Term
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Definition
Greek for 'creeping animal' |
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Term
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Definition
Animals that obtain heat from their environment. |
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Term
What are the influences of temp when you are an ectotherm? |
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Definition
Water loss increase/decrease
Behavior increase/decrease |
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Term
What are some uniting characters of Herps? |
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Definition
ectothermic
tetrapods (for the most part) - 4 legs
not monophyletic group |
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Term
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Definition
a group that contains all desendents of common ancestor |
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Term
What are the three clades of the Lissamphibia? |
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Definition
Urodela - Salamanders
Anura - Frogs
Gymnophiona - Caecillians |
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Term
Are reptiles monophyletic? |
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Definition
No, you have to include Dinosaurs and birds for them to be monophyletic |
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Term
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Definition
Testudines - Turtles
Crocodylia - Crocs
Sphenodontidae - 2 species in NZ
Squamata - Lizards/Snakes/Worm Lizards
Serpentes - Snakes
Amphisbaenia - Worm Lizards |
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Term
What are the different characters we can use to describe a creature? |
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Definition
Morphological
Anatomical
Color Pattern
Karyotypes
Biochemical |
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Term
What is a morphological character that can be used to describe a creature? |
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Definition
Some kind of body form or structure. They are either morphometric or menistics.
Morphometric are quantitative
Menistics are counted |
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Term
What are anatomical characters that can be used to describe a creature? |
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Definition
shape, presence/absence, yes/no questions |
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Term
What are color patterns that can be used to classify a creature? |
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Definition
These are not very reliable because they are often change with time or temperature. Bands of color are often good marks |
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Term
What are karyotypes that can be used to classify a creature? |
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Definition
The number and morphology of Chromosomes |
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Term
What are the biochemical ways to classify a character? |
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Definition
The composition of toxic secreations of frogs
Neuculotide sequence of DNA |
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Term
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Definition
The study of evolutionary relationships among organisms |
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Term
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Definition
describing and classifying organisms |
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Term
What is Linnaean taxonomy? |
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Definition
categories that provide info on similarities, this reflects evolutionary history |
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Term
What is evolutionary taxonomy? |
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Definition
arranging species by their similarity as it reflects homology (descent form a common ancestor) |
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Term
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Definition
members of a group share a common evolutionary history and are closely related |
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Term
What are the assumptions of cladistics? |
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Definition
- any group of organisms is realted by descent from a common ancestor
- there is a bifurating patter of cladogenesis (splits into 2 groups)
- changes happen over time |
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Term
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Definition
closet to ancestral state |
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Term
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Definition
derived or changed characteristic from the ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
a shared derived chracteristics |
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Term
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Definition
a trait in common because it was shared with common ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
a similarity due to convergent evolution not a common ancestor
eg - bats and birds |
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Term
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Definition
a monophyletic group more closely related to the group in question then any other group
eg - crocs and birds |
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Term
define - transformation series |
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Definition
a group of characters ordered from ancestral to derived |
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Term
compare Linnean Taxonomy vs Evolutionary Taxonomy |
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Definition
Linnean is based on putting species into groups/bins
Evolutionary uts things based on a time scale |
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Term
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Definition
a group containing some by not all of its decendents |
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Term
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Definition
a group containing taxa that lack a common ancestor |
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Term
What are the barriers from water to land |
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Definition
1 - respiration
2 - movement
3 - Feeding
4 - skin
5 - senses
6 - other |
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Term
What is necessary for water to land transition regarding respiration? |
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Definition
need development of buccal pump and lungs |
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Term
What is necessary for water to land transition regarding movement? |
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Definition
transition from fins to limbs
shit from rowing to bottom walking
need to be able to bend |
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Term
What is necessary for water to land transition regarding feeding? |
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Definition
have to develop new way of feeding (no suction)
need functional neck for capturing prey
need head to become seperate from pectoral girdle
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Term
What is necessary for water to land transition regarding skin? |
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Definition
Epidermis needs to thicken
Keratinzation of outer layers
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Term
What is necessary for water to land transition regarding senses? |
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Definition
-Transition from aquatic to terrestrial perception
- need to be able to deal with density differences between water and air
- later line and electric organs only present in aquatic animals |
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Term
What is necessary for water to land transition regarding other things? |
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Definition
development of metamorphosis
diversification
reproduction remained fishlike (external) |
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Term
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Definition
- Teeth are pedicellate and bicuspid
- Eater with stapes and operculum and a pair of papillae
- gonads and fat bodies develop from same place
- specialized green rods
-cutaneous respiration
- ribs do not encircle body
- raise and lower eyes |
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Term
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Definition
egg that contains 4 extracrologtic membrances |
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Term
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Definition
- gas diffusion
- removal of waste
- involved in formation of umbilical cord in placental mammals |
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Term
what are the uses of a yolk sac? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the use of Chorion? |
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Definition
surrounds all membranes and provides over all exclosure for young |
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Term
Transition to dry habitats |
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Definition
skin - keratinization
senses - lacked eardrums
very visual
skin highly permeable
reproduction limited to water
Locomotion - streghten verterbal column
- hindlimbs longer/stronger
Respirtaion - change from buccal pump to thoraic
- reduction of bones |
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Term
3 major groups of Amniotes |
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Definition
synapsida - mammals
anapsida - testudines and stem turtles
Diapsiada - birds/crocs/ lizards/snakes,etc |
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Term
contrast anapsid/synapsid/diapsid |
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Definition
Anapsid - no hole
Synapsid - one hole
Diapsid - two hole
no fenestra/hole considered more primative |
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Term
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Definition
1 - amniotic egg and associated membranes
2 - internal fertilization
3 - loss of complex folding of dentine in tract
4 - caniniform maxillary teeth
5 - many others |
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Term
Archosauromorpha synapomorphies |
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Definition
teeth set in sockets
new skull openings
process on shart of femur as an attachment for tail muscles
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Term
Testudines (Turtles) synapomorphies |
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Definition
Anapsid
Solid Stapes
HOrney back covering
no teeth on jaw
limb girdles encased on shell |
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Term
Lepidosaur synapomorphies |
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Definition
teeth attached loosely to tooth-bearing bones
funsion of pelvic bone late in development
paired copulatory organs
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Term
What are some differences between pond living tadpoles and stream living tadpoles? |
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Definition
strea types are more stream lined, have reduced gills and are bullet shaped |
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Term
What are granular glands? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the three kinds of reptile teeth? |
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Definition
Acrodont - directly to bone
Thecodont - in sockets
Pleunodont - arise from groove |
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Term
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Definition
Teeth that are set in the bone |
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Term
What are thecodont teeth? |
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Definition
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Term
What are Pleunodont teeth? |
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Definition
teeth arising from a groove in the jaw |
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Term
What are the two methods of fertilization? |
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Definition
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Term
What species always have external fertilization? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the difference in yolk content between reptiles and amphibians? |
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Definition
Amphib - moderate to heavy yolk
- hatch partially developed
Reptiles - heavy yolk
- hatch as mini adults
- no larval stage |
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Term
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Definition
differentiation of cells into tissues/organs etc |
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Term
What stage do amphibians hatch at? |
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Definition
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Term
What stage do reptiles hatch at? |
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Definition
mini adults, at the end of embryogenesis |
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Term
What method of development do amphibians have? |
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Definition
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Term
What method of development do reptiles have? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The change in time or rate of development relative to an ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
sexually mature individual with juv characteristics |
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Term
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Definition
a trait that develops beyond the state or condition of the trait of the ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
Change in development time without change in morphology |
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Term
What are the differences between interspecific and intraspecific |
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Definition
Inter - between species
Intra - within species |
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Term
What are free living larvae? |
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Definition
Most are able to actively feed though some depend on yolk sac. They need fishless areas. Most are aquatic. |
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Term
What are the anatomical features of free living larvae? |
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Definition
thin skin - highly vascularized
external gills
lidless eyes
muscular trunks
tails or caudal fins
skeleton mostly or entirely made of cartilage
lateral line system |
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Term
What are important for reptile eggs? |
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Definition
Oviposition sites
temperature (sex ratio)
moisture (no submersion) |
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Term
Do most herps have parental care? |
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Definition
No, crocs are an example that do though |
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Term
What affects speed of growth? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some characteristics of reptiles skin? |
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Definition
Most of skin is modified into scales, plates, scutes or sheilds
All karatinized
scales tend to overlap in squamates but not in turtles/crocs |
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Term
What are some characteristics of amphibians skin? |
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Definition
mucus and granular glads
breath through skin (highly vascularized) |
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Term
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Definition
plates under the skin of reptiles that function as armor |
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Term
What are the purpose of skin glands? |
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Definition
water proofing/pheromones/etc |
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Term
What are the special uses of keratin in amphibians? |
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Definition
spades formed on foots of spadefoot toads
nuptual pads
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What were some of the changes that had to take place regarding the skeleton to move from water to land |
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Definition
lost the bouyancy of water
needed to move from undulatory movement to limbed
needed linked vertebrate
needed to modify cranium to capture and ingest terrestrial food
reps and amphibs (not turtles) have lateral body fixiation |
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Term
What kind of teeth do caecillians or frogs have? |
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Definition
they have unicuspid or curved teeth |
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Term
where do salamanders have their teeth? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the appendicular trends ? |
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Definition
~ limbs are derived from fins of fishes
~ pectoral girdle loses articulation with skull
~ pelvic girdle becomes enlarged and elaborated
~ joints form along limbs |
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Term
What sensory organs do have larvae have? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the ampullary sense? |
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Definition
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Term
What groups lack the tympana? |
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Definition
salamanders, caecilians and some frogs |
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Term
What is the purpose of the tympana |
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Definition
to detect airborne sounds |
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Term
what are the two ways that herps detect sounds? |
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Definition
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Term
What species can close their ears? and for what purpose? |
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Definition
crocs and geckos
for when they go underwater |
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Term
How do amphibian lungs work? |
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Definition
thin walled sacs that are highly vascularized
or the buccal pump system |
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Term
how does the buccal pump system work? |
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Definition
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Term
How many lungs do snakes have? |
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Definition
ussually only one and on the right side |
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Term
How do most reptiles breath? |
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Definition
with lungs that are filled through thoratic contractions |
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