bilateral symmetry
(noun)
having equal arrangement of parts (symmetry) about a vertical plane running from head to tail
Examples of bilateral symmetry in the following topics:
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Animal Characterization Based on Body Symmetry
- Animals can be classified by three types of body plan symmetry: radial symmetry, bilateral symmetry, and asymmetry.
- All true animals, except those with radial symmetry, are bilaterally symmetrical.
- In contrast to radial symmetry, which is best suited for stationary or limited-motion lifestyles, bilateral symmetry allows for streamlined and directional motion.
- Animals in the phylum Echinodermata (such as sea stars, sand dollars, and sea urchins) display radial symmetry as adults, but their larval stages exhibit bilateral symmetry .
- The larvae of echinoderms (sea stars, sand dollars, and sea urchins) have bilateral symmetry as larvae, but develop radial symmetry as full adults.
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Body Plans
- Animal body plans can have varying degrees of symmetry and can be described as asymmetrical, bilateral, or radial.
- They can be asymmetrical, radial, or bilateral in form .
- Bilateral symmetry is found in both land-based and aquatic animals; it enables a high level of mobility.
- Bilateral symmetry is illustrated in a goat.
- The sponge is asymmetrical, the sea anemone has radial symmetry, and the goat has bilateral symmetry.
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Classes of Echinoderms
- Of all echinoderms, the Ophiuroidea may have the strongest tendency toward 5-segment radial (pentaradial) symmetry.
- Their early larvae have bilateral symmetry, but they develop fivefold symmetry as they mature.
- Several sea urchins, however, including the sand dollars, are oval in shape, with distinct front and rear ends, giving them a degree of bilateral symmetry.
- These are the only echinoderms that demonstrate "functional" bilateral symmetry as adults because the uniquely-extended oral-aboral axis compels the animal to lie horizontally rather than stand vertically.
- Sea cucumbers are the only echinoderms that demonstrate "functional" bilateral symmetry as adults, as they lie horizontally as opposed to the vertical axis of other echinoderms.
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Superphylum Lophotrochozoa
- These phyla are also bilaterally symmetrical: a longitudinal section will divide them into right and left sides that are symmetrical .
- Species in this group have bilateral symmetry.
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Rhizaria
- A second subtype of Rhizaria, the radiolarians, exhibit intricate exteriors of glassy silica with radial or bilateral symmetry .
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Limits on Animal Size and Shape
- Animals with bilateral symmetry that live in water tend to have a fusiform shape: a tubular shaped body that is tapered at both ends.
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Phylum Echinodermata
- Echinoderms are invertebrates that have pentaradial symmetry, a spiny skin, a water vascular system, and a simple nervous system.
- Adult echinoderms exhibit pentaradial symmetry and have a calcareous endoskeleton made of ossicles, although the early larval stages of all echinoderms have bilateral symmetry .
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Characteristics of Vertebrates
- Animals that possess bilateral symmetry can be divided into two groups, protostomes and deuterostomes, based on their patterns of embryonic development.
- Echinoderms are invertebrate marine animals that have pentaradial symmetry and a spiny body covering; the phylum includes sea stars, sea urchins, and sea cucumbers.
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Phylum Nemertea
- They show bilateral symmetry and remarkable contractile properties.
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Constructing an Animal Phylogenetic Tree
- Eumetazoa are subdivided into radially-symmetrical animals and bilaterally-symmetrical animals and are classified into clade Radiata or Bilateria, respectively.
- The cnidarians and ctenophores are animal phyla with true radial symmetry.
- The bilaterally-symmetrical animals are further divided into deuterostomes (including chordates and echinoderms) and two distinct clades of protostomes (including ecdysozoans and lophotrochozoans).