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Chapter 31 Review Fishes and Amphibians

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Title: Chapter 31 Review Fishes and Amphibians


1
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • Charles Page High School
  • Dr. Stephen L. Cotton

2
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • A vertebrate that has moist skin with glands, but
    lacks scales and claws is a(n) amphibian
  • If an amphibian still has a tail after it
    undergoes the process of metamorphosis, it is
    probably a salamander

3
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • As adults, both frogs and toads have hind legs
    adapted for jumping
  • To breathe, adult amphibians (unlike the larvae)
    use their lungs
  • In the circulatory system of adult amphibians,
    the first loop carries what oxygen-content of
    blood, and to what location? Oxygen-poor to the
    lungs

4
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • Fishes are characterized by each of the following
    except a bony skeleton scales fins pharyngeal
    gills
  • Describe the first fishes according to their body
    covering and jaws. Covered with bony plates and
    jawless

5
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • The pectoral fins of fishes evolved into what
    structure in terrestrial animals? forelimbs
  • What is the largest known fish? White shark
  • Discuss some of the extraordinary feeding
    adaptations of fish. Lighted lures, shoots down
    insects with water, long snout with teeth, teeth
    fused to short beak

6
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • In fishes, blood from the muscles and organs
    collects in the sinus venosus
  • Give some examples of the jawless fishes.
    Lampreys and hagfish
  • How do skates and rays move? Wing-like pectoral
    fins
  • Why are coelacanths important in evolutionary
    history? Nearest land ancestor

7
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • Adult amphibians are vertebrates, but do they lay
    eggs with a shell on them? no
  • Huge amphibians became so numerous 345 to 285
    million years ago that the term Age of
    Amphibians is often applied to this period named
    carboniferous Period.

8
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • How do tadpoles, salamander larvae, and a few
    adult salamanders get rid of excess carbon
    dioxide? through their skin
  • The heart of a tadpole has how many chambers? two
  • In vertebrates, what are the tubes that carry
    urine from the kidneys? ureters

9
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • In an amphibian, what does the nictitating
    membrane cover? eye
  • In a frog, blood returning from the legs collects
    in the vena cava
  • The red eft is a stage of development of the
    crimson-spotted newt
  • The circulatory system of a fish is called a
    singe-loop.

10
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • If a fish is cartilaginous and has jaws, it is
    classified in the class chondrichthyes
  • The kidneys of a freshwater fish pump out much
    dilute urine.
  • Salmon can distinguish between the odor of their
    home stream and others by using their
    chemorecepters

11
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • Give an example of an oviparous fish that cares
    for their young. Siamese fighting fist,
    sticklebacks, cichlids and catfish, male seahorse
  • The heyday of the amphibians ended because
    climate change
  • How do adult amphibians typically get their food?
    carnivores
  • What part of the frog and toad brain coordinates
    jumping? cerebellum

12
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • Were the first fishes armored with jaws? No,
    jawless
  • How many species of living lobe-finned fishes are
    there today? two
  • The feeding adaptation in fish that
    revolutionized vertebrate evolution was the jaw

13
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • During the Ordovician and Silurian Periods,
    jawless fishes underwent a major adaptive
    radiation.

14
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • In moist woods, look under logs and rocks to find
    toads.
  • Fishes in which embryos are nourished directly
    inside the body are called viviparous
  • Because of their external fertilization, frogs
    must be oviparous

15
Chapter 31 ReviewFishes and Amphibians
  • A fish in which the teeth are constantly replaced
    throughout life is the shark
  • The armored jawless fishes were ultimately an
    evolutionary dead end.
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