Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Lecture 13 - Reptilia
- Class Reptilia
- Approx. 6,000 spp. in the 4 major groups
- on all land masses except polar regions
- Advantages Over Amphibians
- 1. Amniotic eggs will calcareous or
leathery shell that prevents desiccation
while also used as a respiratory surface
- (amniotic fluid
and allantois)
- 2. Scaly, water-tight skin
preventing desiccation
- 3. Rotation of limbs to ventral side of body
- 4. Increased jaw mechanism to handle
larger/harder insect prey
- Order: Testudines (turtles)
- Approx. 240 spp.
- General Characteristics:
- A. Oviparous, laying eggs on land
- B. 2 parts of bony shell, to which
vertebrae are fused
- Carapace & Plastron
- Morphology reflects
ecology
- C. Teeth absent, replaced by
keratinized beak
- Two Groups:
- Pleurodires - side-necked turtles
- Cryptodires - "hidden"-necked turtles
- How System Work
- Respiration
- Lungs attached to top, sides of carapace
- Muscles force viscera (organs) upwards against lungs to compress;
expand visceral cavity to decompress
- Exhale
- transverse abdominous;
posterior limiting membrane
- pectoralis; shoulder girdle
- Inhale
- abdominal oblique
- serratus
- Behavior
- Social Dominance
- a. ritualized head movements
- b. biting and ramming
- Reproduction
- Courtship displays
- claw vibrating
- Nesting
- a. all species bury eggs
- b. typically 40-60 days to hatch
- c. some lay in fall; eggs exhibit diapause
- Development of Young
- Temperature-dependent gender determination
- - common among turtles
- - higher temperatures produce larger gender;
female turtles
- - Ca. 3 - 4* C separates males, females
- Narrow temperature window, environmental
variability ensure production of males, females
- Ex: sunny vs. shaded nest sites
- Others?
- ground temperature
- rainy or humid
- global warming
- Order: Crocodylia
- Approx. 22 spp. primarily tropical
- General Characteristics:
- A. Oviparous, constructing terrestrial nests for eggs
- B. Thecodont teeth, well-developed palate
- C. Laterally-compressed tail
- D. 4-chambered heart
- E. 1st evidence of neocortex tissue in brain
- leads to complex behavior
- 3 Families
- Alligatoridae
- - broad snouts
- - only upper teeth show
when jaw closed
- - carnivorous.. but
fruits/veggies too
- Crocodylia
- - narrow snouts
- - 4th lower incisor protrudes
when jaws closed
- - Largely piscivorous
- Gavialidae
- - long narrow snouts
- - 4th lower incisor protrudes
when jaws closed
- - carnivorous.. but
fruits/veggies too
- Unique Adaptations, Behaviors
- Dorsal eyes, nostrils
- remain hidden while being
able to see, breathe
- Secondary palate
- separates nasal
passage from mouth
- Pressure receptors
- bulges on upper, lower jaws
- similar function to
neuromast cells
- Four-chambered heart
- right, left ventricle, atrium
- variable blood flow when
active, at rest, under water
- when sunning, can
"heat rapidly" by
increasing flow to limbs
- Gastroliths
- actively swallowed stones;
"stomach stones"
- Function(s):
- - help control buoyancy
- - digestion
- Nictitaing membrane
- second eyelid; closes front to back
- facilitates underwater vision;
improved eye protection
- Reproduction
- complex courtship behaviors;
posturing, head-slapping, bellowing
- females bury eggs in mound
nests; defend eggs, young
- temperature-dependent
gender determination
- greater than or equal
to 34*C = males
- less than or equal to
30*C = females
- hatchlings call to parents
before emerged from egg
- stimulates male and/or
female to excavate nest
- adults of some
species break open
to assist hatchlings
- Ecosystem Engineers
- "Alligator holes"
- disturb, clear muck, wetland
vegetation with snout, limbs
- create depression
with body, tail
- remains wet during
drier seasons
- Order: Rhynchocephalis
- 2 spp. in New Zealand
- Oviparous, sexually
mature at 20, lives to 50
- pineal eye (unlensed
dorsomedially placed)
- Acrodont teeth with 4 upper
jaw rows, primarily insectivous
- Order: Squamata;
Suborder: Sauria (lizards)
- Approx. 3,760 spp., global
distribution except polar
regions
- Eyelids and external ear present
- Paired kidneys placed posteriorly
- Social Behavior
- dominancy,
territoriality, courtship
- push-ups, gulag (dewlap)
fanning, and head bobs
- very similar regardless of
situation; complex, responses
matter
- Aggressive response = male
Passive response = female
- Ex: Green Anoles
- A. assertion-challenge
- B. Aggressive posturing; if
intruder is male
- C. Courtship; if intruder is
female
- Other interesting aspects
of Lizard Ecology
- Caudal anatomy
Anmerkungen:
- - dropping of tail to escape predator
- effective, but comes with a price
* loss of communication
* reduced fat storage
- come skinks eat autotomized tails
- Reproduction
- Oviparity
Anmerkungen:
- - external development; eggs
- ancestral form
- low cost; multiple clutches possible
- Viviparity
Anmerkungen:
- - internal development; eggs
- derived form
- high cost; single clutch only
- Parthenogenesis
- all female populations
- typically originate from hybridization
between bisexual species
- EX: Whiptails
- clone themselves;
offspring are the
same as her
- unisexual reproduction,
no fertilization
- Order: Squamate; Suborder: Amphisbaenia
- Fossorial adaptations include:
- a. limblessness, but with
vestigial girdles
- b. elongated bony with
annuli to facilitate
bi-directional movement
- c. only 1 lung
- d. external ears absent
- e. skull entirely compact bones;
with flattened snout
- Order: Squamata; Suborder: Serpentes (snakes)
- Approx. 2,400 spp.
- General Characteristics:
- eyelids, external ears, tympanum,
eustacian tubes absent
- girdles extremely vestigial or absent,
sternum absent
- urinary bladder absent, 1 lung
- mandibular symphysis absent,
skull bones loosely connected
- Most (67%) extant species belong to
Family: Colubridae
- a. no trace of pelvic girdle
- b. single carotid artery
- c. highly kinetic (moveable) skull
- d. most non-venomous
- Chemosensation is important
- a. forked tongue; separated tips
move independently
- b. projected, captures chemical
stimuli; retracted, stimuli transferred
to vomeronasal organs
- Types of Movement
- Lateral Undulation or
serpentine locomotion
Anmerkungen:
- - series of irregular curves, each pressing against object
- lateral force canceled by subsequent curve
- Rectilinear locomotion
Anmerkungen:
- - rib muscles lift sections of body off ground, stretch forward
- primarily heavy-bodied snakes; slow movement, but useful for stalking
- Concertina locomotion
Anmerkungen:
- - anchor posteriorly with "loops"; stretch forward; anchor anteriorly; draw rear forward
- adapted for use in narrow passages
-ex: rodent burrows, pipes in your house
- Sidewinding locomotion
Anmerkungen:
- - raise sections of body in "loops", thrust forward and set on ground
- force exerted downward
- primarily used by desert species
- Feeding Specializations
- increased flexibility, movement of skull
Anmerkungen:
- - sides move independently; complex; 3-dimensional
- constriction and venom
Anmerkungen:
- - permit taking of larger prey while minimizing risk of injury
- shortened vertebrae, truck muscles permit tight lopping by constrictors
- cause of death for prey = suffocation
Venom:
mixture of enzymes, phosphates and other compounds
- fangs
Anmerkungen:
- specialized, enlarged teeth associated with venom glands
- Dentition/Placement of Fangs
- Aglyphous
Anmerkungen:
- no fangs, smaller teeth
ex: constrictors
- Opisthoglyphous
Anmerkungen:
- fangs on posterior end of maxilla; smaller teeth in front
fangs hollow or solid
ex: boomslang, false viper
- Proteroglyphous
Anmerkungen:
- fangs on front of maxilla; smaller teeth behind
fangs hollow; permanently erect
ex: Coral snakes
- Solenoglyphous
Anmerkungen:
- fangs only teeth on maxilla
fangs hollow; moveable; longer
ex: viperids