Examples of pharyngeal slit in the following topics:
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- Animals in the phylum Chordata share four key features: a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail.
- Some invertebrate chordates use the pharyngeal slits to filter food out of the water that enters the mouth.
- In vertebrate fishes, the pharyngeal slits develop into gill arches, the bony or cartilaginous gill supports.
- In most terrestrial animals, including mammals and birds, pharyngeal slits are present only during embryonic development.
- In these animals, the pharyngeal slits develop into the jaw and inner ear bones.
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- Adults only maintain pharyngeal slits and lack a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, and a post-anal tail.
- Suspended material is filtered out of this water by a mucous net (pharyngeal slits) and is passed into the intestine via the action of cilia.
- Members of Cephalochordata possess a notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail in the adult stage.
- Adult lancelets retain the four key features of chordates: a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail.
- Water from the mouth enters the pharyngeal slits, which filter out food particles.
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- Pharyngeal slits, which allow water that enters through the mouth to exit without continuing through the entire digestive tract.
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- As chordates, all vertebrates have a similar anatomy and morphology with the same qualifying characteristics: a notochord, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail.
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- They have slit-like mouth openings and a pharynx, which is the muscular part of the digestive system that serves to ingest as well as egest food.
- Mesenteries do not divide the gastrovascular cavity completely; the smaller cavities coalesce at the pharyngeal opening.
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- For example, all vertebrate embryos, including humans, exhibit gill slits and tails at some point in their early development.
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- Some diatoms exhibit a slit in their silica shell called a raphe.
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- They can be distinguished from sharks by their flattened bodies, pectoral fins that are enlarged and fused to the head, and gill slits on their ventral surface.