Biology 11. Class Reptilia Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them Were much better...

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PHYLUM CHORDATA SUBPHYLUM VERTEBRATA CLASS REPTILIA Biology 11

Transcript of Biology 11. Class Reptilia Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them Were much better...

Page 1: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

PHYLUM CHORDATASUBPHYLUM

VERTEBRATA CLASS REPTILIA

Biology 11

Page 2: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Class Reptilia

Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them

Were much better adapted to land

Page 3: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Reptilia Objectives

General characteristics Body systems: reproductive, respiratory,

circulatory, nervous and skeletal 4 orders and example animals

Page 4: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

General Characteristics

1. Amniotic egg – shelled

2. Internal fertilization

3. Scales or plates

4. If legs – 2 pair with claws, on ventral surface

5. Well developed lungs

6. Partial division of ventricle

7. Exothermic

Page 5: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Class Reptilia

Characteristics and Advances:

1. Reproduction:

A) The Amniotic Egg: reptiles solved the problem of water cased development with the amniotic egg. It allowed them to take water with them onto land for the development of the young

B) Internal fertilization was now required

Page 6: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Amniotic egg Shell – porous, prevents rapid water loss

Chorion – lines shell, gas exchange

Amnion – encloses embryo

Allantois – develops from embryo; carries on embryonic respiration and excretion

Yolk sac – contains food supply

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Class Reptilia

2. Respiratory System: Improved lungs no longer require skin

for getting O2 - skin can now dry out Now they can cover skin with scales,

shells or leathery layers

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Class Reptilia

3. Circulatory system Activity levels required more oxygenated

blood - the three and a half chambered heart

The ventricle was almost completely separated so that the right side of the heart pumps to the lungs and the left to the body

BUT still some mixing!

Page 9: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.
Page 10: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.
Page 11: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Class Reptilia

4. Nervous system: Better senses developing along with a larger

brain, better land adaptation Cerebrum and cerebellum continue to increase

in size

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Class Reptilia5. Behaviours Bigger brain and internal fertilization result

in specific behaviorsMate selection behaviorsTerritoriality

This tended to increase contribution of best fit males to gene pool

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Class Reptilia

Evolution Reptiles reached their evolutionary climax

in the Mesozoic with the dinosaurs. They were the dominant vertebrate life for

over 200 million years!

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Class Reptilia

Evidence suggests that the Mesozoic ended with a bang - as a large meteorite or comet struck the Earth

This first brought on intense heat, followed by at least a ten year global winter

95% of all life went extinct during this very short time frame including the trilobites

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Class Reptilia

However, the Earth was changing anyway becoming cooler, drier, and more unstable

This favored adaptations that allowed survival in these conditions

Small isolated pockets of reptiles adapted and survived the end of the Mesozoic

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Modern Day Reptiles

Order Rhynchoephalia: Tuatara (Sphenodon) Order Chelonia: Turtles Order Crocodilia: Crocs and gators Order Squamata: Snakes and lizards

Page 18: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Order Rhynchoephalia Tuatara (Sphenodon) – only living

example Found in New Zealand Resembles large lizard Parietal eye – third eye covered

by skin; senses sun’s radiation

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Order Chelonia

Turtle – sea turtles230 speciesWebbed feetSoft-shelled

(streamlines)Omnivorous

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Order Chelonia

Terrapin – fresh water turtlesClaws and webbed feetSymmetrical plates called scutes covering bony

under layers Top shell – carapaceBottom shell - plastron

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Order Chelonia

Tortoise – land turtleLong necks, short limbsAppendages completely drawn into shell, if

not – very aggressiveNo teethTympanic membrane (poor hearing) Good sense of smellGood color visionTemperature determines sex of eggs: low

temp = males

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Order Crocodilia

Only reptile with a 4 chambered heart Carnivorous Raised nostrils and eyes (so rest of

body is underwater) Valve at back of mouth prevents

water from entering lungs when mouth is open

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Order Crocodilia

Alligators Crocodiles

Less aggressive More aggressive

More terrestrial More aquatic

Rectangular head Triangular head

Teeth not visible when mouth is closed

Teeth visible when mouth is closed

Definite vocalizations No definite vocalizations

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Can you tell the difference between an alligator and a crocodile?

E

B

C

D

A

FCroc

Croc

Gator

Gator

GatorGator

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Order Crocodilian Both Alligators and Crocodiles…

Guard nest and care for youngAs with many turtles and some

lizards – temperature of nest determines sex of young○Low temperature = females

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Order Squamata – Lizards/Snakes

Moveable eyelids See color (except geckos) External ear Vocalize Live in arid climates, conserve

water by excreting uric acid (white paste that is the pre-cursor to urine)

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Lizards Iguanas – horned toad True chameleons – change color in

response to light, temperature and mood; arboreal (tree dwelling); tongue longer than body

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Lizards Gila Monster (aka Beaded Lizard) – only

poisonous lizard known to the world Native to the desert southwest of the US and MexicoPoison is found in saliva… no fangs!The poison is a nerve toxin, that is produced in

glands located in the lower jaw. When a Gila Monster bites an animal, the poison flows into the wound via grooved teeth. This poison only rarely kills people.

Gila Monster

Beaded Lizard

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Lizards Gecko (Geico?) – most primitive; pads

on toes to cling; makes noises, insectivores, eye has vertical pupil to see at night

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Lizards Monitor – Komodo Dragon is largest = 10 feet

FYI: The Komodo Dragon is not venomous or poisonous; however, its saliva contains a number of toxic strains of bacteria which often infect the wounds inflicted on its prey, causing death.

Page 31: Biology 11. Class Reptilia  Evolved from the amphibians and soon displaced them  Were much better adapted to land.

Snakes Loss of limbs and external ears Evolved from lizards Most numerous reptile 2,800 species (300 poisonous)

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Snake Feeding Carnivorous Kills via: Poison or constriction Swallow food whole

Jaw comes unhingedElastic ligamentsGlottis moves forward (so can breathe while

swallowing)Large esophagusNo sternumStrong stomach acid

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Non-Poisonous

Boa

Black

KingGarter

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Poisonous Snakes

Copperhead

Puff Adder

Rattlesnake

Cobra

Coral Snake

Krait

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Snake Venom

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Snake Venom Neurotoxin – affect nervous system Hemotoxin or hemmoragin – affects red

blood cells All contain both types, the amounts of

each may differ Danger is in the amount and concentration

of injected venom and where its injected:In blood vessel… spread fastIn muscle or fat… spread slow

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Top Ten Most Deadly Snakes1) Fierce Snake or Inland Taipan (Oxyuranus microlepidotus),

Australia. 2) Australian Brown Snake (Pseudonaja textilis), Australia. 3) Malayan Krait (Bungarus candidus), Southeast Asia and

Indonesia. 4) Taipan (Oxyuranus scutellatus), Australia. 5) Tiger Snake (Notechis scutatus), Australia.. 6) Beaked Sea Snake (Enhydrina schistosa), South Asian waters

Arabian Sea to Coral Sea.7) Saw Scaled Viper (Echis carinatus), Middle East Asia. 8) Coral Snake (Micrurus fulvius), North America. 9) Boomslang (Dispholidus typus), Africa. 10) Death Adder (Acanthophis antarcticus), Australia and New

Guinea.