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Reptiles

Reptiles. Ch. 11.4. Adaptations for Life on Land. Reptiles lay their eggs on land rather than in water. A reptile is an ectothermic vertebrate that has lungs and scaly skin. Unlike amphibians, reptiles can spend their entire lives on dry land.

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Reptiles

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  1. Reptiles Ch. 11.4

  2. Adaptations for Life on Land • Reptiles lay their eggs on land rather than in water. • A reptile is an ectothermic vertebrate that has lungs and scaly skin. • Unlike amphibians, reptiles can spend their entire lives on dry land.

  3. The ancestors of modern reptiles were the first vertebrates adapted to life completely out of water. • Reptiles get their oxygen from air and breathe entirely with lungs. • Reptiles that live in water, such as sea turtles, evolved from reptiles that lived on land.

  4. Even though sea turtles live in the ocean, they still breathe with lungs and come ashore to lay eggs. • You can think of a land animal as a pocket of water held within a bag of skin. • To thrive on land, an animal must have adaptations that keep the water within the “bag” from evaporating in the dry air. • The skin, kidneys, and eggs of reptiles are adapted to conserve water.

  5. Skin and Kidneys • Unlike amphibians, which have thin, moist skin, reptiles have dry, tough skin covered with scales. • Kidneys are organs that filter wastes from the blood. • The wastes are excreted in a watery fluid called urine. • Reptiles have concentrated urine so they lose very little water.

  6. Reptiles have internal fertilization. Then they lay their eggs on land. While still inside the female’s body, fertilized eggs are covered with membranes and a leathery shell. Unlike amphibian eggs, a reptile’s egg has a shell and membranes that protect the developing embryo and help keep it from drying out. An Egg With a Shell

  7. An egg with a shell and internal membranes is called an amniotic egg. • There are tiny holes in the shell, called pores, that let oxygen gas in and carbon dioxide out.

  8. Lizards and Snakes • Both lizards and snakes are reptiles that have skin covered in overlapping scales. • As they grow, they shed their skin and scales, replacing the worn ones with new ones. • Most lizards and snakes live in warm areas.

  9. Obtaining Food • A few lizards are herbivores that eat leaves. • Most lizards, however, are carnivores that capture their prey. • Some hunt frogs and birds, others eat insects. • Some have sticky tongues to capture the insects like chameleons.

  10. ALL snakes are carnivores. • Most eat small things like mice, but some can eat large prey.

  11. Snakes capture prey • There are different ways snakes can capture their prey: • Long curved teeth for hooking prey. • Venom glands attached to hollow teeth (fangs) • Some squeeze to death and then swallow hole! (Constrictors)

  12. Lizards: Walk Run Use legs Snakes: Slither (no legs) Move by contracting, or shortening, bands of muscles attached to their ribs and backbone. Movement

  13. Alligators and Crocodiles • Both alligators and crocodiles are large, carnivorous reptiles that care for their young. • Florida: Gators = Alligators • Australia: Crocodile Hunter = Crocodiles

  14. FLORIDA Broad, rounded snouts. Only a few teeth visible when mouth shut. AUSTRALIA Pointed snouts. Most teeth visible when mouth shut. Alligators vs. Crocodiles

  15. Obtaining Food • Carnivores • Eat at night • Strong tails for swimming • Very Strong Jaws when biting down. • Weak when opening mouth.

  16. Reproduction • Unlike most reptiles, crocodiles and alligators care for their eggs and newly hatched young. • After laying eggs, the female stays near the nest. • After tiny alligators and crocodiles hatch, the female scoops them up in her mouth and takes them to the water. • She watches them for up to a year until they can feed and protect themselves.

  17. Turtles • Live in the ocean, fresh water, and on land. • A turtle is a reptile whose body is covered by a protective shell that includes the ribs and the backbone. • Most turtles can draw the head, legs and tail inside the shell for protection.

  18. Turtles feed in a variety of ways, but all have a sharp-edged beak instead of teeth for tearing food. • Some are carnivores, like the largest turtles: the leatherbacks. • Leatherbacks eat jellyfishes and their tough skin protects against the jellyfish stinging cells.

  19. Tortoise • Herbivores that eat plants. • Live on dry land.

  20. Extinct Reptiles – The Dinosaurs • Unlike today’s reptiles, there is strong evidence some dinosaurs may have been endothermic! • Some dinosaurs, such as Brachiosaurus, were the largest land animals that EVER lived. • Dinosaurs were the earliest vertebrates that had legs positioned directly beneath their bodies. • This adaptations allowed them to move more easily than salamanders and lizards.

  21. Most herbivores had 4 legs. • Most carnivores had 2 legs (Tyrannosaurus) • Dinosaurs went extinct, or disappeared fro Earth, about 65 million years ago. • Most scientists think the data points to a massive asteroid hitting the Earth that threw up debris blocking out the sun. This lead to the plants dying and all things that rely on them died as well. • Biologists have evidence to show that birds descended from certain small dinosaurs.

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