How many of you remember the Brady Bunch episode in which Peter was studying for a biology test? He asked Marcia for help, and she taught him the mnemonic: “A vertebrate has a back that’s straight.” Well, not all vertebrates have straight backs, but all have backbones, or vertebral columns, that help support their bodies.
Although the vertebral column is perhaps the most obvious feature in vertebrates, it was not present in the first ones, which probably had only a notochord (flexible rodlike structure which plays a role in the development of the nervous system). The vertebrate has a distinct head, with a differentiated brain and three pairs of sense organs (nasal, optic, and otic [hearing]). The body is divided into trunk and tail regions.
Several groups of vertebrates inhabit planet Earth. Let’s take a tour of the five main vertebrate groups alive today: the fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
1.Mammals

This group of vertebrates ranges in size from tiny shrews or small bats weighing only a few grams to the largest known animals, the whales. Most mammals are terrestrial, feeding on both animal and vegetable matter, but a few are partially aquatic or entirely so, as in the case of the whales or porpoises. Mammals move about in a great variety of ways: burrowing, bipedal or tetrapedal (four-legged) running, flying, or swimming. Reproduction usually involves the young developing inside the uterus, where nutritive materials are made available through an allantoic placenta or, in a few cases, a yolk sac. In placental mammals, young have a longer developmental period within the uterus. In marsupials, the relatively undeveloped young are carried in a pouch, where they attach themselves to their mother’s nipple until they become fully developed. Monotreme mammals (that is, the platypus and echidna) differ from other mammals in that they lay eggs which hatch.
2.Birds

The origin of birds, feathers, and avian flight have long been hotly debated; the evolution of birds from reptilian ancestors is universally accepted, however. The diversity of theropod dinosaurs (a diverse group of carnivorous “lizard-hipped” dinosaurs), some with feathers, has greatly expanded our perspective of the evolution and early diversification of birds. While it is known that the critical period in avian evolution and flight took place during the Early Cretaceous (145.5 million to 99.6 million years ago), there is evidence that feathers on theropods emerged much earlier, possibly during the Triassic and Jurassic Periods (some 252 million to 145 million years ago).
3.Reptiles

4.Amphibians

There are three living groups of amphibians (caecilians, salamanders, and anurans [frogs and toads]) that, collectively, make up more than 7,300 amphibian species. One similar tendency among amphibians has been the evolution of direct development, in which the aquatic egg and free-swimming larval stages are eliminated. Development occurs fully within the egg capsule, and juveniles hatch as miniatures of the adult body form. Most species of lungless salamanders (family Plethodontidae), the largest salamander family, some caecilians, and many species of anurans have direct development. In addition, numerous caecilians and a few species of anurans and salamanders give birth to live young.
Frogs and toads display a wide variety of life histories. Some deposit eggs on vegetation above streams or ponds; upon hatching, the tadpoles drop into the water where they continue to develop throughout their larval stage. Some species create foam nests for their eggs in aquatic (watery), terrestrial (land-based), or arboreal (tree-based) habitats; after hatching, tadpoles usually develop in water. Other species deposit their eggs on land and transport them to water, while marsupial frogs are so called because they carry their eggs in a pouch on their backs. A few species lack a pouch and the tadpoles are exposed on the back; in some species, the female deposits her tadpoles in a pond as soon as they emerge from eggs.
5.Fishes

Fishes range in adult length from less than 10 mm (0.4 inch) to more than 20 meters (60 feet) and in weight from about 1.5 grams (less than 0.06 ounce) to many thousands of kilograms. Some live in shallow thermal springs at temperatures slightly above 42 °C (100 °F), others in cold Arctic seas a few degrees below 0 °C (32 °F) or in cold deep waters more than 4,000 meters (13,100 feet) beneath the ocean surface.
Fish reproduction methods vary, but most fishes lay a large number of small eggs that are fertilized and scattered outside of the body. The eggs of pelagic (open ocean) fishes usually remain suspended in the open water, while many shore and freshwater fishes lay eggs on the bottom or among plants. The mortality of the young and especially of the eggs is very high, and often only a few individuals grow to maturity out of hundreds, thousands, and in some cases millions of eggs laid.
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