1 / 121

Reptiles

Reptiles. Reptiles. First truly terrestrial vertebrates ~7000 species worldwide ~300 species in U.S. and Canada. Reptiles. Probably best remembered for what they once were, rather than what they are now Mesozoic era - age of reptiles Dominant group for >150 millions years. Reptiles.

aliya
Télécharger la présentation

Reptiles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reptiles

  2. Reptiles • First truly terrestrial vertebrates • ~7000 species worldwide • ~300 species in U.S. and Canada

  3. Reptiles • Probably best remembered for what they once were, rather than what they are now • Mesozoic era - age of reptiles • Dominant group for >150 millions years

  4. Reptiles • 12 or so principal groups of reptiles evolved • Only 4 groups remain today

  5. Order Squamata • Snakes and lizards • >5800 species • Most successful group

  6. Order Crocodilia • Crocodiles, alligators, caiman • ~25 species • Have survived for 200 million years • Today: concerns that humans may drive them to extinction

  7. Order Chelonia (Testudines) • Turtles • ~330 species • Ancient group that survived, remained mostly unchanged from early ancestors

  8. Order Rhynchocephalia • Snout head or tuatara • Only 1 species • From New Zealand - sole surviving species of ancestral stock

  9. Reptilian Characteristics • Tough, dry scaly skin • Protection against desiccation, physical injury • Thin epidermis shed periodically • Much thicker dermis with chromatophores

  10. Reptilian Characteristics • Dermis converted into snakeskin, alligator leather for shoes, purses, and so on • Scales of keratin (epidermal) • Not homologous to bony, dermal fish scales

  11. Reptilian Characteristics • Crocodilian scales remain throughout life • Grow gradually to replace wear

  12. Reptilian Characteristics • In snakes and lizards, new scales grow beneath old • Old scales shed with old skin

  13. Reptilian Characteristics • Turtles add new layers of keratin under old layers of the plate-like scutes (modified scales)

  14. Shedding • Snakes turn old skin (scales, epidermis) inside out when shedding

  15. Shedding • Lizards split skin and leave it right side out, or slough it off in pieces

  16. Amniotic Egg Chorioallantoic membrane

  17. Amniotic Egg • Reptiles are able to lay their eggs in sheltered locations on land • Young hatch as lung-breathing juveniles, not aquatic larvae

  18. Amniotic Egg • Amniotic egg widened division between amphibians and reptiles • Probably greatly contributed to decline of amphibians and rise of reptiles

  19. Reptile Jaws • Reptile jaws designed for crushing prey • Fish, amphibian jaws designed for quick closure, but little force after • Reptile jaw muscles larger, longer, arranged for better mechanical advantage

  20. Reptile Copulatory Organ • Copulatory organ permitting internal fertilization • Internal fertilization required for a shelled egg • Copulatory organ formed from an evagination of cloaca

  21. Reptile Circulation • More efficient circulatory system, higher blood pressure • All reptiles have at least an incomplete separation of the ventricles • Flow patterns prevent mixing

  22. Reptile Circulation • Crocodilians have two completely separated ventricles • All reptiles have two functionally separate circulations

  23. Reptile Lungs • Improved lungs • Depend almost exclusively on lungs for gas exchange • Supplemented by pharyngeal membrane respiration in some aquatic turtles

  24. Reptile Lungs • Lungs have larger respiratory surface than in amphibians • Air sucked into lungs rather then forced in by mouth muscles • Negative pressure • Skin breathing completely abandoned

  25. Reptile Kidney • Kidneys more advanced (metanephric) • Very efficient at conserving water • Excretes uric acid (rather than urea, ammonia) • A semisolid paste

  26. Better Body Support • Limbs better design for walking on land • More ventral, less lateral • Many dinosaurs walked on only hindlimbs

  27. Nervous System • Much more advanced - relatively larger cerebrum • CNS connections more advanced - permit complex behaviors not found in amphibians

  28. Nervous System • Sense organs generally well-developed • Hearing generally poorly developed in most

  29. Order Chelonia • Turtles • Very ancient group • Little change in morphology since Triassic period

  30. Order Chelonia • Body enclosed in shell • Dorsal carapace • Ventral plastron

  31. Order Chelonia • Thoracic vertebrae and ribs built into shell • Shell of two layers • Inner of bone • Outer of keratin • New keratin deposited under old as turtle grows, ages

  32. Order Chelonia • Jaws lack teeth • Equipped with tough, horny plates for gripping, chewing food

  33. Order Chelonia • Respiration poses a problem • Shell prevents expansion of chest for breathing • Adapted to use certain abdominal, pectoral muscles as a “diaphragm”

  34. Order Chelonia • Air drawn in by contracting limb flank muscles to make body cavity larger • Exhalation also active - shoulder muscles contracted, viscera compressed, air forced out of lungs

  35. Order Chelonia • Deformable plastron in snappers allows some elastic recovery during exhalation • Compressive force of water against body also can force air out

  36. Order Chelonia • Many water turtles acquire enough O2 when inactive by pumping water in and out of mouth • Pharyngeal breathing • Can stay submerged for extended periods • Must lung breathe more frequently when active

  37. Order Chelonia • Nervous system - tiny brain • Typical of most reptiles • Never exceeding 1% of body weight, but cerebrum larger than in amphibians • Turtle can learn, as quickly as a rat, to run a maze

  38. Order Chelonia • Have both middle & inner ear, but sound perception is poor • Turtles are virtually mute • Tortoises may grunt or roar

  39. Order Chelonia • Poor hearing compensated for by: • Good sense of smell • Acute vision • Color perception as good as that of humans

  40. Order Chelonia • Mating & reproduction • Many varieties of courtship • Males of aquatic species may swim around looking for proper leg stripe pattern • Pheromones also • Males use claws

  41. Order Chelonia • Terrestrial species may vocalize • Males may track females (pheromones) for days

  42. Order Chelonia • Males may mark territory with fecal pellets • Courtship involves rubbing limbs against scent glands (underside of jaw) and sniffing

  43. Order Chelonia • Biting, ramming, hooking are directed at other males • Biting - head & limbs • Ramming - rearing up, smacking shells • Hooking - bulldozing under plastron to flip or hurry

  44. Order Chelonia • Turtles are oviparous • Fertilization is internal, and all species bury eggs in ground in nests • 4 to >100 eggs

  45. Order Chelonia • Exercise care in constructing nest • Deposit eggs and abandon them • Incubation 1-14 months • 40-60 days most typical

  46. Order Chelonia • Movements to nesting areas very faithful • Terrestrial species use familiarity with area, sun • Marine species use variety of mechanisms to traverse large distances

  47. Order Chelonia • Earth’s magnetic field • Polarized light • Sun & stars • Low frequency sounds • Green sea turtles find Ascension Island (20 km) in mid-Atlantic from coastal Brazil - 2200 km

  48. Order Chelonia • Size - marine turtles largest • Buoyed by aquatic environment • May reach 2 m in length, 725 kg in weight • Biggest species is leatherback

  49. Order Chelonia • Green sea turtle may exceed 360 kg • Economically valuable - heavily exploited - rarely gets to large size

  50. Order Chelonia • Land tortoises generally not as large as aquatic forms • Some may weigh several hundred kg • Giant tortoises of Galapagos Islands among world’s largest terrestrial turtles

More Related