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Animal

margin-top:6px; margin-bottom:20px"> Animals Scientific classification Domain:Eukaryota KingdomAnimalia Phyla Subkingdom Parazoa     Porifera (sponges) Subkingdom "Agnotozoa"       Placozoa       Orthonectida       Rhombozoa Subkingdom Metazoa   "Radiata"       Cnidaria       Ctenophora (comb jellies)   Bilateria    Protostomia       Platyhelminthes (flatworms)       Nemertina (ribbon worms)       Gnathostomulida (jawed worms)       Gastrotricha       Rotifera (rotifers)       Priapulida       Kinorhyncha       Loricifera       Acanthocephala       Entoprocta       Nematoda (roundworms)       Nematomorpha (horsehair worms)       Cycliophora       Mollusca (mollusks)       Sipuncula (peanut worms)       Annelida (segmented worms)       Tardigrada (water bears)       Onychophora (velvet worms)       Arthropoda (insects, etc)       Phoronida       Ectoprocta (moss animals)       Brachiopoda    Deuterostomia       Echinodermata       Chaetognatha (arrow worms)       Hemichordata (acorn worms)       Chordata (vertebrates, etc) Animals are the group of organisms that constitute the kingdom Animalia. Typically, they are multicellular in composition and capable of both locomotion and responding to their surroundings. Unlike plants, animals do not photosynthesize, instead consuming plants or other organisms to grow and sustain themselves. Most animals have a body plan that becomes fixed as they mature and, except in animals that metamorphose, is established early in their development from embryos. The scientific study of animals is called zoology. Colloquially, "animal" often is used to refer to all animals other than humans and rarely to refer to animals not classified as metazoan (see "Metazoa" below). Humans however are actually animals. The word "animal" derives from the Latin anima, in its sense of vital breath, and comes to English via the Latin word for animal, animal. Animalia is the plural. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Development and evolution 2 Distinguishing characteristics 3 Evolution and basal forms 4 Metazoa 5 History of classification 6 Examples 7 See also 8 External links Development and evolution Animals are eukaryotes, and diverged from the same group of flagellate protozoa that gave rise to the fungi and choanoflagellates. The last are especially close relatives, with collared cells appearing only among them, the sponges, and rarely in certain other animal forms. In all these groups, called opisthokonts, motile cells (cells that propel themselves) have a single posterior flagellum with similar ultrastructure. Adult animals are typically diploid, producing small motile sperm and large non-motile eggs. In all forms the fertilized zygote initially divides to form a hollow sphere called a blastula. This then undergoes rearrangement and differentiation. Blastulae are probably representative of the sort of colonies animals evolved from; similar forms occur among other flagellates, e.g. Volvox. However none of these other groups really ever progressed further, and large multicellular forms tend to develop by progressive growth instead. Distinguishing characteristics The most notable distinction of animals lies in the way the cells are held together. Instead of being simply stuck together or held in place by thick walls, animal cells are linked by septate junctions, composed mainly of elastic proteins - collagen is characteristic - that make up the extracellular matrix. Sometimes this is calcified to form shells, bones, or spicules, but otherwise it's fairly flexible and can serve as a framework, upon which cells can move about and be reorganized. Evolution and basal forms Except for a few exceptionally questionable trace fossils, the first forms that might represent animals appear in the fossil record around the end of the Precambrian. These are called Vendian Biota and are exceedingly difficult to relate to later forms. Other than them, virtually every phylum makes a more or less simultaneous appearance during the Cambrian. This massive adaptive radiation may have come about because of climate change or a simple genetic innovation, and is so sudden that it is usually called the Cambrian explosion. The sponges (Porifera) were separated from the other animals early on, and are very different. Sponges are sessile and usually feed by drawing in water through pores all over the body, which is supported by a skeleton typically divided into spicules - the cells are differentiated, but not organized into distinct groups. There are also three problematic phyla - the Rhombozoa, Orthonectida, and Placozoa - that have an unclear position with respect to other animals. When they were first discovered, the Protozoa were considered as an animal phylum or subkingdom, but as they are generally unrelated and often as similar to plants as animals, a new kingdom, the Protista, was devised to hold them. Metazoa Aside from these, all animals belong to a monophyletic group called the Metazoa (called the Eumetazoa when the name Metazoa is used for all animals), characterized by a digestive chamber and separate cell layers that differentiate into various tissues. Distinguishing features of the Metazoa include a nervous system and muscles. The simplest Metazoa are radially symmetric and diploblastic, that is, they have two germ layers. The outer layer (ectoderm) corresponds to the surface of the blastula and the inner layer (endoderm) is formed by cells that migrate into the interior. It then invaginates to form a digestive cavity with a single opening (the archenteron). This form is called a gastrula or planula when it is free-swimming. The Cnidaria (jellyfish, anenomes, corals, etc) are the main diploblastic phylum; the Ctenophora (comb jellies) may also belong here. The Myxozoa, a group of microscopic parasites, have been considered reduced cnidarians but may instead be derived from the Bilateria. The remaining forms comprise a group called the Bilateria, since they are bilaterally symmetric (at least to some degree), and are triploblastic. The blastula invaginates without filling in first, so the endoderm is simply its inner lining, and the interior then fills in to become a third layer (mesoderm) between the others. Like tissues are grouped into organs. The simplest of such animals are the Platyhelminthes (flatworms), which may be paraphyletic to the higher phyla. The vast majority of the triploblastic phyla form a group called the Protostomia. These phyla all have a complete digestive tract (including a mouth and an anus), with the mouth developing from the archenteron and the anus arising later. The mesoderm arises as in the flatworms, from a single cell, and then divides to form a mass on each side of the body. Usually there is a hollow space around the gut, called the coelom, arising from a split within the mesoderm, or at least some reduced version thereof (eg a pseudocoelom, where the split occurs between the mesoderm and endoderm, common in microscopic forms). Some of the main protostome phyla are united by the presence of trochophore larva, which are distinguished by a special pattern of cilia. These make up a group called the Trochozoa, comprising the following: Traditionally the Arthropoda - the largest animal phylum including insects, spiders, crabs, and kin - and two small phyla closely related to it, the Onychophora and Tardigrada, have been considered close relatives of the Annelida on account of their common segmented body plan (the Articulata hypothesis). This relationship is now in doubt, and it appears that instead they belong with various pseudocoeolomate worms - the Nematoda (roundworms), Nematomorpha (horsehair worms), Kinorhyncha, Loricifera, and Priapulida - which share with them ecdysis and several other characteristics. This group is called the Ecdysozoa. There are various pseudocoelomate protostomes that are hard to classify because of their small size and reduced structure. The Rotifera and Acanthocephala are closely related to each other and probably belong near the Trochozoa. Other groups include the Gastrotricha, Gnathostomulida, Entoprocta, and Cycliophora. The last was discovered only recently, and as little investigation has been done into the marine world more will probably turn up. Most of these were originally grouped as the phylum Aschelminthes, together with the Nematoda and others, but they do not appear particularly closely related to each other. The Brachiopoda (lamp shells), Ectoprocta (=Bryozoa, literally moss animals), and Phoronida form a group called the Lophophorata, thanks to the shared presence of a fan of cilia around the mouth called the lophophore. The evolutionary relationships of these forms are very unclear - the group has even been considered among the deuterostomes, and may be paraphyletic. They are most likely related to the Trochozoa, however, and the two are often grouped as the Lophotrochozoa. The Deuterostomes differ from the Protostomes in various ways. They also have a complete digestive tract, but in this case the archenteron develops into the anus. The mesoderm and coelom do not form in the same way, but rather through evagination of the endoderm called enterocoelic pouching. And, finally, the embryonic cleavage is different. All this suggests that the two lines are separate and monophyletic. The Deuterostomes include: There are also some extinct animal phyla that, without much knowledge of their embryology or internal structure, are very difficult to place. These are mostly from the cambrian period, and include
  • Phylum Archaeocyatha (possibly sponges)
  • Phylum Conulariida (possibly cnidarians)
  • Phylum Conodonta (possibly chordates or near relatives thereof).
  • Phylum Lobopoda (probably arthropods)
  • Phylum Sclerotoma (several otherwise different forms with sclerites)
  • Phylum Vendozoa (some Precambrian forms, possibly not even animal)
History of classification In Linnaeus' original scheme, the animals were one of three kingdoms, divided into the classes of Vermes, Insecta, Pisces, Amphibia, Aves, and Mammalia. Since then the last four have all been subsumed into a single phylum, the Chordata, whereas the various other forms have been separated out. The above lists represent our current understanding of the group, though there is some variation from source to source. Examples Some well-known types of animals, listed by their common names: See also External links

The above article is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License



Tale of Despereaux: Being the Story of a Mouse, a Princess, Some Soup, and a Spool of Thread (Newbery Medal Book) by Kate Dicamillo

Goodnight Moon Board Book by Margaret Wise Brown

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? by Bill Martin Jr.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar Board Book by Eric Carle

Guess How Much I Love You by Sam McBratney

Diary of a Worm by Doreen Cronin

Walter, the Farting Dog by William Kotzwinkle

Pat the Bunny (Touch and Feel Book) by Dorothy Kunhardt

Animal Farm by George Orwell

Baby Einstein: Dogs Board Book by Julie Aigner-Clark

Duck for President by Betsy Lewin

Rats : Observations on the History and Habitat of the City's Most Unwanted Inhabitants by Robert Sullivan

The Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss

Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type by Doreen Cronin

Art of Raising a Puppy, The by New Skete Monks





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From USPTO:
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from PUBMED
1:  Dahmen U, Dirsch O, Li J, Fiedle M, Lu M, Rispeter K, Picucci M, Broelsch
CE, Roggendorf M. 
 ADOPTIVE TRANSFER OF IMMUNITY: A NEW STRATEGY TO INTERFERE WITH SEVERE
HEPATITIS VIRUS REINFECTION AFTER WOODCHUCK LIVER TRANSPLANTATION.
Transplantation. 2004 Apr 16;77(7):965-972. 
PMID: 15087755 

2:  Schaller B, Graf R. 
 Cerebral ischemia and reperfusion: the pathophysiologic concept as a basis for
clinical therapy.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2004 Apr;24(4):351-71. 
PMID: 15087705 

3:  Turan A, Karamanloglu B, Memis D, Hamamcoglu MK, Tukenmez B, Pamukcu Z, Kurt
I. 
 Analgesic Effects of Gabapentin after Spinal Surgery.
Anesthesiology. 2004 Apr;100(4):935-938. 
PMID: 15087630 

4:  Zhao C, Tall JM, Meyer RA, Raja SN. 
 Antiallodynic Effects of Systemic and Intrathecal Morphine in the Spared Nerve
Injury Model of Neuropathic Pain in Rats.
Anesthesiology. 2004 Apr;100(4):905-911. 
PMID: 15087626 

5:  Serkova NJ, Christians U, Benet LZ. 
 Biochemical mechanisms of cyclosporine neurotoxicity.
Mol Interv. 2004 Apr;4(2):97-107. 
PMID: 15087483 

6:  Ishida J, Hashimoto T, Hashimoto Y, Nishiwaki S, Iguchi T, Harada S, Sugaya
T, Matsuzaki H, Yamamoto R, Shiota N, Okunishi H, Kihara M, Umemura S, Sugiyama
F, Yagami KI, Kasuya Y, Mochizuki N, Fukamizu A. 
 Regulatory roles for APJ, a seven-transmembrane receptor related to AT1, in
blood pressure in vivo.
J Biol Chem. 2004 Apr 15 [Epub ahead of print] 
PMID: 15087458 

7:  Garbow JR, Zhang Z, You M. 
 Detection of primary lung tumors in rodents by magnetic resonance imaging.
Cancer Res. 2004 Apr 15;64(8):2740-2. 
PMID: 15087388 

8:  Meir KS, Leitersdorf E. 
 Atherosclerosis in the Apolipoprotein E-Deficient Mouse: A Decade of Progress.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2004 Apr 15 [Epub ahead of print] 
PMID: 15087308 

9:  Fazekas Z, Gao D, Saladi RN, Lu Y, Lebwohl M, Wei H. 
 Protective effects of lycopene against ultraviolet B-induced photodamage.
Nutr Cancer. 2003;47(2):181-7. 
PMID: 15087271 

10:  Boffa MB, Marcovina SM, Koschinsky ML. 
 Lipoprotein(a) as a risk factor for atherosclerosis and thrombosis: mechanistic
insights from animal models.
Clin Biochem. 2004 May;37(5):333-43. 
PMID: 15087247 

11:  Garcia-Villada L, Rico M, Altamirano MM, Sanchez-Martin L, Lopez-Rodas V,
Costas E. 
 Occurrence of copper resistant mutants in the toxic cyanobacteria Microcystis
aeruginosa: characterisation and future implications in the use of copper
sulphate as algaecide.
Water Res. 2004 Apr;38(8):2207-13. 
PMID: 15087203 

12:  Dunn SR, Qi Z, Bottinger EP, Breyer MD, Sharma K. 
 Utility of endogenous creatinine clearance as a measure of renal function in
mice.
Kidney Int. 2004 May;65(5):1959-1967. 
PMID: 15086941 

13:  DiPetrillo K, Coutermarsh B, Soucy N, Hwa J, Gesek F. 
 Tumor necrosis factor induces sodium retention in diabetic rats through
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Kidney Int. 2004 May;65(5):1676-83. 
PMID: 15086906 

14:  Fandrich F, Schulze M, Zehle G, Lange H, Ungefroren H. 
 Stem cell-mediated tolerance inducing strategies in organ transplantation.
Kidney Int. 2004 May;65(5):1548-50. 
PMID: 15086889 

15:  Yoshioka Y, Kumasaka T, Ishidoh K, Kominami E, Mitani K, Hosokawa Y,
Fukuchi Y. 
 Inflammatory response and cathepsins in silica-exposed Hermansky-Pudlak
syndrome model pale ear mice.
Pathol Int. 2004 May;54(5):322-31. 
PMID: 15086836 

16:  Cui H, Chang XH, Liu B, Feng J, Li Y, Ye X, Cao SJ, Fu TY, Yao Y, Li HQ,
Qian HN. 
 The anti-tumor immune responses induced by a fusion protein of ovarian
carcinoma anti-idiotypic antibody 6B11ScFv and murine GM-CSF in BALB/c mice.
Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2004 Mar-Apr;14(2):234-41. 
PMID: 15086722 

17:  Lelievre L, Paterlini-Brechot P, Camatte S, Tartour E, Aggerbeck M, Vilde
F, Lecuru F. 
 Effect of laparoscopy versus laparotomy on circulating tumor cells using
isolation by size of epithelial tumor cells.
Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2004 Mar-Apr;14(2):229-33. 
PMID: 15086721 

18:  Ding YM, Jaumotte JD, Signore AP, Zigmond MJ. 
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damage to dopamine neurons and the impact of glial cell line-derived
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J Neurochem. 2004 May;89(3):776-87. 
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19:  Simmons EM, Himmelfarb J, Sezer MT, Chertow GM, Mehta RL, Paganini EP,
Soroko S, Freedman S, Becker K, Spratt D, Shyr Y, Ikizler TA; The PICARD Study
Group. 
 Plasma cytokine levels predict mortality in patients with acute renal failure.
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PMID: 15086475 

20:  Fabre RA, Perez TM, Aguilar LD, Rangel MJ, Estrada-Garcia I,
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Note again ... some material here is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

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