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Amphibians The First Terrestrial Vertebrates. Alexander True, Ryan Adams, Michael Sinfield-Albets Toler. General Characteristics. Amphibians are present on all continents except for Antarctica. 3,000 modern day species. This is a remnant of a once diverse group. Belong to three orders:
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AmphibiansThe First Terrestrial Vertebrates Alexander True, Ryan Adams, Michael Sinfield-Albets Toler
General Characteristics • Amphibians are present on all continents except for Antarctica. • 3,000 modern day species. • This is a remnant of a once diverse group. • Belong to three orders: • Caudata (salamanders), Anura (frogs and toads), Gymnophiona (caecilians)
Evolutionary Perspective • Amphibians are animals that either move back and forth between water and land or live one of their stages of life in water and another on land. • Amphibians are tetrapods“Four-foot” • The presence of four muscular limbs and feet with toes and fingers
Phylogenetic Relationships • Fossil record provides evidence of many extinct taxa and no one knows what animal was the first stegocephalian. • Taxonomists agree that amphibians are monophyletic and closely related to reptiles, birds, and mammals.
Order Caudata • This order consists of salamanders. • Means “tail-bearing” • Characteristics: • Posses a tail • Have two pairs of unspecialized legs • External gills • Habitat: • Live in moist forest-floor litter • Spend most of life in water • Reproduction: • Internal fertilization • Produce aquatic larvae • Larvae are similar to adults but smaller
Order Gymnophiona • This order consists of caecilians. • Means “naked like a snake” • Characteristics: • Worm-like • Appear segmented because of skin folds that overlie separations between muscle bundles. • Skin over eyes (most likely blind) • Habitat: • Burrow into the ground • Reproduction: • fertilization is internal • Can have aquatic larvae or embryotic larvae that develop on land • Young are miniature adults • Feeding: • Eat soil and worms when they burrow
Anura • This order consists of frogs and toads. • Means “without tail” • About 4,000 species • Characteristics: • Long muscular hind limbs • Webbed feet • Habitat: • Generally moist environments (can really be found almost anywhere) • Reproduction: • External fertilization • Undergoes metamorphosis from tadpole to adult
Anura Feeding • They mostly eat small insects and some plants. • They utilize a sticky tongue, located on their lower jaw, that is extended from their mouth as a sort of sticky lasso to catch their prey. • Most frogs sit and wait for their prey. Their skin colors and textures perfectly camouflages them in their surroundings.
External Structure and Locomotion • The skin of amphibians functions in defense, gas exchange, temperature regulation, and absorption and storage of water. • Skin is highly glandular, these glands keep the skin moist to prevent drying. • The glands also produce a sticky secretion that helps them cling to mates during sexual activities. • The glands produce toxic chemicals that discourage predators. • The bone structure is set up in a way that makes terrestrial locomotion possible. • They have joints at the shoulder, hip, elbow, knee, wrist, and ankle allow freedom of movement and better contact with the substrate. • Each type of Amphibian has a distinct form of movement Salamanders move like a fish swims through water, a Caecilian has accordion movement like a snake, and Frogs have strong hind limbs specialized for jumping.
Locomotion Continued • The terrestrial skeleton is modified to provide support against gravity and it must be strong enough to support the relatively powerful muscle that propel terrestrial vertebrates across land. • The amphibian skull is flattened, smaller, and has fewer bony elements than the skull of fishes. • This lightens the skull so it can be supported out of water. • Changes in jaw structure and musculature allow terrestrial vertebrates to crush pray held in the mouth.
Locomotion Continued Continued • Salamanders move in a way that is reminiscent of the undulatorywaves that pass along the body of a fish. • Terrestrial salamanders also move by a pattern of muscle contractions that throw the body into a curve to advance the stride of a limb. • Caecilians have an accordion-like movement where adjacent body parts push or pull forward at the same time. • The long hind-limbs and pelvic girdle of anurans are modified for jumping. • The dorsal bone of the pelvis (ilium) extends anteriorly and securely attaches to the vertebral column, and the urostyle extends posteriorly and attaches to the pelvis.
Nutrition and Digestion System • Adult amphibians are carnivores that feed on a wide variety of invertebrates. • However, some anurans are more diverse. For example, some bullfrogs on small mammals, birds, and other anurans. • Main factor that determines what amphibians eat is prey size and availability. • Most larvae are herbivorous and feed on algae and other plant matter. • Most amphibians locate prey via sight and simply wait for prey to pass by. • Olfaction plays an important role in prey detection by aquatic salamanders and caecilians.
Nutrition and Digestive System Continued • Most salamanders use just their jaws to capture prey but anurans and plethodontid salamanders use their tongues and jaws. • A true tongue is first seen in amphibians. • The anuran tongue attaches at the anterior margin of the jaw and folds back over the floor of the mouth. • Mucous and buccal glands on the tip of the tongue exude sticky secretions. • When prey comes within range, an anuran flicks out its tongue and uses it as a sort of sticky lasso to capture its prey.
Circulation • The amphibian circulatory system shows remarkable adaptations for a life divided between aquatic and terrestrial habitats. • The pulmonary and systemic circuits are separated. • The atrium is partially divided in urodeles and completely divided in anuras. • There is no ventricle in the septum. • A spiral valve in the conusarteriosusor ventral aorta helps direct blood flow into the pulmonary and systemic circuits.
Gas Exchange • Because the skin of amphibians is moist and richly supplied with capillary beds, the skin can act as a respiratory organ. • Gas exchange across the skin is called cutaneous respiration and can occur in water and on land. • In salamanders, 30 to 90% of gas exchange occurs across the skin. • Gas exchange also occurs across the moist surfaces of the mouth or pharynx which is called buccopharyngeal respiration. • This accounts for 1 to 70% of total gas exchange. • Most amphibians, except plethedontid salamanders, posses lungs. • The lunges of salamanders are simple sacs and the lungs of anurans are subdivided which increases surface area for gas exchange. • The buccal pump mechanism allows pulmonary ventilation by creating positive pressure to force air into the lungs with the use of the muscles in the mouth and pharynx.
Temperature Regulation • Amphibians are cotothermic • They depend on external heat sources to maintain body temperature. • They are ectothermic because they are poorly insulated aquatic animals; so, regardless of how much metabolic heat it produces, it will lose heat as quickly as it is produced because of powerful heat-absorbing properties of the water.
Amphibian Nervous and Sensory Functions • The amphibian brain consists of three embryological subdivisions: • The forebrain contains olfactory center and regions that regulate color change and visceral functions. • The midbrain contains a region called the optic factum that assimilates sensory information and initiates motor responses, and also processes visual sensory information. • The hindbrain functions in motor coordination and in regulating heart rate and the mechanics of respiration. • Sensory receptors are widely distributed across the skin that respond to heat, cold and pain.
Amphibian Nervous and Sensory Functions Continued • Amphibians have singly or small grouping of lateral line systems that respond to low frequency vibrations in water. • They have chemoreceptors in the nasal epithelium and the lining of the mouth, on the tongue, and over the skin. • Olfaction is used in mate recognition as well as in detecting noxious chemicals and in locating food. • Vision is one of the most important senses in amphibians because they are primarily sight feeders. • Eyes are located at the front of the head, providing binocular vision and depth perception. • The lower eyelid is moveable and it cleanse and protects the eye.
Amphibian Excretion and Osmoregulation • The kidneys of amphibians lie on either side of the dorsal aorta on the dorsal wall of the body cavity. A duct leads to the cloaca, and a storage structure, the urinary bladder, is a ventral outgrowth of the cloaca. • Nitrogenous waste product comes in the forms of either ammonia or urea. • Freshwater amphibians excrete ammonia. • Land-based amphibians excrete urea that is produced from ammonia in the liver. • One of the biggest problems amphibians face is osmoregulation. • Facing the same osmoregulatory problems as freshwater fishes they must rid the body of excess water and conserve essential ions. • Amphibians must conserve water. • Many amphibians reduce evaporative water loss by reducing the amount of body surface exposed to air.
Amphibian Reproduction, Development and Metamorphosis • Amphibians are dioecious with ovaries and testes located near the dorsal body wall. • Fertilization is usually external (caecilians are an exception), and because the developing eggs lack any resistant covering, development is tied to moist habitats, usually water. • Some anurans have terrestrial nests that are kept moist by being enveloped in foam or by being located near the water and subjected to flooding. • Only about 10% of all salamanders have external fertilization while all others produce spermatopohores, and fertilization is internal. • 75% have internal development. • Metamorphosis is a series of abrupt structural, physiological, and behavioral changes that transform a larva into an adult. • A variety of environmental conditions, including crowding and food availability, influence the time required for metamorphosis.
Vocabulary • Cutaneous Respiration – Gas exchange across thin, moist surfaces of the skin. Also called cutaneous exchange of integumentary exchange. • Amplexus – The positioning of a male amphibian dorsal to a female amphibian, his forelimbs around her waist. During amplexus, the male releases sperm as the female releases eggs. • Buccal Pump – The mechanism by which lung ventilation occurs in amphibians. Muscles of the moth and pharynx create positive pressure to force air into the lungs. • Nicitating Membrane – The thin, transparent lower eyelid of amphibians and reptiles. • Tetrapods – A taxonomic designation that refers to extant amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals and their closest common ancestor.