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The Origin and Early Evolution of Amniotes. Amniotes diverged from anthracosaurs in the Carboniferous period (late Paleozoic) The Amniotic Egg (shelled egg) - Enclosing the Pond Amnion : membrane enclosing the embryo (cushioned in amniotic fluid )
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The Origin and Early Evolution of Amniotes • Amniotes diverged from anthracosaurs in the Carboniferous period (late Paleozoic) • The Amniotic Egg (shelled egg) - Enclosing the Pond • Amnion: membrane enclosing the embryo (cushioned in amniotic fluid) • Allantois: sac serves as respiratory surface and waste container; highly vascularized • Yolk Sac: contains nutrients for embryo; modified into part of placenta in live-bearers • Chorion: outer membrane; highly vascularized (gas exchange occurs) • Shell: porous, parchment-like or leathery in reptiles; calcium absorbed by growing embryo • Skull Morphology and Amniote Radiation • Anapsid: no temporal opening behind orbit (extinct groups, incl. mesosaurs) • Diapsid: two pairs of temporal openings, separated by arch (incl. extant reptiles) • Synapsid: single pair low on cheeks, bordered by arch (extinct taxa, led to mammals) • Other Derived Characteristics of Amniotes • Jaws: bones and muscles allow crushing and gripping forces (vs. suction of fishes) • Rib ventilation: draw air into lungs (aspiration); limbs freed rib muscles for new function • Thicker, waterproofed skin: more keratin (beta keratin in reptiles) scales and scutes • Circulation: atria completely partitioned; two ventricles incompletely separated (excl. crocodiles, w/ complete separation); functionally separated pulmonary, systemic flows • Excretion: excretion of ammonia (amphibians) involves loss of water; bladder in reptiles absorbs water, nitrogenous waste excreted as uric acid • Nervous system: enlarged cerebrum; related to sensory integration and locomotion
Class Reptilia – Diversity and Taxonomy • Class Reptilia: ~8,000 extant species; “Age of Reptiles” in Mesozoic era (165 my span); most ectothermic; many extinct forms (ex. dinosaurs, ichthyosaurs) • Order Testudines (Chelonia) – Turtles • Little change in morphology from appearance in Triassic • Shell with carapace (dorsal) and plastron (ventral); outer layer of keratin and inner layer of bone (fused ribs and vertebrae); limbs and girdles positioned inside ribs, can be withdrawn (and head) for defense • Respiration hindered by shell; lungs ventilated by limb movement and “false diaphragm” • Small brain, poor hearing, but acute olfaction and vision • Internal fertilization; oviparous, with gender dependent on nest temperature in some (high temperatures produce females) • Diversity includes snapping turtles, giant tortoise, desert tortoise, sea turtles (incl. leatherback) • Order Squamata – Lizards and Snakes (95% of extant reptiles); with kinetic skulls (movable joints) that allow prey manipulation • Suborder Sauria (lizards): include geckos, iguanids, skinks (reduced limbs), monitors (incl. Komodo dragon), chameleons, and beaded lizards (venomous); ectothermic; eyelids • Suborder Serpentes (snakes): limbless; two halves of lower jaw kinetic (allows ingestion of large prey); opening of trachea anterior; rely mainly on chemoreception; most oviparous • Order Sphenodonta – Tuataras • Two species of Sphenodon in New Zealand (protected); “living fossils”; parietal (3rd) eye • Order Crocodilia – Crocodiles and Alligators • Elongated skull with massive jaw muscles; secondary palate allows breathing with full mouth; oviparous, with high nest temperatures producing males (vs. females in turtles) • Traits shared with birds: true four-chambered heart, thecodont teeth (in sockets) • Diversity includes American alligator, saltwater crocodile, Nile crocodile, caimans
FIG. 26.13 FIG. 26.14
FIG. 26.16 FIG. 26.18
Fig. 26.20 FIG. 26.20 FIG. 26.24
Snakes – Locomotion, Prey Capture, and Special Senses • Locomotion • Lateral undulation: lateral force exerted against surface irregularities • Concertina movement: braces S-shaped loops against sides of channel • Rectilinear movement: sections of body rest on ground with intervening sections pulled forward by muscles • Side-winding: throws body forward in loops with body at 60° angle to direction of travel; little contact with ground; used by sidewinder • Prey Capture – most snakes capture prey with mouth and swallow alive • Venom: ~20% of species; vipers with movable, tubular fangs in front of mouth; cobra family (incl. mambas, coral snakes, and kraits) with short, erect fangs in front of mouth; most sea snakes rear-fanged; Australia: 4/1 ratio venom/non • Constriction: capture prey larger than mouth; most ambush (ex. pythons) • Special Senses • Jacobson’s (vomeronasal) organs: pair of pit-like organs in roof of the mouth, lined with chemoreceptors; forked tongue picks up scent molecules of prey (can impart direction to prey) • Pit organs: found only in pit vipers (Subfamily Crotalinae, incl. cottonmouths, copperheads, and rattlesnakes); heat-sensitive pit organs between nostrils and eyes enclose free nerve endings; sense differences of ~0.003 °C; track prey and aim strikes
The Evolution and Extinction of the Dinosaurs and Other Mesozoic Reptiles • Diversity of Extinct Reptiles: evidence of parental care, herding, and endothermy for certain taxa • Order Saurischia (“lizard-hipped”) • Sauropods: herbivorous, massive, quadrupedal (ex. Brachiosaurus) • Theropods: carnivorous, bipedal (ex.Tyrannosaurus, Velociraptor); certain taxa gave rise to birds • Order Ornithischia (“bird-hipped”): most armored or with horns; all herbivorous (ex. Stegasaurus, Triceratops, hadrasaurs) • Order Pterosauria: winged, flying archosaurs (ex. Pteranodon) • Therapsids and Pelycosaurs: early mammal-like amniotes (ex. Dimetrodon); relatives of early mammals • Ichthyosaurs: dolphin-like marine reptiles (incl. Shonisaurus) • Plesiosaurs: large, long-necked marine reptiles • Extinction of the Dinosaurs • Evidence suggests that many dinosaurs were already in decline before meteor impact at end of Cretaceous (K/T boundary); impact crater located off Yucatan Peninsula; evidence for impact included shocked quartz, iridium layer