot survive in places where
water is unavailable or permanently frozen, or where
temperatures regularly exceed 55° C (130° F). However, in all habitats that lie
between these extremes, animal life abounds.
Aquatic Habitats
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Animal life first arose
in water. Millions of years later, marine and freshwater habitats continue to
support a large proportion of the animal life on earth. Aquatic
habitats—particularly in the seas and oceans–rarely experience abrupt changes
in conditions, which is a major advantage for living things.
In the seas and oceans,
the greatest diversity of animal life is found in habitats close to shores. The
richest of all these habitats are coral reefs, underwater ridges that form in
clear water where the minimum temperature is 20° C (68° F) or above. Coral
reefs are composed of an accumulation of the remains of coral—invertebrates
with stony skeletons—calcareous red algae, and mollusks. One of the reasons for
the great diversity of animal life in reefs is that living coral creates a
complex three-dimensional landscape, with many different microhabitats. The
smallest crevices provide hiding places for scavengers such as crabs and
shrimps, while larger ones conceal predators such as octopuses and moray eels.
Over half the world’s fish species live in coral reefs, many hiding away by day
and emerging after dark to feed.
On reefs and rocky shores,
many animals are sessile, meaning that they spend their entire adult lives
fixed in one place. These species, which include sponges, barnacles, and
mollusks, as well as reef-building corals themselves, typically spend the early
part of their lives as drifting larvae, before settling on a solid surface and
changing shape. Sessile animals are common in aquatic habitats because it is
relatively easy for them to collect food, which typically is pushed in the
animal’s direction by water currents. By contrast, very few sessile animals
have evolved on land.
In open water, depth has
a marked influence on animal lifestyles. The surface layers of the open sea
teem with small and submicroscopic animals, which feed either on algae and
other plantlike organisms or on each other. These animals form part of the
plankton, a complex community of living things that drifts passively with the
currents. Many planktonic animals can adjust the depth at which they float, but
larger animals such as fish, squid, and marine mammals, are strong enough to
commute between the surface and the depths far below.
Even in the clearest water,
light quickly fades with increasing depth. Deeper than about 150 m (500 ft),
not enough light penetrates for photosynthesis to occur, so algae are unable to
survive. With increasing depth, water pressure rises and temperature falls,
ultimately coming close to the freezing point on the ocean floor. Despite these
extreme conditions, animal life is found in the ocean’s greatest depths, fueled
by the constant rain of organic debris that drifts down from far above. In a
habitat where prey is widely scattered, many deep-sea fish can swallow animals
larger than themselves, an adaptation that allows them to go weeks or months
between meals.
Land Habitats
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On land, animal habitats
are strongly influenced by climate, the combination of precipitation and
temperature conditions experienced in a region. At or near the equator,
year-round moisture and warmth generates a constant supply of food. Further
north or south, seasonal changes become much more pronounced, shaping the type
of animals that live in different habitats and their strategies for survival (see
Animal Distribution).
Tropical and subtropical
forests are home to by far the largest number of animal species on land. These
animals include the majority of the world’s insects, most of its primates, and
a large proportion of its birds. Tropical forests have existed longer than any
other forests on earth and their plants and animals have evolved an elaborate
web of interrelationships.
Much of the animal life
of tropical forests is still poorly known, and new species are constantly being
discovered. The majority of these newly identified animals are invertebrates,
but larger animals have also come to light during the 20th century. Major
discoveries have included three large but secretive plant-eating mammals: the
okapi, discovered in Central Africa in 1900; the kouprey, discovered in the
forests of Cambodia in 1937; and the sao la, which was identified in forests
bordering Laos and Vietnam in 1993.
Unlike tropical forests,
temperate forests provide animals with an abundance of food during spring and
summer, but a dearth during the winter. In this habitat, animals have evolved
several different strategies for avoiding starvation during the winter months.
Food hoarders, such as squirrels and jay birds, bury surplus food during the
fall, and dig it up again when other food supplies run out. Other forest
animals, such as the common dormouse, avoid food shortages by hibernation, a
period of inactivity when body temperature is lowered. A third group of
animals—composed chiefly of birds, but also including some bats and
insects–migrates to warmer regions before the winter begins and returns again
in spring. In boreal forests, which are found in the far north, the seasonal
swings are more extreme. Here only a few species stay and remain active during
the winter months.
For land animals, the
most testing habitats are ones that experience intense drought or extreme cold.
Desert animals cope with heat and water shortage by behavioral adaptations,
such as remaining below ground by day, and also by physiological adaptations.
North American kangaroo rats, for example, can live entirely on dry seeds
without ever drinking liquid water. They do this by losing very little moisture
from their bodies and using all the “metabolic water” that is formed when food
is broken down to release energy.
In tundra and on polar
ice, winter air temperatures can fall to below -40° C (-40° F), which is far
colder than the temperature of the surrounding seas. The smallest inhabitants
of tundra, which include vast numbers of mosquitoes and other biting flies,
spend winter in a state of suspended animation and are kept alive by chemical
antifreeze within their tissues. The few animals that do remain active on land
or ice during winter, such as seals and male emperor penguins, rely on a thick
layer of insulating fat to prevent their body heat leaking away. Without this
fat, they would die within a matter of minutes.
FEEDING
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Animals all feed on organic
matter, but their diets and way of obtaining food vary enormously. Some animals
are omnivores, meaning that they are capable of surviving on a very wide range
of foods. Many other animals, from giant pandas to fleas, have extremely
precise requirements and cannot deviate from their highly specialized diet.
Herbivores and Carnivores
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In general, animals eat
plants, other animals, or the remains of living things. Plant-eaters, or
herbivores, often do not have to search far to find things to eat, and in some
cases—for example wood-boring insects—they are entirely surrounded by their
food. The disadvantage of a plant-based diet is that it can be difficult to
digest and is often low in nutrients.
To overcome the first
of these problems, most herbivores have tough mouthparts for chewing and
grinding their food. Many plant-eating animals, from termites to cattle, have
complex digestive systems containing microorganisms that break down cellulose
and other indigestible plant substances, turning them into nutrients that the
animals can absorb. The second problem—lack of nutrients–is harder to sidestep,
particularly in a diet made up largely of leaves. As a result, leaf-eaters
often have to feed for many hours each day to obtain the nutrients that they
need.
Carnivores live on flesh
from other animals that is often nutrient-rich and easy to digest but difficult
to obtain. Finding and capturing this kind of food calls for keen senses. But
even though a hunter has acute vision or a highly developed sense of smell, a
large proportion of a hunter’s victims manage to escape. If this happens too
often, a predator quickly starves.
Some mammalian predators,
such as the lion and wolf, increase their chances of success by hunting in
groups. While this strategy enables them to tackle larger prey, a successful
kill has to be shared among members of the group. But in the animal world as a
whole, many other predators adopt a less energy-intensive approach to catching
their food. Instead of actively searching out their prey, they position
themselves in a suitable location and wait for their prey to come within
striking distance.
In this method of hunting,
camouflage and other forms of deception play a prominent role. Most animals
that use a lie-and-wait strategy blend in with their surroundings, but a few use
lures to entice their prey within range. A typical example is the alligator
snapping turtle of North America, which waves a ribbon of pink flesh on its
tongue that resembles a worm. Any fish venturing toward it is swallowed whole.
In predatory animals,
teeth or other mouthparts often play a part in catching and subduing food as
well as in preparing it for digestion. These mouthparts include canine teeth in
carnivorous mammals, venomous fangs in snakes, and poisonous “harpoons” in some
marine mollusks. These harpoons can impale and kill small fish. Each harpoon is
used just once, and afterwards it is expelled and another is formed in its
place.
Other Feeding Strategies
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Most predators hunt the
largest animals that they can catch without putting themselves unduly at risk.
However, some animals concentrate on food items that are much too small to be
worth collecting one by one. Instead of catching food individually, they have
special feeding adaptations for sweeping it up in bulk.
On land, these animals
include insect-eating mammals, such as anteaters and pangolins. Using their
long and sticky tongues, they lick up ants and termites and can consume over
20,000 insects a day. In water, this kind of feeding strategy is mirrored by
animals called filter feeders, which sieve small animals or food particles from
their surroundings. Many of these filter feeders are sessile animals that sieve
food from the water immediately around them. Others, such as some whales, scoop
up their food while on the move and filter it out in their mouths, using
specialized gills or plates of a fibrous material called baleen. This feeding
technique is extremely efficient, allowing whales to grow to an immense size.
In another feeding technique,
predators seek out sources of food that are much larger than themselves but
only eat part of their prey—usually its blood. This way of life is has been
pursued with great success by several groups of flying insects, such as
mosquitoes and horseflies. But in the animal world as a whole, fluid diets are
much more common in animals that feed on plants. Aphids, cicadas, and other
true bugs use piercing mouthparts to suck sap from plant stems. Many different
animals, including moths, butterflies, hummingbirds, and bats, use probing
beaks and tongues to reach nectar in flowers.
To avoid the need to track
down food, some animals use a highly specialized feeding strategy, called
parasitism (see Parasite). A parasite lives on or inside other animals
and simply siphons off some of its host’s food or, more commonly, feeds on the
host itself. External parasites, such as fleas, have well-developed senses and
adaptations that enable them to cling to their hosts. Internal parasites, such
as tapeworms and liver flukes, are highly modified for a life inside their
hosts. The sense organs of internal parasites are rudimentary or absent because
they do not need to find food or avoid enemies. Instead, they devote their time
entirely to the twin tasks of feeding and reproduction.
BREATHING
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Wherever they live, animals
need oxygen in order to survive. By breathing, or respiring, they extract
oxygen from their surroundings and dispose of carbon dioxide waste (see Respiration).
Very small animals do
not need any special adaptations for obtaining oxygen. Oxygen simply diffuses
in through their body surface, with carbon dioxide traveling out the same way.
Larger animals cannot rely on this system because they have a much bigger
volume relative to their surface area. To obtain sufficient oxygen, large
animals have to boost their oxygen intake by using special respiratory organs.
In water, many animals breathe by using gills. A typical gill consists of a
stack of thin flaps connected to the animal’s blood supply. Water moves past
the flaps in a one-way flow, either when the animal moves, or when it pumps
water through its body. The flaps extract oxygen from the water and pass it
into the blood, which transfers it to needed tissues. The blood releases carbon
dioxide in exchange.
Gills do not work on land
because their flaps collapse and stick together. Instead, land animals have
evolved two different kinds of respiratory organs: tracheal systems and lungs.
Tracheal systems are found in insects and many other arthropods. They consist
of slender hollow tubes, called tracheae, that reach deep into the body,
delivering oxygen from outside. Lungs are hollow cavities that have a large
surface area. They are found in vertebrates and also in some invertebrates,
such as terrestrial mollusks.
In tracheae and most lungs,
gases move in a two-way flow. Most vertebrates actively pump air in and out of
their lungs to step up the rate of gas exchange. By stretching and squeezing
their bodies, some arthropods behave in a similar way.
MOVEMENT
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All animals can move parts
of their bodies. The majority are also capable of locomotion—movement of the
whole body from place to place. Many simple animals, such as rotifers and
flatworms, move with the help of microscopic hairlike structures called cilia.
These beat in a coordinated way, propelling the animal through water or making
it glide over solid surfaces at the rate of a few inches an hour. Another form
of creeping movement, seen in earthworms, involves changes in body shape. The
worm’s segments extend and contract in a set sequence, allowing it to force its
way through the surrounding soil.
Some of the earthworm’s
relatives have flaps called parapodia that help them to move, but even with
these, their speed is fairly modest. With a few notable exceptions—such as
squid and octopuses, which can move by a form of jet propulsion—the fastest
animals by far are ones that have skeletons and jointed limbs.
Jointed Limbs
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Jointed limbs are found
in only two groups of animals: the arthropods and vertebrates. An arthropod’s
limbs are made of a number of hard tubular segments, which form part of its
external skeleton, or exoskeleton. The muscles that operate them are hidden away
inside this strong outer framework. In vertebrates, the plan is reversed. The
bony skeleton forms an internal framework, with muscles attached around it.
During the course of evolution,
both these kinds of limbs have become modified in many different ways. Aquatic
animals often have paddlelike limbs that push against the water, enabling them
to speed away from predators or after food, or to maneuver their way around
confined spaces. On land, the fastest animals, such as the horse and cheetah,
have long legs and a flexible backbone, which helps to increase the length of
their stride. Land animals that move by jumping often have highly developed
hind legs, with extra-large muscles. In fleas, the muscles squeeze an elastic
material called resilin, which flicks the legs back when released. This
extremely rapid flick is faster than a jump triggered by muscles alone, and it
throws a flea up to 30 cm (12 in) into the air.
Many animals can glide,
but only insects, birds, and bats are capable of powered flight. The fastest
flying insects are dragonflies, which can reach speeds of about 29 km/h (about
18 mph) in short bursts. However, in terms of speed and endurance, birds are by
far the most successful animal aviators. Swans and geese can cruise at 64 km/h
(40 mph) for many hours at a time, while peregrine falcons can briefly reach
145 km/h (90 mph) when they swoop down on their prey.
Patterns of Movement
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Being able to move gives
animals many advantages, but it also generates its own demands. For any animal,
random movement can be unhelpful or even dangerous. To be useful, movement has
to be carefully guided.
Animals are guided by
their senses, which provide feedback about their changing surroundings. In
animals that have radial symmetry (symmetry around a central point), such as
jellyfishes, sensory nerves are arranged more or less evenly around the body.
This arrangement makes the animal equally sensitive to stimuli from any
direction. In bilaterally symmetrical animals (animals made of equal halves),
sensory nerves are concentrated in the head. They convey signals to the brain
from organs such as ears and eyes, telling an animal about the surroundings
that it is about to encounter.
These sensory systems
help animals to move toward food and away from possible danger. On a longer
time span, they also guide them through much more complex patterns of movement
that are essential for their survival. These movements include special kinds of
behavior needed to locate a partner, and also seasonal movements or migrations.
Some of the shortest migrations
are carried out by microscopic flatworms that live on sandy shores. These worms
migrate up to the surface of the sand at low tide and back into it at high
tide—a total distance of about 20 cm (about 8 in) roughly twice a day. In the
open ocean, many planktonic animals carry out larger daily migrations, rising
to the surface at dusk and then sinking at sunrise. By doing this, they reduce
the chances of being eaten.
The longest migrations
are annual ones, undertaken by animals in response to the changing seasons. By
carrying out these journeys, animals can breed in places where food is abundant
for just a few months each year. Long-distance annual migration is seen in some
plant-eating mammals, such as wildebeest and caribou, and also in whales, but
it is most common in animals that fly. Some birds, such as terns and
shearwaters, migrate over 32,000 km (20,000 mi) each year. Research has shown
that during these epic journeys, they use a variety of cues to help them
navigate. These include familiar landmarks, the position of the sun and stars,
and the also the orientation of Earth’s magnetic field (see Animal
Migration).
REPRODUCTION
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Like all living things,
animals have limited life spans. Although individual animals eventually die,
reproduction ensures that they hand on their characteristics to future
generations. Animals reproduce at markedly different rates, but all have the
potential to increase their numbers if resources allow it. In practice, sharp
increases are rare, kept in check by predators and food shortages.
Forms of Reproduction
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Animal reproduction takes
two overall forms. In the first form, called asexual reproduction, animals
produce offspring without needing a partner. Asexual reproduction is most
common in simple animals such as flatworms and cnidarians. In flatworms, the
parent often develops a constriction in its body, and the rear part eventually
tears itself free. The rear part grows a new head, while the front part grows a
new tail. Some cnidarians can also divide in two, but many reproduce by a
different process, called budding. During budding, a small outgrowth of the
body slowly develops into a complete new animal, which eventually takes up life
on its own.
Asexual reproduction also
occurs in insects such as aphids and in a few unusual vertebrates, such as
whiptail lizards. However, in general, it is rarely used as an animal’s sole
method of reproduction. This is because asexual reproduction produces offspring
that are genetically identical to their parent. They inherit all their parent’s
weak points and are equally vulnerable if a disease or other changes in the
environment threaten the group’s survival.
A second and much more
common form of reproduction, sexual reproduction, involves two parents. The
parents produce sperm and egg cells (gametes), which are brought together to
form a fertilized cell (zygote) with a new and unique combination of genes. In
this genetic lottery, offspring inherit unique combinations of characteristics
that increase the likelihood that at least some individuals in the population
can survive changes in the environment.
Sexual reproduction is
used by the vast majority of the world’s animals. However, a significant number
of species, particularly in the world of insects, use both forms of
reproduction at different stages of their life cycles. They reproduce asexually
when food is abundant, but turn to sexual reproduction when conditions become
more severe.
Reproductive Strategies
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Asexual reproduction is
relatively easy to achieve because it involves only a single animal. Sexual
reproduction is much more complex because the partners often have to find each
other and precisely coordinate their reproductive behavior. In most cases, each
partner is either male or female, but in some animals—such as earthworms,
slugs, and snails–each one is a hermaphrodite, an animal that has both male and
female organs. Hermaphrodites usually fertilize each other, with both partners
producing young (see Hermaphroditism).
Most aquatic animals shed
their eggs and sperm into the water, where external fertilization takes place.
In corals and many other sessile species, the moment of spawning is often
triggered by the tides, maximizing the chances that the egg and sperm will
meet. In a minority of marine animals, fertilization is internal, meaning that
the male mates with the female, inserting his sperm into her body. For this to
work, the male needs special adaptations to make the transfer. Male sharks and
rays use special claspers that are attached to their pelvic fins, while
barnacles, which are often hermaphrodites, use a threadlike penis that can be
almost as long as their bodies.
On land, external fertilization
is rare because egg and sperm cells cannot survive for long in the open. As a
result, almost all land animals must mate to trigger internal fertilization in
order to reproduce. Different groups of animals have evolved a wide variety of
mechanisms to make sure that males and females manage to locate suitable
partners. Some female insects emit chemicals called pheromones, which guide
males towards them, while others use sound signals or biochemically produced
light (see Bioluminescence). In birds, elaborate plumage and courtship
displays help to attract females towards the males (see Animal Courtship
and Mating).
The males of many insects
and virtually all mammals use a penis to transfer sperm to the female, who
harbors the eggs, in a process known as copulation. The penis ensures that
sperm is transferred successfully without being carried away by wind, water, or
other environmental elements. Most birds and reptiles mate using a cloaca, a
single opening located on the lower abdomen. During mating, these animals align
their cloacas for transfer of sperm. Some birds, such as bald eagles, can
perform this feat in mid-air.
Once a female has mated,
egg development can proceed in two different ways. In oviparous species, which
include the majority of vertebrates except mammals, and also most insects, the
fertilized eggs are laid and develop outside the mother’s body. In viviparous
animals, which include nearly all mammals together with some reptiles and
sharks, the young develop inside the mother and are born live.
Most animals that are
born live look similar to their parents, although they are not fully developed.
By contrast, many egg-laying invertebrates look completely different from their
parents when they hatch and often live in a completely different way. Known as
larvae, these young change shapes as they grow up, during a process called
metamorphosis. Larvae are also found in some fish and most amphibians.
Mating Systems
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Animals that reproduce
sexually have evolved a wide variety of different systems for maximizing the
number of young that can be raised. In the simplest system, each female is
partnered by a male, and the partnership lasts for life. In more complex
systems, the fittest adults have many partners while others have none at all.
In polygynous breeding
systems, successful males mate with more than one female. Polygyny is common in
birds, particularly in species where the males establish breeding territories
that provide access to food. A male with a good territory may attract several
mates, while one with an inferior territory may attract few or none. Polygyny
can also be seen in some mammals and is taken to extremes in species such as
elephant seals. The largest and most powerful male elephant seals, weighing up
to four times as much as the females, clash viciously for dominance on a
breeding beach. A successful male can assemble a harem of over twenty females,
but weaker males are excluded from breeding altogether.
In polyandrous breeding
systems, one female mates with several males. This kind of breeding system is
rare and usually occurs in species where the males take on the work of raising
the young. An example of a polyandrous bird is the North American spotted
sandpiper. In this species, females compete for males. A single female can lay
up to five sets, or clutches, of eggs, and each clutch is incubated by a
different partner.
The most specialized mating
systems of all occur in animals that form permanent family groups. In social
insects, which include many bees and wasps and all ants and termites, each
group or colony is founded by a single female or queen. The queen is the only
individual in the colony to reproduce. Her offspring, which can number more
than a million, forage for food, maintain the nest, and care for the young.
Parental Care
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With the exception of birds, the majority of egg-laying animals play no part in helping their young to survive. A large proportion of their young die, and to offset this, they often produce a huge number of eggs. A housefly, for example, can lay over a thousand eggs in the course of its life, while a female cod can lay 3 million.
Most amphibians and reptiles
lay smaller clutches of eggs, and some of them remain with their eggs and guard
them until they hatch. Birds lay smaller clutches still, and the parents
incubate the eggs, or keep them warm until they hatch, and continue to care for
their young once they have hatched. Most ground-nesting species protect their
young and lead them to food, but typical tree-nesting birds provide their young
with both food and shelter until they are able to fend for themselves. Without
this parental care, the young birds would have no hope of survival.
Parental care is equally
important in mammals, which provide food for their young in the form of milk.
Raising a family in this way creates a close link between the mother and her
young. This method also allows the young to learn important patterns of
behavior by watching their mother at work. In small rodents, this learning
period lasts for just a few days, but in larger mammals, it can last for more
than a year.
STRATEGIES FOR SURVIVAL
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In the living world, resources
such as food and space are limited. As a result, survival is a constant
struggle. Through evolution, animals have developed a range of adaptations that
give them the best chances of success.
The most obvious of these
adaptations are physical ones that affect the shape or structure of an animal’s
body. Equally important, although often less conspicuous, are adaptations that
affect behavior and body processes. Together, these different adaptations allow
each species to pursue a distinctive way of life.
Physical Adaptations
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The need to eat exposes
animals to the danger of being attacked and eaten themselves. To avoid this
fate, all animals have physical adaptations that enable them to escape being
attacked or to survive an attack once it is underway.
The simplest form of defense
is a rapid escape, which calls for keen senses and well-developed systems for
movement. Many plant-eating mammals depend on this strategy for survival and
must maintain a constant lookout for danger. A less-demanding survival
strategy, found in many small animals such as insects, involves deception.
These animals use camouflage to blend in with their backgrounds, or they mimic
inedible objects such as twigs or bird droppings. If a predator does come too
close, they still have the option of making a dash for safety.
A more sophisticated form
of mimicry occurs in animals that resemble species that are poisonous. This is
common in insects, and it also occurs in some snakes. Poisonous insects, such
as bees and wasps, are often brightly colored to warn other animals that they
are best left alone. By adopting these colors and developing similar body
shapes, non-poisonous insects benefit from the same protection. The physical
adaptations involved can be elaborate. The hornet clearwing moth, for example,
is yellow and brown like a stinging hornet. On its first flight, it loses most
of its wing scales, resulting in transparent wings that make the resemblance
even more convincing.
An alternative defense,
seen in a wide range of animals, uses armor or spines to fend off an attack.
Animal armor includes hard shells, overlapping scales, and in the case of
armadillos, bands of hardened plates connected by areas of softer skin. If they
are threatened, many of these animals can shut their bodies away inside their
armor, making them difficult to attack. The disadvantage of this defense is
that the animal cannot escape. If its armor is broken open, death is almost certain.
Behavioral Adaptations
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In simple animals, behavior
is governed almost entirely by instinct, meaning that it is pre-programmed by
an animal’s genes. In more complex animals, instinctive behavior is often
modified by learning, producing more-flexible responses to the outside world.
Many forms of behavior
help animals to survive severe environmental conditions. Two examples are
hibernation, which enables animals to survive cold and food shortages in
winter; and estivation, which allows animals to survive drought and heat in
summer. True hibernators, such as bats and some rodents, become completely
inactive during winter, and their body temperature falls close to freezing.
While in this state, they survive entirely on food reserves stored in their
bodies. Estivating animals, which include land snails and some amphibians, seal
themselves up when conditions become dry and only become active again when it
rains. Between these two extremes, many other animals show less drastic
patterns of behavior that are triggered by cold or heat. Winter wrens, for
example, often crowd together for sleep when temperatures fall below freezing.
On warmer nights, they sleep on their own.
Special forms of behavior
also help animals to find food, to avoid being eaten, and to protect their
young. One of the most advanced forms of this behavior is the use of tools.
Several kinds of animals, particularly primates and birds, pick up implements
such as twigs and stones and use them to get at food. More rarely, some tool-using
animals seek out a particular object and then shape it so that it can be used.
Woodpecker finches probe for insect grubs by making tools from cactus spines,
and chimpanzees sometimes dig for termites using specially prepared twigs.
Defensive behavior is
exhibited by individual animals and also by animal groups. Group defense is
common in herding mammals, particularly in species such as the musk-ox, which
form a protective ring around their calves when threatened by wolves. It can
also be seen in swallows, starlings, and other songbirds, which instinctively
mob hawks and other birds of prey. By grouping together to harass their
enemies, they reduce the chances that they or their young will be singled out
and attacked.
Individual defensive behavior
is often based on threatening gestures that make an animal look larger or more
dangerous than it actually is. Sometimes it involves some highly specialized
forms of deception. One of the most remarkable is playing dead. Seen in animals
such as the Virginia opossum and some snakes, this last-ditch defense is
effective against predators that habitually hunt moving prey but leave dead
animals alone. After the predator has inspected the “dead” animal and moved on,
the prey comes back to life and makes its escape.
ORIGINS OF ANIMALS
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Most biologists agree
that animals evolved from simpler single-celled organisms. Exactly how this
happened is unclear, because few fossils have been left to record the sequence
of events. Faced with this lack of fossil evidence, researchers have attempted
to piece together animal origins by examining the single-celled organisms alive
today.
Modern single-celled organisms
are classified into two kingdoms: the prokaryotes and protists. Prokaryotes,
which include bacteria, are very simple organisms, and lack many of the
features seen in animal cells. Protists, on the other hand, are more complex,
and their cells contain all the specialized structures, or organelles, found in
the cells of animals. One protist group, the choanoflagellates or collar
flagellates, contains organisms that bear a striking resemblance to cells that
are found in sponges. Most choanoflagellates live on their own, but
significantly, some form permanent groups or colonies.
This tendency to form
colonies is widely believed to have been an important stepping stone on the
path to animal life. The next step in evolution would have involved a
transition from colonies of independent cells to colonies containing
specialized cells that were dependent on each other for survival. Once this
development had occurred, such colonies would have effectively become single
organisms. Increasing specialization among groups of cells could then have
created tissues, triggering the long and complex evolution of animal bodies.
This conjectural sequence
of events probably occurred along several parallel paths. One path led to the
sponges, which retain a collection of primitive features that sets them apart
from all animals. Another path led to two major subdivisions of the animal kingdom:
the protostomes, which include arthropods, annelid worms, mollusks, and
cnidarians; and the deuterostomes, which include echinoderms and chordates.
Protostomes and deuterostomes differ fundamentally in the way they develop as
embryos, strongly suggesting that they split from each other a long time ago.
Animal life first appeared
perhaps a billion years ago, but for a long time after this, the fossil record
remains almost blank. Fossils exist that seem to show burrows and other
indirect evidence for animal life, but the first direct evidence of animals
themselves appears about 650 million years ago, toward the end of the
Precambrian period. At this time, the animal kingdom stood on the threshold of
a great explosion in diversity (see Biodiversity). By the end of the
Cambrian Period, 150 million years later, all of the main types of animal life
existing today had become established.
Moving onto Land
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When the first animals
evolved, dry land was probably devoid of any kind of life, except possibly
bacteria. Without terrestrial plants, land-based animals would have had nothing
to eat. But when plants took up life on land over 400 million years ago, that situation
changed, and animals evolved that could make use of this new source of food.
The first land animals included primitive wingless insects and probably a range
of soft-bodied invertebrates that have not left fossil remains. The first
vertebrates to move onto land were the amphibians, which appeared about 370
million years ago.
For all animals, life
on land involved meeting some major challenges. Foremost among these were the
need to conserve water and the need to extract oxygen from the air. Another problem
concerned the effects of gravity. Water buoys up living things, but air, which
is 750 times less dense than water, generates almost no buoyancy at all. To
function effectively on land, animals needed support.
In soft-bodied land animals
such as earthworms, this support is provided by a hydrostatic skeleton, which
works by internal pressure. The animal’s body fluids press out against its
skin, giving the animal its shape. In insects and other arthropods, support is
provided by the exoskeleton (external skeleton), while in vertebrates it is
provided by bones. Exoskeletons can play a double role by helping animals to
conserve water, but they have one important disadvantage: unlike an internal
bony skeleton, their weight increases very rapidly as they get bigger,
eventually making them too heavy to move. This explains why insects have all
remained relatively small, while some vertebrates have reached very large
sizes.
Speciation and Extinction
|
Like other living things,
animals evolve by adapting to and exploiting their surroundings. In the
billion-year history of animal life, this process has created vast numbers of
new species, each capable of using resources in a slightly different way. Some
of these species are alive today, but these are a minority; an even greater
number are extinct, having lost the struggle for survival.
Speciation, the birth
of new species, usually occurs when a group of living things becomes isolated
from others of their kind (see Species and Speciation). Once this has
occurred, the members of the group follow their own evolutionary path and adapt
in ways that make them increasingly distinct. After a long period—typically
thousands of years—their unique features mean that they can no longer breed
with their former relatives. At this point, a new species comes into being.
In animals, this isolation
can come about in several different ways. The simplest form, geographical
isolation, occurs when members of an original species become separated by a
physical barrier. One example of such a barrier is the open sea, which isolates
animals that have been accidentally stranded on remote islands. As the new
arrivals adapt to their adopted home, they become more and more distinct from
their mainland relatives. Sometimes the result is a burst of adaptive
radiation, which produces a number of different species. In the Hawaiian
Islands, for example, 22 species of honeycreepers have evolved from a single
pioneering species of finch-like bird.
Another type of isolation
is thought to occur where there is no physical separation. In this case,
differences in behavior, such as mate selection, may sometimes help to split a
single species into distinct groups. If the differences persist for a long
enough time, new species are created.
The fate of a new species
depends very much on the environment in which it evolved. If the environment is
stable and no new competitors appear on the scene, an animal species may change
very little in hundreds of thousands of years. But if the environment changes
rapidly and competitors arrive from outside, the struggle for survival is much
more intense. In these conditions, either a species changes, or it eventually
becomes extinct.
During the history of
animal life, on at least five occasions, sudden environmental change has triggered
simultaneous extinction on a massive scale. One of these mass extinctions
occurred at the end of the Cretaceous Period, about 65 million years ago,
killing all dinosaurs and perhaps two-thirds of marine species. An even greater
mass extinction took place at the end of the Permian Period, about 200 million
years ago. Many biologists believe that we are at present living in a sixth
period of mass extinction, this time triggered by human beings.
ANIMALS IN THE BALANCE OF NATURE
|
Compared to plants, animals
make up only a small part of the total mass of living matter on earth. Despite
this, they play an important part in shaping and maintaining natural
environments.
Many habitats are directly
influenced by the way animals live. Grasslands, for example, exist partly
because grasses and grazing animals have evolved a close partnership, which
prevents other plants from taking hold. Tropical forests also owe their
existence to animals, because most of their trees rely on animals to distribute
their pollen and seeds. Soil is partly the result of animal activity, because
earthworms and other invertebrates help to break down dead remains and recycle
the nutrients that they contain. Without its animal life, the soil would soon
become compacted and infertile.
By preying on each other,
animals also help to keep their own numbers in check. This prevents abrupt
population peaks and crashes and helps to give living systems a built-in
stability. On a global scale, animals also influence some of the nutrient
cycles on which almost all life depends. They distribute essential mineral
elements in their waste, and they help to replenish the atmosphere’s carbon
dioxide when they breathe. This carbon dioxide is then used by plants as they
grow.
Animals and People
|
Until relatively recently
in human history, people existed as nomadic hunter-gatherers. They used animals
primarily as a source of food and also for raw materials that could be used for
making tools and clothes. By today’s standards, hunter-gatherers were equipped
with rudimentary weapons, but they still had a major impact on the numbers of
some species. Many scientists believe, for example, that humans were involved
in a cluster of extinctions that occurred about 12,000 years ago in North
America. In less than a millennium, two-thirds of the continent’s large mammal
species disappeared.
This simple relationship
between people and animals changed with domestication, which also began about
12,000 years ago. Instead of being actively hunted, domesticated animals were
slowly brought under human control. Some were kept for food or for clothing,
others for muscle power, and some simply for companionship.
The first animal to be
domesticated was almost certainly the dog, which was bred from wolves. It was
followed by species such as the cat, horse, camel, llama, and aurochs (a
species of wild cattle), and also by the Asian jungle fowl, which is the
ancestor of today’s chickens. Through selective breeding, each of these animals
has been turned into forms that are particularly suitable for human use. Today,
many domesticated animals, including chickens, vastly outnumber their wild
counterparts. In some cases, such as the horse, the original wild species has
died out altogether.
Over the centuries, many
domesticated animals have been introduced into different parts of the world
only to escape and establish themselves in the wild. Together with stowaway
pests such as rats, these feral animals have often had a highly damaging effect
on native wildlife. Cats, for example, have inflicted great damage on
Australia’s smaller marsupials, and feral pigs and goats continue to be serious
problems for the native wildlife of the Galápagos Islands.
Despite the growth of
domestication, humans continue to hunt some wild animals. Some forms of hunting
are carried out mainly for sport, but others provide food or animal products.
Until recently, one of the most significant of these forms of hunting was
whaling, which reduced many whale stocks to the brink of extinction. Today,
highly efficient sea fishing threatens some species of fish with the same fate
(see Fisheries).
Since the beginning of
agriculture, the human population has increased by more than two thousand
times. To provide the land needed for growing food and housing people, large
areas of Earth’s landscapes have been completely transformed. Forests have been
cut down, wetlands drained, and deserts irrigated, reducing these natural
habitats to a fraction of their former extent.
Some species of animals
have managed to adapt to these changes. A few, such as the brown rat, raccoon,
and house sparrow, have benefited by exploiting the new opportunities that have
opened up and have successfully taken up life on farms, or in towns and cities.
But most animals have specialized ways of life that make them dependent on a
particular kind of habitat. With the destruction of their habitats, their
number inevitably declines.
During the last century
or so, animals have also had to face additional threats from human activities. Foremost
among these are environmental pollution and the increasing demand for
resources, such as timber and fresh water. For some animals, the combination of
these changes has proved so damaging that their numbers are now below the level
needed to guarantee survival.
Across the world, efforts
are currently under way to address this urgent problem (see Endangered
Species). In the most extreme cases, gravely threatened animals can be helped
by taking them into captivity and then releasing them once breeding programs
have increased their number. One species that was restored in this way is the
Hawaiian mountain goose or nēnē. In the 1950s, its population had been reduced
to about 25 birds. Captive breeding has since helped the population increase,
although the nēnē remains on the endangered list.
While captive breeding
is a useful emergency measure, it cannot assure the long-term survival of a
species. Today animal protection focuses primarily on the preservation of
entire habitats, an approach that maintains the necessary links between the
different species the habitats support. With the continued growth in the
world’s human population, habitat preservation will require a sustained
reduction in our use of the world’s resources to minimize our impact on the natural
world.