Marine Vertebrates

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Science Karteikarten am Marine Vertebrates , erstellt von Jaz Harker am 21/01/2017.
Jaz Harker
Karteikarten von Jaz Harker, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Jaz Harker
Erstellt von Jaz Harker vor mehr als 7 Jahre
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Frage Antworten
General characteristics of fish live in water gills throughout life fins, scales internal/external egg production ectotherms
General characteristics of amphibians young mature in water adults live in/near fresh water mostly gill breathers when young naked skin lay eggs in water carnivorous adults ectotherms
General characteristics of reptiles land or sea water lung breathers scales/plates lay eggs mostly carnivores ectotherms
General characteristics of birds land most fly lung breathers feathers,wings,beaks excellent colour vision and hearing lay eggs carnivores or herbivores endothermic
General characteristics of mammals land and sea lung breathers mammary glands seven neck vertebrae enlarged brain live birth carnivore, herbivore, omnivore endothermic
what is microevolution generation by generation evolution of populations and groups over lifetime of species natural selection and adaptation driving forces
what is macroevolution speciation - birth of a species extinction - death of a species both engage processes outside natural selection and adaptation
what is the relationship of chordates to other animals revealed by? anatomical characters biochemical characters embryological characters genetic characters fossil record
what are evolutionary systematics and cladistic systematics E = based on similarity patterns of key characteristics C = emphasises common descent based on shared derived characteristics (recent not ancient adaptations)
characteristics of protostomes spiral cleavage blastopore becomes mouth nerve cords of CNS ventral mesoderm derived from mesentoblast subepidermal musculature derived from 4d mesoderm schizocoelous coelom formation embryogeny
characteristics of deuterostomes radial cleavage blastopore often becomes anus nerve cords of CNS not ventral mesoderm from wall of archenteron sheets of subepidermal muscles derived from archenteric mesoderm entercoelous ceolom formation embryogeneis
what is holoblastic cleavage planes pass completely through cytoplasm - isolecithal/weakly telolecithal eggs
what is meroblastic cleavage plane does not pass completely through cytoplasm - highly telolecithal (high yolk)
what is radial cleavage strict longitudinal & transverse cleavage equal sized blastomeres arranged in rows with reference to animal and vegetal axis
what is spiral cleavage subsequent divisions result in different sized blastomeres displacement of blastomeres so they lie in furrow between eachother alternate moves 'left-right' to produce spiral
characteristics of phylum chordata pharyngeal gill slits dorsal notochord dorsal, hollow nerve cord muscular locomotor, postanal tail circulatory system with ventral contractile blood vessel & gas exchange
what is Hox gene complex regulates expression of hierachy of genes, control process of long-axis body development front to back evolution of more complex animal - verts have duplication of entire Hox complex
characteristics of subphylum vertebrata distinctive endoskeleton and vertebrael column greater development of central nervous tissue at front end limb girdles - paired appendages neural crest & cells closed blood vessel system paired/fused spinal nerves autonomic nerve system
methods of fish taxonomy meristic = characters correspond to body segments (no. fin rays & scales) morphometric = measurable structures (fin length) allometry = lengths of body parts grow at different rates - different ratio at different age/size
characteristics of soft anatomy of anatomical fish taxonomy position of viscera division of muscles branches of blood vessels sexually dimorphic structures posession and type of swim bladder
two classes of agnatha myxini (hagfish) cephalaspidomorphi (lamprey)
characteristics of myxini nakes skin containing slime glands no paired appendages fibrous & cartilaginous skeleton heart and accessory hearts digestive system (no stomach) biting mouth (rasping tounge)
characteristics of cephalaspidomorphi slender body median fins (no paired appendages) fibrous & cartilaginous skeleton pores in pharangeal cleft heart sucker lke oral disc and tounge osmoregulation (kidney) digestive system small cerebellum
morphology of chondrichthyes large fusiform body, heterocercal caudal fin (top lobe > bottom lobe) ventral mouth placoid scales
anatomy of chondrichthyes intestine with spiral valve brain of two olfactory lobes 5-7 paired gills 4 chambered heart no swim bladder or lung inner ears detect prey well
olfactory system of chondrichthyes olfactory organs - water into nasal sacs behind nostril are bars - behind is olfactory epithelium water slowed over OE sensitivity up to 1 part in 10 billion for proteins/AA
what is intertial/pressure drag pressure differences from displacement of water as fish moves through it (swimming motion)
what is viscous/frictional drag friction between fish body and surrounding water (fish scales)
where is heart positioned in all fish? posterior and ventral to gills (more 'anterior' in teleosts than sharks)
fish heart: form and function 4 chambers in series venus blood into thin walled sinus venosus single chamber atrium single thick walled ventricle out of heart via conus/bulbus arteriosus, initially to gills
what are the conus and bulbus arteriosus? conus = cardiac muscle in chondrichthyes and lungfish that produces pulsed blood flow bulbus = non-muscular, elastic reservoir in ray-finned fish that produces continuous flow from heart
what is function of operculum? protects gills streamlines body reducing drag aids in smoothing water flow across gills
describe the expansion/suction pump phase of respiration --mouth closed - enlargement of buccal cavity. -ve pressure causes operculum cavity to shut, isolating gills --mouth opens, -ve pressure draws in water to buccal & pharyngeal cavity --mouth closes - contraction of cranial muscles & skull bones creates +ve pressure - water forced towards gills --operculum valve opens under +ve pressure - water across gills, out of chamber
what is Bohr shift carrying capacity of respiratory pigment decreases with reduced pH per unit O2
what is Root shift saturation level of respiratory pigment is decreases with reduced in pH per unit O2
respiratory anatomy of hagfish --muscular vellum draws water through single median nostril and over gill sacs, out through singular gill opening -- feeding = water in/out via opening by last gill sac
respiratory anatomy of lamprey -- muscular contraction expands/contracts fill area -- water in via multiple gill openings, each gill sac has unique water flow
modified gill structures to assist aerial respiration -- arborescent organ (tree-like branches) -- plate-like extensions to gill to allow for more rigid structure (would collapse and stick together)
modified extra-branchial structures in aerial respiration -- vascularised surfaces (skin,mouth,opercular cavity) -- modifications to gut - vascularised areas -- modified, vascularised & compartmentalised swim bladders (buoyancy and respiratory function) -- vascularised lungs as dorsal pouches from gut
osmoregulation in freshwater species -- water in/ions out by diffusion across gills/pharynx/skin/diet via urine -- excrete dilute (hypo-osmotic) urine -- ions & water in with diet -- reabsorb ions in nephron, particularly monovalent -- AT monovalent into body via chloride cell
are freshwater fish hyper or hypo osmotic to their environment? what is the problem with this? hyper-osmotic gain water & lose ions
osmoregulation in marine species -- ions & water out across permeable membranes in diet and urine -- low volume hypo-osmotic urine -- drink seawater (gain ions) -- selectively remove divalent ions in urine filtrate -- reabsorb water from gut -- AT monovalent out of body by chloride cells
are marine fish hyper or hypo osmotic to their environment? what are the problems of this? hypo-osmotic gain ions and lose water
What visual pigment is produced by vitamin A1 Rhodoposin
What visual pigment is produced by vitamin A2 Porphyropsin
What pigment dominates in -- seawater -- freshwater -- migratory species -- rhodoposin -- porphyropsin -- adjust ratio of pigments to maximise light absorbance
explain the lateral line -- detection of pressure waves & changes in water flow -- neuromast made of sensory cells -- movement detected by bending of cupola containing bundled kinocillia of basal sensory cells -- stimulate afferent nerve endings
explain electrical fish -- modified muscle blocks used to generate electric field evolved into stunning devices -- predation and defence -- electric eel produce up to 400V
examples of sound production in fish -- tooth grinding -- drumming - stringulation of roof of swim bladders by striated muscles -- high-pitched squeeling by gas escape in swim bladder -- most significant in aphotic zones
Diversity of predation methods which is shown by adaptations in ... body shape (camouflage) physiology (endothermy, eye twitch in sailfish) colouration (camouflage and lures) jaws,teeth,guts (goblin shark protruding jaw, gut proportions depend on diet)
what is the change from herbivorous to carnivorous predation during development called? ontogenetic dietary change
what are defence mechanisms classed as? -- primary (avoiding detection, inquilism - live in non-related organism) -- secondary (reducing chances of being eaten e.g. shoaling, toxins)
what is size important for? predation food fluctuations increased fecundity competition for mates
when are smaller larvae more likely to survive situations where prey abundance is high in large scale patchy spatial distributions
when are larger larvae more likely to survive areas of low prey abundance/patchiness
define iteroparous single/multiple batch spawning each year over number of years survive after spawning and repeat
define semelparous spawn once and die, no fallback gap where reproductive effort failed
define a) protogynous b) protoandrous a) female adults change to male - male removed & dominant female changes gender b) male adults change to female - disappearance of female
what is gross growth efficiency (GGE) measures proportion of prey carbon converted to predator carbon
what is transfer efficiency (TE) proportion of prey production taken by predator <100% and GGE
what does fishing act as? -- additional predation pressure -- remover of prey & predators on juvenile or adult -- habitat/benthic food modifier
what are the environmental impacts of fishing habitat damage dead discards ghost fishing reduction in prey species
how can regulation help recovery of fisheries? -- gear limitations (mesh size, escape gaps, square panels) -- effort limitations (days at sea, engine size) -- catch limits (quotas)
what feature is helpful in identifying reptiles? number of holes in the skull -- turtles the most primitive - limited holes -- crocodile used for muscle attachment
features of the amniotic egg -- development of three membranes - chorion, amnion, allontois -- allontoic cavity is outgrowth of hindgut - respiratory organ and storage for nitrogenous wastes -- shell permeable to gases - respiration
what is ammonotelism? loss of nitrogen compounds (ammonia) through leaky skin and gills
what is ureotelism? conversion of ammonia to urea (requires additional energy)
what is uricotelism? conversion of ammonia to uric acid excretion requires loss of less water (organisms in desert environment)
general morphology/anatomy of crocodiles and aligators tetrapodal trunk dorso-ventrally flattened tail laterally compressed 1-7m sexually dimorphic
features of crocodile/alligator skull strong with pneumatised bone protects brain secondary palate influenced by diet/ecology hole in jaw anchor point for closure musculature teeth for gripping/holding - continually replaced
features of crocodile/alligator skeleton --non-permeable skin --long, strong spine with flexibility in tail, neck & trunk --osteoderms - non permeable, vascularised, heat exchange --derived form of pelvis & ankle - fast running
examples of locomotion in crocodiles/alligators belly crawl high walk swimming (tail = >10kph) jumping galloping (unique to crocs) climbing
what is gular/palatal valve? (crocodiles/alligators) controlled by tongue musculature prevents water flow to lungs allows mouth to open underwater capture/drowning of prey
what is aestivation/brumation (crocodiles/alligators) virtually shut down - low metabolism temporal torpor due to heat/cold burrows provide stable environmental conditions ensures continued survival
TSD in crocodiles/alligators females = 27-29 degrees males = 29-31 degrees above = mixture
why do sea snakes have light sensitivity in the tail end? keep tail tucked in when hiding
role of temperature in embryonic development of turtles - IP decreases as temperature increases (non-linear) - temperature decreases with depth in sand - more stable - incubation length drops throughout summer as temperature increases
what is a satellite relay data logger (SRDL)? dive computer with transmitter, stores information & compresses data file satellite overhead - data beamed data to fisheries to avoid impact on turtles
what use are SRDL data? migratory pathways - fisheries depth utilisation migratory energetics & foraging strategies physiology & thermoregulation identification of key foraging areas
principle threats to turtle nesting beach poaching (adults & eggs) artificial lighting loss of nesting habitat enchroachment
features of archaeopteryx 12 known specimens London & Berlin skeletons are neotype 140 million years old teeth bony tail found in lithographic limestone long feathers on legs and feet
What are Huxleys 5 conditions of being a bird fluffy body covering flight (bipinate feathers) brood their nests take care of young hollow bones (air sac system)
features of birds breastbone (muscle attachment) wishbone (upstroke) three-toed foot (dinosaurs) airspaces in skull (lighter) hollow bones (lighter & respiratory systems)
when did modern birds first emerge? late cretaceous
what are the two major groups that make up modern bird radiation plaeognaths neognaths
what are the 4 major clusters of neognaths gamebirds & waterfowl metavians waterbirds & seabirds higher landbirds
what is the interorbital septum (birds) vertical plate of bone that forms bony wall between eyes
what are the differences between the 2 palatal types - neognaths and palaeognaths? Neognaths = hing-like joint between pterygoid and palatine lightweight, flexible palate Palaeognaths = firm junction between pterygoid and palatine reinforced, stiff palate
what are key features of modern bird skeleton pneumatic bones big brained big eyed toothless skull with fusion of different bones boat-shaped sternum four toes - digit I reversed shortened tail skeleton with pygostyle
features of bird beak hollow bones of upper and lower jaw casing of constantly growing keratin lightweight, durable changes shape according to wear flexible and sensitive
what are maxillary overhangs (birds) overhanging sections of beak on upper jaw crucial to parasite control
what are herbst corpuscles (birds) organs in sensory pits in wader bill tips
what are totipalmate feet? (birds) webbing between all toes pelicans, gannets, boobies used in paddling, diving, sexual display, airbrakes
how are grebe feet different to other birds feet? lobed not webbed, generate lift by acting as multi-slotted hydrofoils
what is the zygodactyl foot (birds) digit IV rotated to posterior surface of foot to oppose digits II and III two toes forwards, two toes backwards
what is the pamprodactyl foot in swifts resting/flying - all digits point anteriorly climbing/clinging - digits I and II oppose III and IV to form pincer arrangement
adaptations of marine iguanas long claws laterally compressed tail salt gland - nostril eat red/green algae tricuspid teeth dark skin
characteristics of dugongs tail with flukes solid upper lip smooth & scarred skin short & rigid body hairs easily visible ear opening pointed ends to forelimbs without nails long, tusk like incisor teeth
characteristics of manatees rounder tail divided upper lip pleated, rough skin - often attach algae/barnacles long and flexible body hairs rounded ends to forelimbs with nails no incisor teeth
what is the function of horizontal diaphragm in sirenians extends length of body cavity control buoyancy and avoid pitch and roll
aquatic adaptations of otters small SA:Volume ratio no insulating blubber - dense, fine fur streamlined body - sensory high on sides of head webbed paws - propulsion
skeletal adaptations of polar bear to cold marine environment long neck- drag prey, musculature is much bigger carnivorous dentition large & taller strong sexual dimorphism
describe bubble netting in humpback whales net of bubbles around shoal prey congregate in centre lunge feed in centre other humpbacks insonify sound reverberates around curtain fish into centre
what is brachycardia facial contact with cold water - human heart rate slows 10-25% - seals change from 125bpm to ~10bpm (extended dive) lessens need to bloodstream oxygen - more used by other organs
what is peripheral vasocontriction high pressure due to deep diving - capillaries in extremities close off stops blood circulation to these areas
what happens during very deep dives by cetaceans organ & circulatory walls allow plasma/water to pass freely through thoracic cavity pressure stays contant - organs arent crushed alveoli fill with plasma - reabsorbed when out of pressurised environment
how could you approximately measure the population of a species? population increases by mutation at approx. average constant level 'this much variability - approx this number of individuals'
list disturbances to whales tourism fishing researchers pollutants and disease ocean noise ship strikes
what is an ascoban? protection of small cetaceans in north-western European oceans
what is an accobam? protection of cetaceans in southern European waters
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