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Chapter 30 Mammals. Section 1: Mammalian Characteristics. Section 2: Diversity of Mammals. Mammals. Chapter 30. 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics. Hair and Mammary Glands.
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Chapter 30 Mammals Section 1: Mammalian Characteristics Section2: Diversity of Mammals
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Hair and Mammary Glands • Two characteristics that distinguish members of class Mammalia from other vertebrate animals are hair and mammary glands.
Mammals Chapter 30
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Functions of Hair Insulation Camouflage Sensory devices Waterproofing Signaling Defense
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Other Characteristics • Endothermy • Source of body heat is internal. • Heat is produced by a high metabolic rate. • Body temperature is regulated by internal feedback mechanisms.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Feeding and Digestion • Daily intake of food is used to generate heat to maintain a constant body temperature.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics
Mammals Chapter 30
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Trophic Categories Insectivores Herbivores Carnivores Omnivores
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Teeth • Reveal the life habits of a mammal • Carnivores use canines to stab and premolars to slice and shear meat. • Incisors of insectivores are long and curved, functioning as pincers in seizing insect prey.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Excretion • Kidneys excrete or retain the proper amount of water in body fluids. • Enables mammals to live in extreme environments Mammals
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Respiration • High levels of oxygen are required to maintain a high level of metabolism. • Mammals are the only animals that have a diaphragm.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Circulation • Mammals require a consistent supply of nutrients and oxygen to maintain homeostasis. • Keeping oxygenated and deoxygenated blood separate makes the delivery of nutrients and oxygen more efficient.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics The Brain and Senses • Mammals have highly developed brains. • Cerebral cortex is responsible for coordinating conscious activities, memory, and the ability to learn. • Cerebellum is responsible for balance and coordinating movement.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Complex Behavior Senses • The importance of the senses varies from one group of mammals to the next. Glands • A system of glands secretes a variety of fluids that helps to regulate a mammal’s internal environment.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.1 Mammalian Characteristics Reproduction • In mammals, the egg is fertilized internally. • Development of the embryo takes place in the female uterus. Movement • Mammals must find food, shelter, and escape from predators.
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals Mammal Classification • Monotremes • Marsupials • Placental mammals
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals Monotremes • Reproduce by laying eggs • Duck-billed platypus • Echidna Echidna
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals Marsupials • Very short period of development in the uterus • Crawl into a pouch made of skin and hair and continue development while being nourished by milk from the mother’s mammary glands Kangaroo
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals Placental Mammals • Give birth to young that do not need further development within a pouch Shrew • Represented by 18 orders Humpback whale
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals
Mammals Chapter 30
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals Evolution of Mammals
Mammals Chapter 30 30.2 Diversity of Mammals Therapsids • A therapsid is an extinct vertebrate with both mammalian and reptilian features. • Pair of holes in the roof of the skull that allowed for the attachment of jaw muscles • Limbs positioned beneath their bodies • Might have been endotherms
Mammals Chapter 30 Chapter Resource Menu Chapter Diagnostic Questions Formative Test Questions Chapter Assessment Questions Standardized Test Practice biologygmh.com Glencoe Biology Transparencies Image Bank Vocabulary Animation Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding feature.
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 CDQ 1 Chapter Diagnostic Questions Name the term that refers to a mammal’s ability to produce heat internally. endoderm endothermy ectoderm ectothermy
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 CDQ 2 Chapter Diagnostic Questions What classification of mammals reproduces by laying eggs? marsupial placental mammal monotreme therapsid
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 CDQ 3 Chapter Diagnostic Questions A mammal’s period of gestation refers to what? amount of time the young stays with its herd amount of time the young stays in the uterus amount of time the young drinks its mother’s milk amount of time for the young to mature enough to reproduce
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 1 30.1 Formative Questions Which characteristics distinguish mammals from other vertebrates? kidneys and a cloaca mammary glands and hair a high metabolic rate and limbs a four-chambered heart and endothermy
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 2 30.1 Formative Questions What is the tough, fibrous protein that makes up hair, nails, claws, and hooves? urea keratin cellulose collagen
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 3 30.1 Formative Questions What is the source of body heat for mammals? hibernation insulation metabolism respiration
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 4 30.1 Formative Questions Which part of the brain is more highly developed in mammals than in other animals? cerebrum hypothalamus medulla optic lobe
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 5 30.1 Formative Questions What is a group of cells that secretes fluid to be used elsewhere in the body? a bladder a duct a gland an organ
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 6 30.2 Formative Questions Which mammals have reptilian features, such as laying eggs? cetaceans marsupials monotremes sirenians
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 7 30.2 Formative Questions Which mammals use their two pairs of razor-sharp incisor teeth to gnaw through wood, seed pods, or shells to get food? artiodactyls insectivores lagomorphs rodents
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 8 30.2 Formative Questions Which animals are cetaceans? deer and goats moles and shrews dolphins and whales manatees and dugongs
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 FQ 9 30.2 Formative Questions Why did mammals undergo extraordinary adaptations to the environment after the disappearance of dinosaurs? They had new niches available to them. They were able to survive the ice age. They were no longer prey to dinosaurs. They no longer competed with dinosaurs.
A B Mammals Chapter 30 CAQ 1 Chapter Assessment Questions The graph shows that large animals such as elephants have a high metabolic rate. • True • False
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 CAQ 2 Chapter Assessment Questions Select the mammal that is a member of the order Chiroptera. hedgehog ape anteater bat
Mammals Answer: It takes longer and is more difficult to digest plant material than meat. Chapter 30 CAQ 3 Chapter Assessment Questions Compare the digestive tracts of the deer and the fox. Infer why the deer’s digestive tract is so much longer.
A B Mammals Chapter 30 STP 1 Standardized Test Practice Which animal eats the least amount of food as a percentage of its body mass? elephant shrew
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 STP 2 Standardized Test Practice Why is a high metabolic rate necessary for the shrew’s survival? Its body loses heat quickly. It has a short digestive tract. It carries out complex behavior. It produces milk for its offspring.
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 STP 3 Standardized Test Practice How does a herbivore’s digestive tract compare to the digestive tract of this carnivore? An herbivore will have… a shorter digestive tract and a smaller cecum. a shorter digestive tract and a larger cecum. a longer digestive tract and a larger cecum. a longer digestive tract and a smaller cecum.
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 STP 4 Standardized Test Practice How do ruminants benefit from having bacteria in their stomachs? They can be omnivorous. They can digest meat. They can filter urea. They can process cellulose.
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 STP 5 Standardized Test Practice Which teeth are more highly developed in a mountain lion? canines incisors molars premolars
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 STP 6 Standardized Test Practice What is believed to have caused the isolation of marsupials’ ancestors to Australia and nearby islands? adaptive radiation continental drift habitat destruction reproductive isolation
A B C D Mammals Chapter 30 STP 7 Standardized Test Practice What competitive adaptive advantage do placental mammals have over marsupials? a more highly developed digestive system a pair of holes in the roof of the skull limbs positioned beneath their bodies more highly evolved social behavior
Mammals Chapter 30 Glencoe Biology Transparencies
Mammals Chapter 30 Image Bank