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Class Reptilia

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Class Reptilia Chapter 20 Class Reptilia Reptilia - to creep Turtles, crocodiles, lizards, snakes, worm lizards, and tuatarans Class Reptilia First vertebrates to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class Reptilia


1
Class Reptilia
  • Chapter 20

2
Class Reptilia
  • Reptilia - to creep
  • Turtles, crocodiles, lizards, snakes, worm
    lizards, and tuatarans

3
Class Reptilia
  • First vertebrates to have amniotic eggs
  • Extraembryonic membranes
  • Protect the embryo from desiccation
  • Albumen
  • Cushions
  • Moisturizes
  • Food source
  • Yolk - supplies food

4
Class Reptilia
  • Other adaptations for land
  • Impervious skin
  • Keratin epidermal scales
  • Horny tales
  • Water conserving kidneys
  • Enlarged lungs

5
Class Reptilia
  • Subclass Anapsida lack openings in the temple
  • Turtles
  • Subclass Diapsida
  • Lower and upper openings in the temporal region
    of the skull
  • Snakes, lizards, and tuataras
  • Subclass Synapsida single dorsal opening in the
    temporal region of the skull

6
Class Reptilia
  • Characteristics of reptiles
  • Skull with one surface
  • Respiration by lungs
  • Metanephric kidneys
  • Internal fertilization
  • Amniotic eggs
  • Very dry skin with keratinized scales
  • 17 orders of Reptilia
  • 4 Living orders of Reptilia

7
Class Reptilia
  • Order Testudines
  • Tortoise and turtles
  • 225 Species of turtles
  • Bony shell
  • Limbs from internal ribs
  • Keratinized beak

8
Class Reptilia
  • Carapace - dorsal portion of shell
  • Plastron - ventral portion of shell
  • North American box turtle has hinges
  • Eight cervical vertebrae

9
Class Reptilia
  • Long Life span
  • 14 or more years
  • Up to 100 years
  • Sexual maturity seven or eight years

10
Class Reptilia
  • Oviparous
  • Nest contain 5 - 100 eggs
  • Development lasts 4 weeks to one year
  • Independent young
  • Sea turtle conservation controversy

11
Class Reptilia
  • Order Rhynchocephalia
  • Snout head
  • 2 living species of Tuataras
  • Burrow
  • Endangered species
  • Lizard-like reptiles
  • Virtually unchanged from extinct members
  • Tooth arrangement is the distinguishing factor

12
Class Reptilia
  • Oviparous
  • Share underground nesting burrows with
    ground-seeking sea birds
  • Venture out of the burrow at dawn and dusk for
    feeding

13
Class Reptilia
  • Order Squamata
  • Three suborders
  • Suborder Sauria - the lizards
  • Suborder Serpentes - the snakes
  • Suborder Amphisbaenia - worm lizards

14
Class Reptilia
  • Lizards
  • 3,300 species
  • Two pairs of limbs
  • Upper and lower jaws unite
  • Vary in length
  • Few centimeters up to 3 m

15
Class Reptilia
  • Habitat
  • Land Dwellers
  • Burrowers
  • Tree Dwellers
  • Reproduction
  • Most are oviparous
  • Some are viviparous or ovoviviparous

16
Class Reptilia
  • Gecko
  • Habitat
  • Semitropical
  • Climbers
  • Adhesion disks aid
  • Nocturnal
  • Clicking vocalization

17
Class Reptilia
  • Iguana
  • Thick Bodies
  • Short necks
  • Distinct Heads
  • Marine iguana
  • Flying iguana
  • Can fly 30 meters

18
Class Reptilia
  • Chamelions - Group of Iguanas
  • Characteristics
  • Live in Africa and India
  • Arboreal habitat
  • Long, sticky tongue
  • Change color
  • Light
  • Temperature
  • Behavior

19
Class Reptilia
  • Gila Monster and Mexican Beaded Lizard
  • Venomous lizard
  • Southwestern North America
  • Not fatal to humans

20
Class Reptilia
  • Suborder - Serpentes
  • Snakes
  • 2,300 Species
  • 300 are venomous
  • 30,000 - 40,000 humans die each year
  • Most occur in Southeast Asia
  • lt 100 Occur in the U.S.

21
Class Reptilia
  • Characteristics
  • Lack limbs
  • Up to 200 Vertebrae
  • Skull Adaptations
  • Movable upper jaw
  • Each jaw moves independently

22
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23
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24
Class Reptilia
  • Adaptations
  • Differences in eye focusing
  • Loss of left lung
  • Displacement of
  • Gallbladder
  • Right Kidney
  • Gonads

25
Class Reptilia
  • Reproduction
  • Oviparous
  • Live birth
  • Boas
  • Garter snakes
  • Age of snakes
  • 135 million years old
  • Possible relation to caecilians

26
Reptilia
  • Suborder Amphisbaenia
  • Double walk
  • Worm Lizards
  • 135 Species
  • Habitat
  • Specialized burrowers
  • Africa, South America, Caribbean, and Mideast

27
Reptilia
  • Characteristics
  • Legless
  • Wedge shaped head
  • Single median tooth in upper jaw
  • Can move forward or backward

28
Reptilia
  • Order Crocodilia
  • Greek - lizard
  • 21 species
  • Crocodiles, alligators, gavials, and caimans
  • Have existed for 170 million years

29
Reptilia
30
Reptilia
31
Reptilia
  • Snout is elongated
  • Nostrils at the anterior end to help with
    breathing while mostly submerged
  • Breathe and inhale water at the same time

32
Reptilia
  • Tail
  • Muscular, elongated, and laterally compressed
  • Used for swimming, attacking prey, and maneuvers

33
Reptilia
  • Teeth
  • Laterally compressed teeth
  • Thrashing motion of capture
  • Swallow food whole
  • Death roll
  • Stomach
  • Gizzard-like
  • Swallow rocks and other objects

34
Reptilia
  • Reproduction
  • Oviparous
  • Parental Care resembles that of birds
  • Nesting and parental care can be traced to common
    ancestor of both groups

35
Reptilia
  • External Structures
  • Skin
  • No respiratory function
  • Thick, dry, and keratinized scales
  • Shedding of the scales is called ecdysis
  • Pheromones are secreted
  • Cryptic, Aposematic, and mimicry coloration

36
Reptilia
  • Support
  • Skeleton resembles amphibian form
  • Skull is elongated
  • Secondary palate
  • Increase in cervical vertebrae
  • Atlas and axis increase head movement
  • Ribs can be highly modified
  • Cobra
  • Flying lizards
  • Autotomy - loss of a tail

37
Reptilia
  • Movement
  • Prehistoric Reptiles
  • Many were bipedal
  • Reptile
  • Tetrapods
  • Primitive reptiles move like salamanders
  • Higher than most amphibians

38
Reptilia
  • Nutrition and Digestion
  • Carnivores
  • Tongue
  • Turtles and crocodiles are nonprotrusible
  • Lizards and anurans have sticky tongues
  • May exceed the lizards length

39
Reptilia
  • Snakes
  • Glottis is far forward to allow for breathing
  • Vipers have hollow fangs that are hinged on the
    maxillary
  • Coral, sea, and cobra snakes rigid fangs
  • Some cobras can spit
  • Venom glands are modified salivary glands

40
Reptilia
  • Body Regulation
  • Gas Exchange
  • Three chambered heart
  • Sinous venosus is now a pacemaker

41
Reptilia
  • Low oxygenated blood from right atrium to
    ventricle
  • High oxygenated blood from lungs to ventricle to
    left atrium

42
Reptilia
  • Gas exchange
  • Across respiratory surfaces
  • Partitioned into spongelike chambers
  • Form a negative pressure mechanism for ventilation

43
Reptilia
  • Temperature Regulation
  • Ectotherms
  • Can survive (-2 to 41 oC)
  • Need (25 to 37 oC) to live
  • Behavior is used for temperature regulation
  • Body orientation
  • Nocturnal
  • Panting
  • Blood diversion
  • Chormatophore dispersion

44
Reptilia
  • Nervous and Sensory Functions
  • Cerebral hemisphere is larger than in Amphibians
  • Improved smell
  • Jacobson organ
  • Snakes can smell with their tongue
  • Improved vision motor coordination
  • Ears detect vibrations
  • Snakes have heat sensitive pit organs

45
Reptilia
  • Optic lobe and Cerebellum are enlarged
  • Increased vision
  • More refined motor coordination
  • Independent eye movement
  • Different fields of vision
  • Dominant sense in most reptiles
  • Colored vision

46
Reptilia
  • Excretion
  • Kidneys have more nephrons or blood filtering
    units (Metanephric kidneys)
  • More blood flow
  • Higher pressure
  • Excrete uric acid
  • Insoluble in water
  • Can be stored as a paste

47
Reptilia
  • Osmoregulation
  • Reabsorption of water
  • Internal respiratory surfaces
  • Relatively impermeable exposed skin
  • Behavior
  • Nocturnal
  • Avoidance of hot surfaces
  • Storage of water in lymphatic spaces

48
Reptilia
  • Reproduction
  • Eggs
  • Land dwelling is possible
  • Not completely independent of water

49
Reptilia
  • Internal Fertilization
  • Egg shell forms after
  • Males have an intromittent organ
  • Sperm can be stored by the female
  • Turtles 4 years
  • Snakes 6 years

50
Reptilia
  • Parthenogenesis
  • 6 families of lizards
  • 1 family of snake
  • Parental Care
  • Eggs are usually abandoned
  • 100 species of reptiles take care of their young
  • American alligator
  • Sex is temperature dependent
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