Title: Figure 49.0 Bat locating a moth
1Figure 49.0 Bat locating a moth
2Figure 49.2 Sensory transduction by a taste
receptor
3Figure 49.3 Sensory receptors in human skin
4Figure 49.4 Mechanoreception by a hair cell
5Figure 49.5 Chemoreceptors in an insect Female
silk moth Bombyx mori releasing pheromones SEM
of male Bombyx mori antenna
6Figure 49.x1 Chemoreceptors Snake tongue
7Figure 49.6 Specialized electromagnetic
receptors Rattle snake with infrared recpters,
beluga whale pod
8Figure 49.6bx Beluga whale pod
9Figure 49.7 Eye cups and orientation behavior of
a planarian
10Figure 49.8 Compound eyes
(a)
11Figure 49.8x1 SEM of compound eye
12Figure 49.8x2 Insect vision A black-eyed Susan
(Rudbeckia hirta) as humans see it and in
ultraviolet light as visible to an insect
13Figure 49.9 Structure of the vertebrate eye
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16Figure 49.10 Focusing in the mammalian eye
17Figure 49.11 Photoreceptors in the vertebrate
retina
18Figure 49.15x Photoreceptor cells
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20Figure 49.13 From light reception to receptor
potential A rod cells signal-transduction
pathway
21Figure 49.12 Effect of light on retinal
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23Figure 49.14 The effect of light on synapses
between rod cells and bipolar cells
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26Figure 49.15 The vertebrate retina
27Figure 49.16 Neural pathways for vision
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31Figure 49.4 Mechanoreception by a hair cell
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34Figure 49.17 Structure and function of the human
ear
35Figure 49.18 How the cochlea distinguishes pitch
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37Figure 49.19 Organs of balance in the inner ear
38Figure 49.20 The lateral line system in a fish
39Figure 49.21 The statocyst of an invertebrate
40Figure 49.22 An insect ear
41Figure 49.x2 Salmon follow their noses home
42Figure 49.23 The mechanism of taste in a blowfly
43Figure 49.2 Sensory transduction by a taste
receptor
44Figure 49.24 Olfaction in humans
45Figure 49.25 The cost of transport
46Figure 49.x3 Swimming
47Figure 49.x4 Locomotion on land
48Figure 49.x5 Flying
49Figure 49.26 Energy-efficient locomotion on land
50Figure 49.27 Peristaltic locomotion in an
earthworm
51Figure 49.28a The human skeleton
52Figure 49.28b The human skeleton
53Figure 49.29 Posture helps support large land
vertebrates, such as bears, deer, moose, and
cheetahs
54Figure 49.30 The cooperation of muscles and
skeletons in movement
55Figure 49.31x1 Skeletal muscle
56Figure 49.31x2 Muscle tissue
57Figure 49.31 The structure of skeletal muscle
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59Figure 49.32 The sliding-filament model of
muscle contraction
60Figure 49.33 One hypothesis for how myosin-actin
interactions generate the force for muscle
contraction (Layer 4)
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63Figure 49.34 Hypothetical mechanism for the
control of muscle contraction
64Figure 49.35 The roles of the muscle fibers
sarcoplasmic reticulum and T tubules in
contraction
65Figure 49.36 Review of skeletal muscle
contraction
66Figure 49.37 Temporal summation of muscle cell
contractions
67Figure 49.38 Motor units in a vertebrate muscle
68Figure 49.38x Motor units in a vertebrate muscle