5. Anatomical Positions
For humans: standing
erect facing forward,
with head level and
eyes facing forward, feet
flat on the floor and
directed forward, and
arms are at the sides of
the body with palms
turned forward.
6. Anatomical Position for Animals
The animal should either be supine
(laying on back facing upward) position
with arms out be side
7. Planes of Reference
Frontal plane: vertical plane that divides the
body into an anterior/ventral or
posterior/dorsal portions.
Sagittal plane: vertical plane that divides the
body or organ into right and left sides
(midsagittal or median plane is down the
middle of the body creating equal parts)
Transverse plane: divides the body into
superior (upper) or inferior (lower) portions.
8. Directional Terms
Superior/Cranial: toward the upper part/head
Inferior/Caudal: away from the head/lower
part
Anterior/ventral: nearer to or at front of body;
stomach side
Posterior/dorsal: nearer to or at the back of
body; dorsal fin side
Medial: nearer to midline
Lateral: farther away from midline
9.
10. Directional Terms Cont.
Proximal: nearer to attachment of limb
to trunk, nearer to origin
Distal: farther away from attachment of
limb to trunk, farther away from origin
Superficial: toward or on surface of
body
Deep: away from surface of body
11. Try these…
The heart is _______ to liver
The stomach is ________ to lungs.
The sternum (breastbone) is ______ to
the spinal column.
The esophagus is ________ to trachea
(windpipe).
12. Try these…
The stomach side of a dog is called
____.
The ______ fin is located on the fish’s
back.
The ______ fin is also known as the tail
fin.
The head is ______ to the tail.
13.
14. Symmetry
Asymmetrical: irregularly shaped body,
these animals are sessile
Radial: divided along any plane, through
central axis, into roughly equal halves, these
animals are starfish or hydras
Bilateral: can be divided down its length into
similar right and left halves, these animals
can use the anatomical terms such as
posterior, ventral, etc.
15.
16. Zygote Development
Fertilization: sperm (male sex cell) and egg
(female sex cell) meet
Zygote is formed when these cells fertilize
and repeatedly divide by mitosis
Embryo: when cell division begins
Blastula: fluid-filled cell
Gastrulation: cell division continues until one
side of the blastula moves inward
17. Embryo Development
Ectoderm: outer surface of gastrula;
develops into skin and nervous system
Endoderm: inner surface of gastrula; develop
into the lining of digestive syst.
Mesoderm: “middle” between ectoderm and
endoderm, eventually turn into muscles,
circulatory, excretory, and some respiratroy
systems
18. Development Cont.
Protostome: opening of the gastrula
develops into the mouth; examples:
snails, earthworms, & insects
Deuterostome: animal whose mouth
developed NOT from the opening, but
from cells elsewhere on gastrula,
examples: sea stars, fish, toads,
snakes, birds, & humans
19.
20. Bilateral Symmetry & Body
Plans
Acoelomates: no body cavities; have 3 cell
layers - ectoderm, endoderm, & mesoderm;
Ex: flatworms
Pseudocoelomates: space develops
between ectoderm & endoderm, fluid-filled
body cavity partly lined w/ mesoderm; one-
way digestive tract; ex: roundworms
Coelomate: body cavity fluid-filled space that
is completely surrounded by mesoderm;
organs & org. systems develop; Ex:
earthworms
21.
22.
23. Animal Protection & Support
Exoskeleton: hard covering on outside
of body that provides framework for
support
– Prevent water loss
– Protect soft body
– Provide place for muscle attachment
– Must molt & shed the old ones
– Found in invertebrates (insects, crabs, etc)
24.
25. Animal Protection & Support
Endoskeleton: protects internal organs
& provide internal brace for muscles to
pull against
– Made of calcium carbonate
– Found in vertebrates & sea stars
26.
27. Animals Also Have the ability to
move!!
Sessile: doesn’t move during adult life
– Examples: sponges
Motile: ability to move
– Humans, dogs, etc.