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Most of the species that have been named and studied belong to the animal kingdom - including well-known groups like mammals, birds, fishes, insects, and mollusks. Plants, the other relatively familiar kingdom, include fewer named species than beetles - a single order of animals! The number of named species does not necessarily indicate the number of species that actually exist, however. Recent work suggests that the greatest diversity of species occurs in the Kingdoms Protoctista (Protists) or Bacteria. The bacteria probably include two or more distinct kingdoms.

According to the Margulis and Schwartz (1998), animals are:

  • heterotrophic (unable to synthesize their own food by photo- or chemo-synthesis)
  • diploid (contain two sets of chromosomes)
  • multicellular (comprised of more than one cell)
  • include a blastula stage of early development (with the exception of sponges)

These traits are not necessarily unique to animals (e.g., plants and members of other kingdoms also are multicellular), but together they can be used to define the Animal Kingdom. A great variety of life forms exist in the animal kingdom, and this is the only group in which we find nervous systems and brains.

Diversity of Animals

Animals range in size from microscopic zooplankton to whales, the largest animals ever to live on earth. Most species are found in the oceans, but of course animals are successful on land, in water, and in the air. The number of phyla, classes, and other taxonomic categories changes as we learn more about relationships between species. Today, experts recognize about 37 different phyla of animals (Margulis and Schwartz 1998). Only 15 of these (indicated with an asterisk) are represented by species that occur in the Western Great Lakes Region. Links to other web resources are provided for some of the phyla. Many of these connect to the excellent site developed by the University of California-Berkely Museum of Paleontology. An index of the world's species can be found at Catalogue of Life.

 

Subkingdom Parazoa (cells do not form organs; growth is indeterminate)

Subkingdom undetermined (characteristics of neither Parazoa or Eumetazoa) Subkingdom Eumetazoa (cells are organized into organs or organ systems)
History of Animals

Although spectacular fossils of wooly mammoths and dinosaurs have made news headlines, very few of the animals that have existed during the history of earth are preserved as fossils. In particular, soft-bodied animals like insects, worms, and protozoans are quickly decomposed and are unlikely to be fossilized except under extraordinary circumstances. Evidence from microfossils and marine sediments suggests that the first true multicellular animals (=metazoans) evolved on the ocean floor between 700 million and 800 million years ago. The oldest deposits of animal fossils were first found in the Ediacara Hills of South Australia, where animals resembling jellyfish, segmented worms (annelids) and arthropods occur in rocks dated at about 600 million years before present. The first "explosion" of animal taxa in the fossil record apparently took place during the Cambrian Period, about 500-570 million years ago (m.y.a.).

Web Links

Several excellent web sites are devoted to information about animal diversity and the phyla listed above. Here we list some of the major sites. If you are aware of additional sites with high quality information about animals, please email the webmaster (address at the bottom of page) with your recoommendation.

Natureserve (Online encyclopedia of biodiversity specializing in endangered species)
Animal Diversity Web (University of Michigan Museum of Zoology)
Biomedia
(Survey of organisms through the University of Glasgow)
University of California-Berkely Museum of Paleontology

 

Biodiversity Topics: Introduction . Plants . Animals . Mammals . Birds . Reptiles & Amphibians . Arthropods . Spiders . Insects

© 2001-2004 The Cofrin Center for Biodiversity and the University of Wisconsin Green Bay, All Rights Reserved
Last updated on January 12, 2006