Ethan Ross
Test por , creado hace más de 1 año

Evolution of Marine Reptiles, Neil lecture

29
1
0
Ethan Ross
Creado por Ethan Ross hace alrededor de 6 años
Cerrar

Evolution of Marine Reptiles

Pregunta 1 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Amphibia-Amniota: Basic anatomical and reproductive differences

Reptiles

Skin covered by scales.
Eggs are laid in ground, developing embryonary membranes and (soft) or calcareous (hard) shells. Some groups can develop embryo retention and .
Larval stages .

Explicación

Pregunta 2 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Key terms

Reptiles: all members of the amniote clade
that includes living turtles, lizards, crocs

: reptiles with two skull openings
behind orbit: the lizard-croc clade

Neodiapsid: diapsid clade that includes
+ Sauria

Lepidosaurs: tuatara and kin
(rhynchocephalians) and squamates

: snakes, lizards, amphisbaenians
( = ‘worm-lizards’)

Archosauromorphs: archosaurs and close
relatives (like protosaurs & )

Archosaurs: and kin, pterosaurs,
dinosaurs and kin (including birds)

Explicación

Pregunta 3 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

Earliest reptiles have an skull
(= where there are no post-orbital openings)

The diapsid skull evolved from
an anapsid ancestor…

The diapsid skull (or a modified version
of it) is present in lizards, snakes, crocs, birds

Explicación

Pregunta 4 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Turtles have an anapsid skull and hence have
conventionally been placed outside of .

However, molecular data places them deep
within Diapsida. If correct, this means that they
evolved their .

Explicación

Pregunta 5 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Archosauromorphs: archosaurs and their close relatives

Non-archosaurian archosauromorphs include , trilophosaurs and rhynchosaurs. Mostly terrestrial animals; include small, lizard-like predators and omnivores, long-necked amphibious forms, specialised herbivores.

Explicación

Pregunta 6 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

: lizards, snakes, tuatara and their relatives

Mostly small diapsids with flexible skulls: key events in evolution include appearance of different in skull. Post-Triassic group, many key divergences in

Explicación

Pregunta 7 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

(Sphenodon): two species of chunky, lizard-like diapsids, endemic to New Zealand. Endangered, now restricted to offshore
Islands.
Enlarged teeth and marginal teeth all . Propaliny
present; halves of lower jaw
rotate about symphysis.
motion
used to break up prey.
Complete LTB long thought to be a ‘primitive’ feature;
contributed to the idea that Sphenodon is an archaic relict.

Explicación

Pregunta 8 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Squamates: over species
‘lizards’ to amphisbaenians
and snakes.

Explicación

Pregunta 9 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Reptile physiology and anatomy makes the transition to marine life relatively easy. However, to take to marine life a reptile still has to…
--- move efficiently in the water
--- feed effectively in the water
---
….. oh, and cope with , reproduction and heat loss too…

Explicación

Pregunta 10 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

The evolution of locomotion in water, examples from the marine reptile fossil record
: Where propulsion is only generated during the ,
e.g., paddling, rowing (bears, paddling seabirds, swimming rodents, diving ducks)

Explicación

Pregunta 11 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Continuous locomotion: there’s , powered by body and/or tail. Axial locomotors practising continuous locomotion can be axial swimmers (using wave-like sweeps of tail) or axial swimmers (using swivelling of propulsive structure, like tail fin). Another category within continuous locomotion: (using lift- or drag-based limbs).

Explicación

Pregunta 12 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Trend seen frequently in evolutionary history of marine reptiles. Transition from axial swimmers to axial swimmers. Seen in ichthyosaurs, , mosasaurs.

Explicación

Pregunta 13 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

Trend seen rarely in evolutionary history of marine reptiles. Transition from axial undulatory swimmers to paraxial swimmers. Seen in .

Explicación

Pregunta 14 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Salt and sea-water
Seawater contains about 35g of salt per liter. Marine mammals void unwanted salt via that produce concentrated . Reptiles don’t have such efficient kidneys: instead they use salt-excreting skull glands.

Marine iguana salt glands
are in the

Crocodile salt glands
are on the tongue

Sea snake salt glands
are

Sea turtle salt glands
are between the eyes

Seabird salt glands are set in bony
depressions above the eyes

Explicación

Pregunta 15 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Sauropterygians
Major clade of Mesozoic marine reptiles, initially mostly but worldwide by Jurassic.
, pachypleurosaurs, , pistosaurs and plesiosaurs.

Key characters: condition, retracted external nostrils, closed palate extending to braincase, absence of
several skull bones (lacrimal, tabular, postparietal, supratemporal), large retroarticular process, scapula superficial to
clavicle, small ilium etc.

Explicación

Pregunta 16 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Placodonts
Triassic sauropterygians from Europe, Middle East and China, famous for their
dentition. Evolved an elaborate, turtle-like armour composed of interlocking .

Explicación

Pregunta 17 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.


Small amphibious Triassic sauropterygians (to 2m) known
from 100s of specimens. Some suction-feeding features.
Embryos show that present already.

Explicación

Pregunta 18 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

Viviparity evolved early on within Sauropterygia – before these animals evolved and pelagic habit

Explicación

Pregunta 19 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

Nothosauroids
The best known nothosauroid: Nothosaurus from Middle and Upper Triassic Europe, Middle East and China. Several species ranging from 1.25 to 3.5 m long. Fantastic !

Explicación

Pregunta 20 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Pistosaurs: ancestors of plesiosaurs
Several Late Triassic taxa appear to be ‘’. Resemble plesiosaurs in having
nostrils, parietal crest, a simplified humerus shape and other characters.
Enlarged, wing-shaped hands suggest (presumably underwater ‘flight’).

Explicación

Pregunta 21 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Examples of non-plesiosaurian sauropterygians

Explicación

Pregunta 22 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

Plesiosaurs
Carnivorous Mesozoic marine reptiles
Approx. years ago
Plesiosaurs are derived sauropterygians
Sauropterygia – including placodonts, pachypleurosaurs, nothosaurs, pistosaurs

Explicación

Pregunta 23 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Quick history of plesiosaurs

Plesiosaurs evolved during the
Late from .

Several lineages evolved giant
size (10m+, 5tons+) during
Jurassic & Cretaceous.

‘Pliosauromorphs’ ( heads,
necks) evolved several
times from ‘plesiosauromorphs’
( heads, necks). Most
‘pliosauromorphs’ belong within
Pliosauroidea.

Plesiosauroids include very long-
necked elasmosaurids as well
as long-snouted polycotylids.

Plesiosaurs mostly pelagic ocean-
going animals, but there were
lineages
within Leptocleidia.

Mass extinction end of Cretaceous.

Explicación

Pregunta 24 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

The skull and dentition
Modified diapsid (‘euryapsid’) condition:
Position of the intenal and external nares
Single large temporal fenestra

Explicación

Pregunta 25 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Polycotylid debate
Traditional Classifications treat them as
But apart from the , most of the characters are typically plesiosauroid.
So, are unreliable
It now makes more sense to refer to plesiosaurs as either pliosauromorph or plesiosauromorph.

Explicación

Pregunta 26 de 30

1

Rellena el espacio en blanco para completar el texto.

Mesozoic plesiosaur ‘pregnant female’ with a

Explicación

Pregunta 27 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Ichthyosaurs
Carnivorous Mesozoic marine reptiles
Approx. years ago (before )
Exact origin of ichthyosaurs unknown
Teeth set in (not sockets)
Ichthyopterygia – increasingly through time
Huge

Explicación

Pregunta 28 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

The big question about all the Mesozoic marine reptile lineages we’ve looked at
(thalattosaurs, hupehsuchians, sauropterygians, also ichthyosaurs) is: where do their affinities lie within Reptilia?

Difficult to resolve because all have a strongly modified morphology: in the skull, diapsid condition has been modified
to (where there’s a supratemporal fenestra, but no obvious
laterotemporal fenestra).

Seems that all of these lineages are within
. Sauropterygians have
sometimes been argued to be close to
lepidosaurs; other studies suggest that all
of these lineages are archosauromorphs.

Explicación

Pregunta 29 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Cretaceous lizards invade the seas
During the ‘mid’ Cretaceous (from c ), several lineages of anguimorph lizards (related to ) took to the seas as mid-sized (c1m), long-bodied, shallow-water foragers on reefs etc.
From shallow marine sediments of Europe, Middle East, N America. Dolichosaurs and aigialosaurs.
was present,
even in these mid-sized
amphibious lineages.
Carsosaurus with 4
embryos in body cavity.

Explicación

Pregunta 30 de 30

1

Rellena los espacios en blanco para completar el texto.

Mosasaurs
Large to gigantic aquatic anguimorphs (mostly marine).
Flexible zone in , evidence for feeding. Evolutionary trends: longer snout, retracted
Nostrils, longer and wider paddle-like limbs, more
paddle-like tail, with some evolving tail.

Explicación