Zoology Chapter 20 and Mammal Orders
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Transcript of Zoology Chapter 20 and Mammal Orders
Chapter 20 Study Questions
1. Describe the evolution of mammals, tracing their synapsid lineage from early amniote ancestors to true mammals. How would you distinguish the skull of a synapsid from that of a diapsid?
The synapsid lineage, characterized by lateral temporal openings in the skull, began with pelycosaurs, early amniotes of the Permian period. Pelycosaurs diversified extensively and evolved changes in jaws, teeth, and body form that presaged several mammalian characteristics. These trends continued in their successors, the therapsids, especially in cynodonts. One lineage of cynodonts gave rise in the Triassic to early mammals. Fossil evidence, as currently interpreted, indicates that all three groups of living mammals -‐ monotremes, marsupials, and placentals -‐-‐ are derived from the same cynodont lineage. The great diversification of modern placental orders occurred during the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods.
Synapsid skull has a single pair of lateral temporal openings plus the orbit.
Diapsid skull has a pair of lateral temporal openings, a pair of dorsal temporal openings plus the orbit.
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3. Hair is hypothesized to have evolved in therapsids as an adaptation for insulation, but modern mammals have adapted hair for several other purposes. Describe these.
Most mammals wear somber colors that disguise their presence. Often a species is marked with "salt-‐and-‐pepper" coloration or a disruptive pattern that helps make it inconspicuous in its natural surroundings.
Bristles of hogs, spines of porcupines and their kin, and vibrissae also hair modifications. Vibrissae, commonly called "whiskers," are really sensory hairs that provide a tactile sense to many mammals. The slightest movement of a vibrissa generates impulses in sensory nerve endings that travel to special sensory areas of the brain.
Procupines, hedgehogs, echidnas, and a few other mammals have developed an effective and dangerous spiny armor.
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Chapter 20 Study Questions
4. What is distinctive about each of the following: horns of bovids, antlers of deer, and horns of rhinos? Describe the growth cycle of antlers.
True horns of the family Bovidae (sheep and cattle) are hollow sheaths of keratinized epidermis that embrace a core of bone arising from the skull. True horns are not shed, usually are not branched (although they may be greatly curved), grow continuously, and occur in both sexes.
Antlers of the deer family, Cervidae, are branched and composed of solid bone when mature. During their annual spring growth, antlers develop beneath a covering of highly vascular soft skin called velvet. When growth of antlers is complete just before the breeding season, blood vessels constrict, and the stag tears off the velvet by rubbing its antlers against trees. Antlers are shed after the breeding season. New buds appear a few months later to herald the next set of antlers. For several years, each new pair of antlers is larger and more elaborate than the previous set. Annual growth of antlers places a strain on mineral metabolism, since during the growing season an older moose or elk must accumulate 50 or more pounds of calcium salts from its vegetable diet.
Rhinoceros horns consist of hair-‐like, keratinized filaments that arise from dermal papillae cemented together, but they are not attached to the skull.
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5. Describe the location and principal function(s) of each of the following skin glands: sweat glands (eccrine and apocrine), scent glands, sebaceous glands, and mammary glands.
Sweat glands are tubular, highly coiled glands that occur over much of the body surface in most mammals. They are absent in other vertebrates. There are two kinds of sweat glands: eccrine and apocrine. Eccrine glands secreate a watery fluid that, if evaporated on the skin's surface, draws heat away from the skin and cools it. Eccrine glands occur in hairless regions, especially foot pads, in most mammals, although in horses and most primates they are scattered over the body. Apocrine glands are larger than eccrine glands and have longer and more convoluted ducts. Their secretory coil is in the dermis and extends deep into the hypodermis. They always open into a hair follicle or where a hair once was. Apocrine glands develop near sexual puberty and are restricted (in humans) to axillae (armpits), mons pubis, breasts, prepuce, scrotum, and external auditory canals. In contrast to the watery secretions of eccrine glands, apocrine secretions are milky, whitish, or yellow in color, that dry on the skin to form a film. Apocrine glands are not involved in heat regulation. Their activity is correlated with certain aspects of the reproductive cycle.
Chapter 20 Study Questions
Scent glands occur in nearly all mammals. Their location and functions vary greatly. They are used for communication with members of the same species, for marking territorial boundaries, for warning, or for defense. Scent producing glands are located in orbital, metatarsal, and interdigital regions; at the base of the tail; and in the penis. During mating season, many mammals produce strong scents for attracting the opposite sex.
Sebaceous glands are intimately associated with hair follicles, although some are free and open directly onto the surface. The cellular lining of a gland is discharged in the secretory process and must be renewed for further secretion. These gland cells become distended with a fatty accumulation, then die, and are expelled as a greasy mixture called sebum into the hair follicle. Called a "polite fat" because it does not turn rancid, sebum keeps skin and hair pliable and glossy. Most mammals have sebaceous glands over their entire body; in humans, they are most numerous in the scalp and on the face.
Mammary glands, for which mammals are named, occur on all female-‐mammals and in a rudimentary form on all male mammals. In the embryo, they develop by thickening of the epidermis to form a milk line along each side of the abdomen. Mammary glands increase in size at maturity, becoming considerably larger during pregnancy and subsequent nursing of young. In human females, adipose tissue begins to accumulate around mammary glands at puberty to form the breast. In most mammals, milk is secreted from the mammary glands via nipples, but monotremes lack nipples and simply secrete milk into a depression on the mother's belly where it is lapped by the young.
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7. Describe the food habits of each of the following groups: insectivores, herbivores, carnivores, and omnivores. Give the common names of some mammals belonging to each group.
Insectivores: Insectivorous mammals, such as shrews, moles, anteaters, and most bats, feed on a variety of insects and other small invetebrates.
Herbivores: Herbivorous mammals that feed on grasses and other vegetation form two main groups: (1) browsers and grazers, such as ungulates ( hooved mammals, including horses, deer, antelope, cattle, sheep, and goats), and (2) gnawers, including many rodents as well as rabbits and hares.
Carnivores: Carnivorous mammals, which feed mainly on herbivores, include foxes, dogs, weasels, wolverines, fishers, and cats. Since their protein diet is more easily digested than the fibrous food of herbivores, their digestive tract is shorter, and the cecum is small or absent.
Chapter 20 Study Questions
Carnivores organize their feeding into discrete meals rather than feeding continuously (like herbivores) and therefore have much more leisure time.
Omnivores: Omnivorous mammals use both plants and animals for food. Examples are pigs, raccoons, many rodents, bears, and most primates, including humans.
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8. Most herbivorous mammals depend on cellulose as their main energy source, and yet no mammal synthesizes cellulose-‐splitting enzymes. How are the digestive tracts of mammals specialized for symbiotic digestion of cellulose?
No vertebrates synthesize cellulose-‐splitting enzymes (cellulases). Instead, herbivorous vertebrates harbor anaerobic bacteria and protozoa that produce cellulase in fermentation chambers in their gut. Simple carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids produced by the microorganisms can be absorbed by the host animal, and the host can digest the microorganisms as well.
Fermentation in some herbivores, such as rabbits, horses, zebras, elephants, some primates, and many rodents, occurs primarily in the colon and in a spacious side pocket, or diverticulum, called a cecum. Although some absorption occurs in the colon and cecum, fermentation occurs posterior to the small intestine, where nutrients are absorbed, so many nutrients are lost in feces. Rabbits and many rodents eat their fecal pellets (coprophagy), giving food a second pass through the gut to extract nutrients.
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10. Describe the annual migrations of barren-‐ground caribou and fur seals.
The barren-‐ground caribou of Canada and Alaska undertakes direct and purposeful mass migrations spanning 100 to 700 miles twice annually. From winter ranges in boreal forests (taiga), they migrate rapidly in late winter and spring to calving ranges on the barren grounds (tundra). Calves are born in mid-‐June. As summer progresses, caribou are increasingly harassed by warble and nostril flies that bore into their flesh, by mosquitoes that drink their blood (estimated at a liter per caribou per week during the height of the mosquito season), and by wolves that prey on their calves. They move southward in July and August, feeding little along the way. In September, they reach the taiga and feed there almost continuously on low ground vegetation. Mating (rug) occurs in October.
The longest mammalian migrations are made by oceanic seals and whales. One of the most remarkable migrations is that of northern fur seals, which breed on the Pribilof Islands approximately 185 miles off the coast of Alaska and north of the Aleutian Islands. From
Chapter 20 Study Questions
wintering grounds off the southern Californian, females journey as much as 1740 miles across open ocean, arriving in spring at the Pribilofs where they congregate in enormous numbers. Young are born within a few hours or days after the cows arrive. After calves have been nursed for approximately three months, cows and juveniles leave for their long migration southward. Bulls do not follow, but remain in the Gulf of Alaska during the winter.
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11. Explain what is distinctive about the life habit and mode of navigation in bats.
Bats are mostly nocturnal or crepuscular (active at twilight), and thus hold a niche unoccupied by most birds. Their achievement is attributed to two features: flight and the capacity to navigate by echolocation. Together, these adaptations enable bats to move quickly while avoiding obstacles in absolute darkness, to locate and to catch insects with precision, and to find their way deep into caves ( a habitat largely unexploited by other mammals and birds ) where they sleep during the daytime hours.
When in flight, a bat emits short pulses 5 to 10 msec in duration in a narrow directed beam from its mouth or nose. Each pulse is frequently modulated; it is highest at the beginning (up to 100,000 Hz per second) and sweeps down to perhaps 30,000 Hz per second at the end. When bats search for prey they produce about 10 pulses per second. If prey is detected, the rate increases rapidly up to 200 pulses per second in the final phase of approach and capture. Pulses are spaced so that the echo of each is received before the next pulse is emitted, an adaptation that prevents jamming. Since transmission-‐to-‐reception time decreases as a bat approaches an object, the bat can increase pulse frequency to obtain more information per second about an object. Pulse length also is shortened as the bat nears an object.
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12. Describe and distinguish patterns of reproduction in monotremes, marsupials, and placetal mammals. What aspects of mammalian reproduction are present in all mammals but in no other vertebrates?
Monotremes are (oviparous) mammals, such as the duck-‐billed platypus,which has one breeding season each year. Embryos develop for 10-‐12 days in the uterus, where they are nourished by yolk supplies deposited prior to ovulation and by secretions from the mother. A thin, leathery shell is secreted around the embryos before the eggs are laid. The platypus lays its eggs in a burrow, where they hatch in a relatively underdeveloped state after about 12 days. After hatching, the young feed on milk produced by the mother's mammary glands. Because monotremes have no nipples, the young lap milk secreted onto the belly fur of the mother.
Chapter 20 Study Questions
Marsupials are pouched, viviparous mammals. Marsupials have a transient type of placenta called a choriovitteline or yolk sac placenta. Embryos (blastocysts) of a marsupial are first encapsulated by a shell membranes and float freely for several days in uterine fluid. After "hatching" from the shell membranes, embryos of most marsupials do not implant, or "take root" in the uterus, but instead erode shallow depressions in the uterine wall in which they lie and absorb nutrient secretions from the mucosa through vascularized yolk sac. Gestation is brief in marsupials, and therefore all marsupials give birth to tiny young that are effectively still embryos, both anatomically and physiologically. However, early birth is followed by a prolonged interval of lactation and parental care.
Eutherians are viviparous placental mammals. In placentals, the reproductive investment is in prolonged gestation. Like marsupials, most placental embryos initially receive nutrients through a yolk sac placenta. The yolk sac placenta usually is transitory and quickly replaced by a chorioallantoic placenta, formed from the chorionic and allantoic membranes. The numerous capillaries of the placenta and the mother's uterus are close, but do not connect. This still allows nutrients, respiratory gases, wastes, and other molecules to diffuse between the maternal and embryonic circulation.
Unlike other vertebrates, female fertility is restricted to a certain time during the periodic estrous cycle. Females only copulate with males during a relatively brief period called estrus or heat.
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13. What is the difference between density-‐dependent and density-‐independent fluctuations in the sizes of mammalian populations?
Density-‐independent fluctuations are causes that affect a population whether it is crowded or dispersed. These irregular fluctuations are produced by variations in climate, such as unusually cold, hot, or dry weather, or by natural catastrophes, such as fires, hailstorms, and hurricanes.
Density-‐dependent fluctuations are much more spectacular. These are associated with population crowding. A major feature of this type of fluctuation is that it is the actual crowding that creates the downward correction and not availability of food and/or water.
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14. Describe the hare-‐lynx population cycle, considered a classic example of prey-‐predator relationship. From your examination of the cycle, formulate a hypothesis to explain the oscillations.
Chapter 20 Study Questions
Snowshoe rabbits of North America show 10-‐year cycles in abundance. The well-‐known fecundity (ability to produce young in great numbers) of rabbits enables them to produce litters of three or four young as many as five times a year. The density may increase to 4000 hares competing for food in each square mile of the northern forests. As a result of an increased food supply, predators ( owls, minks, foxes, and especially lynxes ) also increase. Then the rabbit population crashes precipitously for reasons that have long puzzled scientists. Rabbits die in great numbers, not from lack of food or from an epidemic disease, but apparently from some density-‐dependent psychogenic cause. As crowding increases, rabbits become more aggressive, show signs of fear and defense, and stop breeding. The entire population reveals symptoms of pituitary-‐adrenal gland exhaustion, and endocrine imbalance called "shock disease", which causes death. Obviously, following these precipitous decreases in rabbit population the predator population will also decrease.
It would only make sense that some animals might have an innate need for a minimum amount of space or territory in order to survive. In an evolutionary sense it would also make sense that mammals capable of fastest reproduction rates would have a built in "upper limit" to their growth because growth beyond a given point may become irreversible. This means that if the rabbit population were to continue to grow until the food supply were exhausted maybe the food supply would not be able to recover and either the rabbits or the vegetation (or both) would go extinct.
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15. What anatomical characteristics distinguish primates from other mammals?
All primates share certain significant characteristics: grasping fingers on all four limbs, flat fingernails instead of claws, and forward-‐pointing eyes with binocular vision and excellent depth perception.
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17. In what ways do the genera Australopithecus and Homo, which coexisted for at least 1 million years, differ?
Coexisting with the earliest species of Homo was a different lineage of robust australopithecines. These australopithecines had heavy jaws, skull crests, and large back molars. They are an extinct branch and not part of our own human lineage. Also Homo had a larger brain and definitely used tools. Australopithecus only possibly used tools.
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Chapter 20 Study Questions
18. When did the different species of Homo appear, and how did they differ socially?
Homo erectus appeared about 1.5 million years ago. Homo erectus had a successful and complex culture and became widespread throughout the tropical and temperate Old World.
Homo neanderthalensis arose about 150,000 years ago. They invented more sophisticated stone tools.
Homo spiens arose about 800,000 years ago. They developed culture with aesthetics, artistry, and language.
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19. What major attributes make the human position in animal evolution unique?
Humans are unique in having a non-‐genetic cultural evolution that provides constant feedback between past and future experience. Our symbolic languages, capacity for conceptual thought, knowledge of our history, and ability to manipulate our environment emerge from this non-‐genetic cultural endowment. Finally, we owe much of our cultural and intellectual achievements to our arboreal ancestry, which gave us binocular vision, superb visuotactile discrimination , and manipulative use of our hands.
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Mammal Orders
Order Type of Mammal Didelphimorphia American Opossum Dasyuormorphia Australian Carnivorous mammals Peramelemorphia Bandicoots Diprotodontia Koala, Wombats, Possums, Wallabies, and Kangaroos Soricomorpha Shrews and Moles Chiropera Bats Primates Monkey’s and Apes Cingulata Armadillos Lagmorpha Rabbits Hares and Pikas Rodentia Squirrels, rats, and woodchucks Carnivora Dogs, wolves, cats, bears, weasels, seals, sea lions, and walruses Proboscidea Elephants Perissodactyla Horses, asses, zebras, tapirs, and rhinoceroses