Entrance Exams
Govt. Exams
The combination of exoskeleton, jointed appendages, and open circulatory system is diagnostic of Arthropoda.
Deuterostomes (including chordates) form coelom through enterocoely (from gut outpockets), while protostomes use schizocoely (splitting of mesoderm).
Feathers are unique to birds and provide insulation and aerodynamic surfaces essential for flight, while other options are found in other vertebrate classes.
Pharyngeal slits function in respiration (aquatic chordates) and are modified into the middle ear structure and eustachian tube in terrestrial vertebrates.
Amphibians uniquely have a biphasic life cycle, spending early life in water as aquatic larvae and later life on land as terrestrial adults, undergoing metamorphosis.
Insects have highly developed tracheal systems with extensive branching allowing efficient terrestrial respiration, unlike crustaceans which use gills.
Snails (gastropod mollusks) characteristically have both a radula (feeding structure) and a ventral muscular foot for locomotion.
Echinoderms possess a unique water vascular system derived from the coelom, used for locomotion, feeding, and respiration through tube feet.
Insects undergo complete metamorphosis with distinct larval, pupal, and adult stages, a characteristic holometabolous development.
The notochord develops from the chordamesoderm (primitive pit), which gives rise to axial structures in chordates.