Key Terms

acoelomate
animal without a body cavity
bilateral symmetry
type of symmetry in which there is only one plane of symmetry, so the left and right halves of an animal are mirror images
blastopore
opening into the archenteron that forms during gastrulation
blastula
16–32 cell stage of development of an animal embryo
body plan
morphology or defining shape of an organism
Cambrian explosion
time during the Cambrian period (542–488 million years ago) when most of the animal phyla in existence today evolved
cleavage
cell divisions subdividing a fertilized egg (zygote) to form a multicellular embryo
coelom
lined body cavity
Cryogenian period
geologic period (850–630 million years ago) characterized by a very cold global climate
determinate cleavage
cleavage pattern in which developmental fate of each blastomere is tightly defined
deuterostome
blastopore develops into the anus, with the second opening developing into the mouth
diploblast
animal that develops from two germ layers
Ecdysozoa
clade of protostomes that exhibit exoskeletal molting (ecdysis)
Ediacaran period
geological period (630–542 million years ago) when the oldest definite multicellular organisms with tissues evolved
enterocoely
mesoderm of deuterostomes develops as pouches that are pinched off from endodermal tissue, cavity contained within the pouches becomes coelom
eucoelomate
animal with a body cavity completely lined with mesodermal tissue
Eumetazoa
group of animals with true differentiated tissues
gastrula
stage of animal development characterized by the formation of the digestive cavity
germ layer
collection of cells formed during embryogenesis that will give rise to future body tissues, more pronounced in vertebrate embryogenesis
Hox gene
(also, homeobox gene) master control gene that can turn on or off large numbers of other genes during embryogenesis
indeterminate cleavage
cleavage pattern in which individual blastomeres have the character of “stem cells,” and are not yet predetermined to develop into specific cell types
Lophotrochozoa
clade of protostomes that exhibit a trochophore larvae stage or a lophophore feeding structure
mass extinction
event or environmental condition that wipes out the majority of species within a relatively short geological time period
Metazoa
group containing all animals
organogenesis
formation of organs in animal embryogenesis
Parazoa
group of animals without true differentiated tissues
protostome
blastopore develops into the mouth of protostomes, with the second opening developing into the anus
pseudocoelomate
animal with a body cavity located between the mesoderm and endoderm
radial cleavage
cleavage axes are parallel or perpendicular to the polar axis, resulting in the alignment of cells between the two poles
radial symmetry
type of symmetry with multiple planes of symmetry, with body parts (rays) arranged around a central disk
schizocoely
during development of protostomes, a solid mass of mesoderm splits apart and forms the hollow opening of the coelom
spiral cleavage
cells of one pole of the embryo are rotated or misaligned with respect to the cells of the opposite pole
triploblast
animal that develops from three germ layers

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Biology 2e for Biol 111 and Biol 112 Copyright © by Mary Ann Clark; Jung Choi; and Matthew Douglas is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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