Title: Class Reptilia
1Class Reptilia
1
22
3History
- Reptiles are the evolutionary base for the rest
of the tetrapods. - Early divergence of mammals from reptilian
ancestor. - Early reptiles arose from amphibian ancestor and
were small, lizard-like insectivores.
3
4Class Reptilia
- Scales
- Amniotic egg
- One occipital condyle
- Ectothermic
- Three chambered heart
- Alligators have 4
- Claws
4
5Ectothermic
5
6Common Features
- Positioning of legs more directly under animal
(more support). - Paired limbs with five toes.
- Adapted for running, climbing, swimming.
- Absent in snakes.
6
7Common Features
- Body covered with horny epidermal scales made
from protein keratin. - Scales serve to reduce water loss and provide
protection. - Reptiles molt as they grow.
- Jaws adapted to biting/tearing.
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88
9Common features
- Respiration through internally protected and
moistened (a moist cloacal surface in some
turtles). - Most reptiles have a 3-chambered heart with a
partially divided ventricle. - No mixing of blood from lungs with deoxygenated
blood. - Crocodiles have 4 chambers and a unique feature
cog teeth.
9
10Common features
- Excretory waste uric acid (doesnt waste water)
- Brain first cerebral cortex (capable of
reasoning, planning, perception) - Still ectothermic
- Must live in favorable conditions or hibernate.
- Being ectothermic enables an organism to survive
on much less food than an endothermic organism.
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11Reproduction
- Internal fertilization gametes not subject to
desiccation. - Amniote egg significant evolutionary
breakthrough. - Egg covered by tough, water-resistant, leathery
or calcerous shell. - Extraembryonic membranes compartmentalize the
interior for several functions.
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12Amniote Egg
12
13Amniote Egg
- Chorion hard covering permeable to respiratory
gases but not water. - Allantois functions in gas exchange and a
storage reservoir for metabolic waste. - Amnion fluid-filled sac acts as cushion for
embryo and prevents desiccation. - Yolk sac food for embryo eliminates need for
larval stage.
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14Reptile Skulls
- Except for turtles, all reptiles have two
temporal openings in the skull. - These openings have allowed for attachment and
expansion of the jaw muscles.
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15Reptile Skulls
- Anapsid
- No opening
- Synapsid
- One opening
- Diapsid
- Two openings
- Euryapsid
- One small opening
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1616
17Subclass AnapsidaOrder Testudines
- 260 species of turtles/tortoises
- Oldest group of reptiles (225 mya)
- Protective body shell
- Encases vital organs
- Provides some protection to head/limbs
- Composed of bony plates covered by horny
epidermal scales - 2 parts upper carapace, lower plastron
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18Primitive features
- Loss of body-wall muscles
- Ribs/trunk vertebrae fused to carapace
- Lack teeth hard beak grab and tear food
19Subclass AnapsidaOrder Testudines
- All lay eggs on land.
- Third eyelid nictitating membrane.
- Longest living vertebrates (100years in wild)!
19
20TURTLES TORTOISES
- Only reptile with shell
- Only reptile WITHOUT TEETH
20
http//www.perlgurl.org/archives/2006/05/hawaiian_
honu_the_green_sea_turtle.html http//www.carcosa.
net/jason/blog_images/2005/07/04/african-spurred-t
ortoise.jpg
21Turtle Shell
Carapace
21
Plastron
2222
23Box TurtleTerrapene
- Adapted to live on land
- Feet not webbed
- High domed shell
- Safe
23
24Red-Eared SliderTrachemys
- Red stripe behind eye
- Live in or near water
- Ponds
- Slow moving water
- Pets
- Carry Salmonella
24
25Snapping TurtleChelydra
- Live in water
- Lay eggs on land
- Long tail
- Muscular limbs
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2626
27Giant TortoiseLifespan 150 Years
27
28Leatherback Sea Turtle
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29Diapsids
- Dinosaurs
- Snakes
- Lizards
- Crocodilians
- Birds
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30Subclass Diapsida
- Superorder Lepidosauria
- Order Squamata
- 4675 species of lizard
- 2700 species of snakes
- 140 species of amphisbaenians
- Limbless, burrowing animals
- Vestigial eyes under skin
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31Order Rhynchocephalia
- 2 species of Tuatara
- Solitary, nocturnal, burrowing animal
32Order Squamata
- Kinetic skull
- Movable joints
- Lizards
- Snakes
- Dinosaurs
-
32
33Order Squamata
- Most successful, diversified of living reptiles.
- Occur in most habitats of world.
- Lizards
- Legs, eyelids, ear openings
- Halves of lower jaw united
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34Geckos
- Small lizards
- Adhesive toe pads
34
35Gecko Toe Pads
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36Wall LizardLacerta
- Color is variable
- Slender body
- Small scales
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37AUTOTOMY
- Self amputation to escape predators
- Cant regrow
- Costly lose muscle/stored fat
37
http//www.californiaherps.com/lizards/images/ecpr
incipis1dn.jpg
38Texas Horned Lizard
- Spines for protection
- Eats ants
- Endangered species
38
39Gila Monster
- Poisonous lizard
- Not very aggressive
39
40Green Iguana
- Ornamental crest
- Five feet long
- Tropical rainforest
- Mexico
- South America
- Omnivores
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41Chameleons
- Arboreal - live in trees
- Africa and Madagascar
- Catch insects with tongue
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42Komodo Dragon
- Attack and eat humans
- 10 feet long
- 300 pounds
- Indonesia
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43Snakes
- Elongated derivative of lizard (increased
vertebrae, not lengthening of segments) - Lack limbs, eyelids, ear openings
- Jaw bones are loosely united to allow swallowing
of large prey - Throat and windpipe are at separate ends of mouth
to allow breathing while eating - Can be venomous (hemotoxin/neurotoxin)
- Tongue to smell, some have heat pits to sense
body heat
44Snakes
- No legs
- No external ears
- Jacobsons organ
- Sense smell with aid of tongue
- Cornea of eye protected with a spectacle
- transparent membrane
- Skull bones loose
- Swallow large prey
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45JACOBSONs ORGAN
- An extrasensory organ in the roof of a snake's
mouth - Sharpens its sense of smell.
- Two hollow, highly sensitive saclike structures
- Allows it to track both prey and potential mates
45
http//www.kwic.com/pagodavista/schoolhouse/speci
es/herps/snktonge.htm
46HEAT SENSING ORGAN
- Pit" organ located between the eye and the
nostril on each side of the head. - Detects heat given off by warm-blooded prey
46
http//www.kwic.com/pagodavista/schoolhouse/speci
es/herps/snktonge.htm
47Swallow Prey
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4848
49Constrictors
http//www.thematzats.com/snakes/images/squeeze.gi
f
- Wrap around prey and kill by suffocation
- Ex Boa constrictors
49
http//www.eastrock.org/brazil/images/bra19.jpg
50VIPERS
- Inject venom with large movable fangs
- Ex rattlesnakes, copperheads, water moccasins
50
Images from http//www.worsleyschool.net/science
/files/rattle/snakes.html
51ELAPIDS
- Inject venom with small fixed (non-movable)
fangs - Ex cobras, kraits, coral snakes
51
http//www.kidsturncentral.com/animals/cobra.htm
5252
53Snake Venom
53
54Copperhead Agkistrodon
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55Cottonmouth or Water Moccasin Agkistrodon
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56Western Diamond Backed RattlesnakeCrotalus
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57Prairie Rattlesnake Crotalus
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58Timber Rattlesnake Crotalus
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59Black Rat Snake
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60Diamond Backed WatersnakeNerodia
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61Green Snake
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62Coral Snake
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63Superorder Archosauria
- Includes extinct dinosaurs/pterosaurs and birds
- 23 species of crocodiles, alligators, caimans
- Largest of the living reptiles
- Amphibious carnivores
- Live in tropics/subtropics
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64- Lizard-like body with short legs, clawed/webbed
toes, massive tail - Flat head with nostrils at tip
- Powerful jaws
- Dorsal side armored with dermal plates
65Dinosaurs
Dominate animals in Mesozoic Era
65
66Euryapsid
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67Synapsids
- Pelycosaurs
- Dimetrodon
- Mammal like reptile
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68Order Crocodilia
- Crocodiles
- Caimans
- Alligators
- Gavials
- Elongated skull
- Four chambered heart
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69Alligator
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70Caiman
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71Gavial
71
72Alligator
Caiman
Crocodile
Gavial
72
73The End
73