5580
locomotion and lung ventilation
Air moves between the lungs (arrow), but little or no air moves into or out of the animal. Sustained locomotion requires separation of respiration from locomotion.
problems with morphological characters
(1) Incomplete fossil record • There are gaps in the records of many taxa • Sometimes millions of years long
Problems with molecular characters
(1) Not all are equally useful • Some indicate short-term changes; other indicate long-term changes • Mixing the two can produce misleading results (2) Not applicable to fossils • Fossils seldom yield molecules • Addition of a new fossil can rearrange a morphology-based phylogeny • Molecular phylogenies can't be tested this way (3) Dating diverge times is difficult • Based assumptions about rates of molecular mutation Problems with Molecular Characters 15
Basic scaling rules
(1)Surface area increases as the square of the change in linear dimensions . (2)Volume increases as the cube of the change in linear dimensions.
palatal teeth
-> reduced/lost in more derived amniotes -> absent in most extant amniotes
defintion of synapsid
1 temporal bar
Maintaining body temps different from air temps requires Thermoregulatory mechanisms:
1) Ectothermy: gaining heat from external sources, e.g. basking in the sun or resting on a warm rock. 2) Endothermy: gaining heat from internal sources, i.e. metabolic production of heat
alternative phylogenies for eutheria
1) afrotheria is basal to all other eutherians 2) xenarthra is basal to all other eutherians Placentalia=infraclass Afrotheria, Xenarthra, Boreoeutheria= superorder
3 major continental movements
1) cambrian fragmentation 2) devonian coalescence 3) late cretaceous fragmentation
Grassland plants present herbivores with two problems
1) difficult to digest due to high cellulose and lignin content 2) cause rapid tooth wear due to high silica content
Boreoeutheria
1) euarchontoglires 2) laurasiatheria
Chorioallantoic placentas
1) hemochorial placenta 2) endotheliochorial placenta 3) epitheliochorial placenta
Evidence that cetaceans were artiodactyls
1) molecular evidence 2)fossil evidence -astragalus ankle in two different prehistoric whales
The problem of foregut fermentation: balancing constraints
1) rumen capacity 2) energy requirements 3) nutrient requirements
hominin derived skeletal traits
1) skull attaches inferiorly to vertebral column 2) bowl-shaped pelvis 3) barrel shaped rib cage and distinct waist 4) larger valgus angle 5) s-shaped vertebral column 6) non divergent hallux
fully aquatic animals have only evolved three times
1)Sirenia: manatees Never come to land Herbivorous 2)cetacea whales, dolphins, porpoises never come to land carnivorous 3)carnivora: pinnipeds: seals, lions, walrus amphibious: come to land to breed, give birth carnivorous
If an animal increases in size isometrically:
1. Weight would increase as the cube of its linear dimensions 2. Cross section of its bones would increase only as the square of its linear dimensions --This wouldn't work since limbs are unable to support the increased weight
Two mechanisms for increasing sound pressure: "impedance matching
1. area effect 2.lever effect
2 major evolutionary lineages of amniotes
1. sauropsids (reptiles, including birds) 2. sunapsids (mammals) -Parallel but independent origins of basic characters, e.g. lung ventilation, kidney function, insulation, temperature regulation
milk compisition for whales and seals
12x higher in fats and 4x richer in proteins than that from domestic cows
pharyngeal formula for Therapsids
2:3:3:3:3
pharygneal formula for pelycosaurs
2:3:4:5:3
Temporal fenestration
3 different lineages of amniotes are identified based on the number of holes in the head
how old is earth?
4.6 billion years old
modern synthesis
A comprehensive theory of evolution that incorporates genetics and includes most of Darwin's ideas, focusing on populations as the fundamental units of evolution.
Polyphyletic taxon
A group composed of a collection of organisms in which the most recent common ancestor of all the included organisms is not included, usually because the common ancestor lacks the characteristics of the group. Polyphyletic taxa are considered "unnatural", and usually are reclassified once they are discovered to be polyphyletic.
paraphyletic taxon
A group composed of a collection of organisms, including the most recent common ancestor of all those organisms. Unlike a monophyletic group, a paraphyletic taxon does not include all the descendants of the most recent common ancestor.
Isometry
A transformation in which the preimage and image are congruent
Advantages of terrestrial activity
Access food Escape aquatic predators Both would increase the survival of adults and their offspring
______________possess remnants of genes known to be required for testicular descent
Afrotherians; These are nonfunctional relict genes(pseudogenes)
Middle ear
Air-filled space between the eardrum and the inner ear
Infrared radiation
All objects (animate & inanimate), radiate energy at wavelengths determined by their absolute temp • Objects in the temp range of animals and the Earth's surface radiate in the infrared portion of the spectrum • Animals continuously radiate infrared heat to the environment and receive infrared radiation from the environment. • Infrared radiation can lead to either gain or loss of heat, depending on relative temp of animal & environmental surfaces
Anthropod origins
All tiny eosimiids stem anthropoids, 12 g predated the split between catarrhines and platyrrhines
Heterometry
Alteration in the level of gene expression during development
A derived character is called?
An apomorphy; away from the ancestral condition
monophyletic lineages
An evolutionary lineage with a single evolutionary origin, i.e., an ancestor and all its descendants
facilitation
An interaction in which one at least one species benefits and none lose
Shared ancestral character
Ancestral character shared by ≥ 2 taxa -- Vertebral column is a Symplesiomorphy in vertebrates
Dispersal via rafting
Animals trapped on floating islands of vegetations rafting event
Homologous character
Any character (trait) that species share by inheritance from a common ancestor that also possessed it. A character with a single evolutionary origin
homologous character
Any character(trait) that species share by inheritance from a common ancestor that also possessed it. A character with a single evolutionary origin
One hypothesis for extinction
Asteroid impact led to a massive release of methane generating rapid global warming inhospitable to life.
Why is frugivory linked to the evolution of binocular vision?
Because stereoscopic vision is necessary for seeing cryptic objects against a background
Gigantothermy
Bigger animals have more stable body temperatures
Which of the following mammals is most closely to Cetaceans?
Bisons
Cetaceans and Artiodactylas are now often grouped together in the single order:
Cetartiodactyla
Ancestral character
Character that DOES NOT differ from ancestral condition --Plesiomorphy
Which character is ancestral vs derived?
Compare the characters of the ingroup(organisms under study) to those of an outgroup
Key mechanism driving speciation, diversification, and radiation
Continental drift
The temporalis muscle connects the
Coronoid process to the temporal fossa
Fossil evidence indicates that the three major lineages of extant mammals originated during which Period?
Cretaceous
extant lineages of crown group mammalia originated during what period?
Cretaceous
How did the mammal ear originate?
Current hypothesis: Early synapsids detected sounds via bone conduction: Sound waves received by the lower jaw and transmitted via the angular, articular, and quadrate bones to the stapes and inner ear • Pelycosaur stapes appears to be more of a structural brace than a sound conductor. • Low-frequency sound received via intra-bone conduction, from mandible to quadrate and quadrate to stapes
The evolution of the definitive mammalian middle ear involved
Decreasing size of the middle ear bones, and increasing size of the tympanic membrane
shared derived character
Derived character shared by ≥ 2 taxa and inherited by a common ancestor -Synapomorphy
parallel evolution
Development of similar characters among species that recently diverged
sauropsids
Diapsids and Anapsids
Ameridelphia
Didelphimorphia: Opossums: found mainly in the Neotropics, 1 North American species; Diversity was highest mid-cenozoic Paucituberculata
What was key to early radiation of tetrapods in the late carboniferous period?
Diversification of insects
binomial nomenclature
Each species is assigned two names: one identifying the species itself and the other the genus to which the species belongs.
Plate tectonics
Earth's crust (continents & seafloors) is made of rocky plates that float on denser, partially melted rock. • 10 majors plates and many minor ones, separated by ridges, trenches, or faults.
Xenarthra and afrotheria may be more closely related to boreotheria which means?
Either one may be 1) the sister taxon of Boreotheria 2) Basal to all other placentals
Laurasiatheria
Elipotyphla -originally known as Insectivora, include tenrecs, golden moles, elephant shrews, tree shrews molecular data placed these species in other orders Fereungulata-largest grouping Artiodactyla Perissodactyla Cetaceans Carnivora pholidota
Late Cretaceous Fragmentation
Epicontinental Seas - Act as Barriers
What's the difference beteen an era, period, an epoch?
Era: Paleozoic, Mesezoic, Cenozoic Period Epoch: 252 (Permian-Triassic) 66(Mesozoic- Cenozoic) and (cretaceous- Paleogene)
Evaporation
Evaporation of water occurs from the body surface and from the pulmonary system • Each gram of water represents about 2450 joules of heat • Evaporation of water transfers heat from the animal to the environment and thus always represents a loss of heat.
heterochrony
Evolutionary change in the timing or rate of an organism's development.
Systematics
Evolutionary classification of organisms
African lungfish
Exhibits tetrapod-liked gaits, including walking and bounding (uses a primitive lung to breathe
Triassic Jurassic importance
Extinction event, set stage for dinosaurs
End-Triassic importance
Extinction vacated terrestrial niches, set stage for dinosaurs
estrous cycle steps
FSH initiates follicular development within the ovary estrogens- secreted by the follicle- cause thickening of the endometrium LH cause the egg to burst from the follicle(ovulation) GnRH Estrogen/progesterone stimulates uterus to thicken and progesterone stimulates growth of mammary glands
Fereungulata is the smallest grouping within Laurasiatheria
False
Most of the defining characteristics of mammals originated in the Cenozoic Era
False Triassic Era
________in an order stem from a ______________ and retain still fewer characteristics in common.
Families; still more remote ancestor;
How are fins made into limbs?
Fins and limbs are made into homologous structures, coded for by the same set of Hox genes.
Solar radiation
For most animals, the sun is the primary source of heat, and solar energy always results in heat gain. • Solar radiation reaches an animal directly when its standing in a sunny spot, and indirectly via reflection from clouds, atmospheric dust, and objects in the environment
consequences of maintaining high blood pressure
Forces some blood plasma (liquid part of blood) out of capillary vessels and into intercellular spaces of body tissues • Fluid is recovered and returned to circulatory system by the lymphatic system • ALL tetrapods have a lymphatic system
_________in the same family share fewer characteristics because each has departed further from their __________________
Genera; remote common ancestor;
Plesiadapiforms
Generalized aboreal primate small brain no post orbital bar retained claws
Xenarthra Prehistoric diversity
Glyptodonts -Ground Sloths
Enlarged temporal fenestra and loss of the orbital bar are interpreted as feeding adaptations that fuel a relatively higher metabolic rate because they allow:
Greater volume of jaw adductor muscles
Autopod
Hands/feet with digits Function: holdfasts and pivot points; provided frictional contact with the ground
Conduction
Heat transfer between the animal and a solid material(e.g. substrate) Results in heat gain or heat loss: 1) heat loss= substrate temp< animal surface temp 2) heat gain= substrate temp> animal surface temp Can be modified by changing: 1) the surface area of the animal in contact with the substrate 2) the rate of blood flow in the parts of the body in contact with the substrate
Climate Patterns Across the Phanerozoic
High 02, low CO2 and temp
Scales, hairs, etc. are what?
Homologous. • All develop from a common epidermis: anatomical placode (shared ancestral character of amniotes) • All express a similar suite of developmental signaling molecules • Hair & Feathers are not independently derived structures and they DID NOT evolve from Scales. • A change in gene expression in development caused the anatomical placode to produce different type of epidermal structures from the same primordium (ancestral tissue structure)
What led to insect diversification?
Increase in terrestrial vegetation
What is the function of the corpus luteum
Inhibits gonadotropin releasing hormone GnRH ) and maturation of new follicles
What is the northernmost living extant nonhuman primate?
Japanese Macaque
extinct lineages of crown group mammalia originated in what period?
Jurassic
Mesozoic Mammal Radiations
Jurassic Early Cretaceous
Hierarchy in the Linnaean System
Kingdom, Phylum, Subphylum Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species -did king phillip cry out for goodness sakes?
Consequence of monotremes diverging early?
Laurasia: Boresphenidans Gondawana: Australosphenidans -- Stem monotremes, other extinct groups Consequence: retain basa characteristics
Devonian coalescence
Led to the supercontinent: Pangea was mid-Carboniferous to mid- Jurassic
morphological adaptations for aquatic living
Locomotion 1)paraxial swimming typical of semiaquatic mammals relatively inefficient use limbs 2) axial swimming typical of fully aquatic mammals undulations of body and tail. relatively efficient
Late-Triassic importance
Mammaliaforms appear, first appearance of the dinosaurs(small, carnivorous therapods)
Metatheria
Marsupials; Give birth to live young; short gestation time produces very immature young that continue development attached to nipple often in pouch. Marsupials dominate the mammalian fauna only in Australia
Both ____________and ________________have a placenta
Metatherians and Eutherians;
when did Glaciers regress?
Mid-Permian; Ice-free world persisted until the mid- Cenozoic -Largest "ice-house to hot-house" transition
Phylogenetics recognizes only?
Monophyletic lineages
Prototheria
Monotremes -Retain the generalized amniote reproductive feature of laying eggs. -Extant monotremes are 4 species of echidna and the platypus
Great American Interchange
More animals moved south than north Today, opossums, porcupines, and armadillos are the only southern immigrants established north of the Rio Grande 50% of extant South American genera are from North American immigrants
Is the pectoral girdle connected to the head?
NO
Are wings a homologous character among bats and birds?
No, wings evolved independently in these separate lineages, which diverged long ago. • This is an example of convergent evolution
Permian-Triassic Importance
Non-Mammalian Synapsids Dominate
Where did "true" primates originate?
North America and Eurasia
stem primates
Northern Hemisphere Plesiadapiforms Early paleocene-eocene
Structure of Amniote Bone
Not uniform: dense outer layer, spongy inner layer Articular cartilage reduces friction as the joint moves--> arthritis
amniotes climate patterns across the phanerozoic
O2 above, Temps below present, Co2 at present
No convincing explanation of the ________of the Amniotic Egg
Origin Extraembryonic membranes not preserved in the fossil record
Euprimates originated near the boundary between which two Epochs?
Paleocene-Eocene
In what era did the tetrapods, amniotes, and synapsids originate?
Paleozoic
Which kind of group is artiodactyla?
Paraphyletic. It includes the common ancestor but not all of the descendents. Excludes the cetaceans which are believed to have evolved from an artiodactyl ancestor and are most closely related to hippos among living forms
Eutherians
Placentals; Placenta: structure that transfers nutrients from the mother to the embryo and removes waste products of the embryo's metabolism
axial muscles function in tetrapods
Postural support Lung ventilation
Terrestrial Tetrapods climate patterns across the Phanerozoic
Present O2, still slightly above present CO2
costal ventilation
Produces a pressure differential large enough to draw air down a long thin tube such as the trachea in the necks of amniotes.
Synapsids mammal types
Prototheria- Monotremes Metatheria- Marsupials Eutheria- Placentals
Function of temporal fenestration?
Provide room for muscles to bulge Modify complexity and orientation of the jaw-closing (adductor) muscles
The crurotarsal joint emphasizes fore-and-aft movement of the leg because it involves a plane of motion between which bones?
Proximal tarsals (astragalus/calcaneum) and fibia/tibia
Which of the following skeletal characteristics is NOT an adaptation for improved locomotion?
Reduced clavicle and interclavical 3 or more sacral vertebrae Large pubis and ischium Shorter tail
Underlying reason for skull fenestration
Reorientation of the adductor mandibularis to enhance feeding
reversal
Return to an ancestral form; can produce similar structures in distantly related organism
Heat radiating outward from the Earth's core creates convection in mantle rock?
Sea floor spreading: pushes land masses to or away from one another When plates collide, they form mountains or subduction zones
Amniotic egg features
Shell permits movement of water vapor, O2, and CO2 Must be deposited in air • Albumen (egg white): protects against mechanical damage; provides water & protein • Yolk sac: energy supply • 3 extraembryonic membranes derived from the embyro
Anthropoidea is synonymous to what?
Simiiformes
which blood circuit do fish have?
Single circuit; Two chambered heart: one atrium and one ventricle Atrium collects blood returning from body • Ventricle pumps blood to gills where gas exchange occurs and blood is re-oxygenated (gill circulation). • Blood then continues through the rest of the body before arriving back at the atrium = SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION. • Unidirectional flow of blood produces a gradient of oxygenated to deoxygenated blood around the fish's systemic circuit. • This limits the amount of oxygen that can reach organs and tissues, reducing overall metabolic capacity
Tetrapod Skeleton
Skeleton that can support body Legs and feet that can transmit backward force to substrate Rigid bones
Derived characters of amniotes
Skin elaborations Amniotic egg scales, hair, feathers, etc. are homologous costal ventilation of the lungs temporal fenestration
Diversification is an outcome of what?
Speciation
Hypothesis of common descent
Species diverge gradually and to an indefinitely great extent from common ancestors -Nested series of ancestor-descendant relationships trace the evolutionary history of a group of organisms
The most abundant terrestrial vertebrate in the late carboniferous and entire Permian periods?
Synapsids
Permian importance
Synapsids are the dominant terrestrial tetrapod
amniotes
Tetrapod that produces an amniotic egg mammals, birds, reptiles
How does a land animal evolve in water?
Tetrapod traits were advantageous for animals that were still living in water. • Lobed fins may have been useful in slow stalking behavior in shallow water; digits, wrists, and ankles may have promoted maneuverability
Most synapsid lineages disappeared by the end of the Permian because?
The Permian extinction. 80% of all species were eliminated. The biggest extinction event in Earth's history, 252 MYA.
amniotes have what in embryo?
Three extraembryonic membranes -derived from the zygote, but separate from the embryo itself 1)chorion (outer membrane) Gas exchange 2) allantois (inner membrane) - waste storage, gas exchange 3) amnion (innermost membrane) -cushions and protects embryo
Most derived tetrapodmorph Fish:
Tiktaalik Fills a morphological gap between fishes and tetrapods; its fins indicate it was on the fish side of the fish-tetrapod transition
Scandentia
Tree shrews "Potental" next closest relatives of primates (including humans)
Mammaliaformes originated during which Period?
Triassic
A diverse pattern of extinction and survival of tetrapod lineages at the K-Pg boundary suggests that asteroid impact was not the sole cause of the K-Pg extinction. true or false?
True
Tetrapods
Vertebrate descended from a four-legged ancestor; this includesanimals that have returned to life in the water mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians
Further separation of the continents produced?
Vicariant isolation
Can the same character be synapomorphic or symplesiomorphic?
Yes, depending on the taxonomic comparison: A vertebral column is a symplesiomorphy among vertebrates -Provide NO info. about evolutionary relationships of vertebrates to one another. A vertebral column is a synapomorphy when vertebrates are compared to invertebrates -Provides info. about evolutionary relationships between vertebrates & invertebrates
are elephants related to manatees and dugongs?
Yes, some early proboscideans have anatomical features that suggest a semiaquatic existence later proboscideans may represent a secondary return to a more terrestrial existence from an originally aquatic stock.
Axial skeleton: vertebrae and ribs
Zygapophyses interlock, resist torsion and compression Cervical vertebrae allow head to move up/down, right/left
The masseter muscle connects the:
Zygomatic arch to the masseteric fossa
clade
a monophyletic taxon
outgroup
a reference group that is less closely related to the ingroup than the members of the ingroup are related to eachother
Light bars indicate
absence of fossils but taxon assumed present because fossils are known from earlier times.
What is the geographic distribution of extant Catarrhines
africa and asia
3 major groups of eutherians
afrotheria(africa) xenarthra boreoeutheria
when did extant orders of mammals diversify?
after K-PG boundary Driver of KT mass extinction
dichromatic (two pigments) vision
all eutherians lack RH2 and SWS2 which limits ability to distinguish colors
sacral vertebra connected to pelvic girdle function
allows hindlimbs to transfer force to the axial skeleton 1 sacral attachment in basal tetrapods mammals usually have 2-5 sacral vertebrae humans have 5 sacral vertebrae fused together to form the sacrum
what are toxic waste products of proteins?
ammonia highly toxic
amniote distinguishing character
amnion: inner layer surrounding the embryo; derived from the embryo itself
shared derived characters of amniotes
amniotic egg skin elaborations from keratin costal ventilation of the lungs palatal teeth mesotarsal joint(aka intratarsal joint)
impedance matching
amount of sound energy conducted by medium
Middle ear function
amplfiy and transmit sound waves to the inner ear
Cross-sectional area of a limb supports?
an animal's weight on land
ureter
ancestral character of amniotes
anapsids have what?
ancestral reptiles; no temporal fenestra
_________________________________contributed to the early diversification and radiation of mammals.
angiosperm radiation and dinosaur extinction
Extant vertebrates
animals with backbone and skull
Mammalia
any species descended from the last common ancestor of Prototheria, Metatheria, and Eutheria
Endothermy and ectothermy ________ mutually exclusive
are NOT; many aniimals do both.
occipital condyle function
articulates with the atlas to form a hinge joint that allows flexion and extension of the head
Two major groupings of eutherians
atlantogeneta -afrotheria -xenarthra Boreoeutheria
Mesotarsal joint
axial locomotion ankle joint lacked a distinct plain of motion appendicular(limb-based) locomotion distinct ankle hinge joint allows for propulsive lever motion
Skull differences between Metatherians and eutherians
basal dental formula for eutherians 3/3, 1/1, 4/4, 3/3 (x 2) = 44 teeth many eutherians have fewer teeth, e.g. humans
monotremes characteristics
basal shoulder girdle -- retain interclavicle and large coracoid -- lack scapular spine and supraspinous/infraspinous fossae
Chiroptera
bats were originally placed with euarchontans Molecular data place them in Laurasiatheria
Why is acoustic impedance of water greater than air?
because water is denser than air. More pressure is required to transmit sound through water More pressure= less impedance
Bone diameter scales with positive allometry:
bigger animals have proportionally thicker limb bones than smaller ones
defining hominin trait
bipedalism
Evolution of Bipedalism traditional hpothesis
bipedalism was an evolutionary response to the spread of african savanna environments. bipedalism originated in the savannas, and was an adaptation to savanna living knuckle walking was a precusor to bipedalism
which tetrapods have the highest blood pressure?
birds and mammals. Why?
parturition
birth
placenta functions
built from extraembyronic membranes 1) physically anchors fetus to uterus 2) transports nutrients from the circulation of the mother to the developing fetus 3) excretes metabolites of the fetus into the maternal compartment 4) produces hormones that regulate organs of the mother and fetus -suppresses the normal immune response that hte mother's body would normally mount aginst the placenta and fetus, which are genetically alien to the mother --chorion produces lymphocytes and protein that block mother's immune response --the placenta is therefore an allograft: a successful foreign transplant
Bone conduction
by direct route through the dentary to the postdentary bones or by indirect route through the rest of skull - is a major transmission route of sound waves to the inner ear in synapsids.
Carnivora
caniformia feliformia
what are carbohydrates made up of?
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen HOC
In which period did the tetrapods, amniotes, an synapsids originate?
carboniferous
Carnivora physical trait distinguishes carnivorans from other carnivorous mammals?
carnassial pair
carnivore vs herbivore skull musculature
carnivore: jaw joint on same level as tooth row
What is the geographic distribution of extant Platyrrhines
central and south america
apomorphy
character that differs from ancestral condition
plesiomorphy
character that does not differ from ancestral condition
Plesiomorphy
character that species have inherited unchanged from their ancestors --Carnassial teeth
Vomeronasal organ
chemosensory organ in the roof of the mouth of most tetrapods(except birds) in some mammals, males use it to inhale pheremones to asses female reproductive status(flehmen behavior) remnant may exist in humans
Which two extraembryonic membranes form the placenta of Eutherians?
chorion allantois
xenarthra orders
cingulata(armadillos) pilosa(sloths and anteaters) edentates because they do not have incisors and lack or have poorly developed molars
Dermopterans
closests relatives of primates flying lemurs--don't fly and aren't lemurs
key component of milk
colustrum first product released by the mammary gland following birth protein-rich fluid containing antibodies that confer mother's resistance to various diseases to the young
The definition of Mammalia is any species descended from the last _______________ of ____________ mammals.
common ancestor; extant
Homoplastic similarities do not indicate ____________
common ancestry • They can obviously complicate the process of determining evolutionary relationships.
which ventricular septum do mammalian synapsids have?
complete
Mammals and birds have which ventricular septum
complete and each lost a systemic arch
which kind of ventricular septum do derived amniotes have?
complete or partial venctricular septum
Early eocene
connectivity between Asia, North America, and Europe via the Bering bridge and Greenland respectively Separation between Eurasia, Africa, South America Separation between North and South America
what kind of evolution was the ciruclatory sytem in mammals and birds
convergent evolution
fermentation
conversion of sugars into inorganic acids and alcohols in the absence of oxygen
Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of mammals that originated in Cynodonts?
crurotarsal joint zygomatic arch bowed out Diphyodont dentition masseteric fossa on dentary
hypotheses for why testicles descend
dangling gonads are a way to signal virility and good health.
Describe the trend in average body size of synapsids from the end Permian to the end Triassic.
decreasing
Synapsids characteristics
decreasing body size improved locomotion improved food processing improved hearing
DMME
definitive mammalian middle ear; Three auditory ossicles completely detached from the mandible. The DMME is the defining characteristic of mammalia
Groups can only be identified on the basis of ________________
derived characters; -- Characters that have the same evolutionary origin (are homologous) that differ from the ancestral condition (are derived).
Which group is most closely related to primates?
dermoptera flying lemurs
problems with a high cellulose diet
diets are rich in carbon, but low in protein most of the carbohydrates are locked in indigesetible cellulose, and the proteins exist in chemical compounds herbivores depend on specialized bacteria and protozoans living in the digestive tract to digest cellulose and protein these organisms also synthesize fatty acids, amino acids, proteins, and vitamins. that can be absorbed and used by the animal host
Different lung structures may refect ?
different O2 concentrations
Different physical properties of air and water result in ___________________________ acting on terrestrial and aquatic vertebrates
different selective forces; A key difference is the effect of gravity on support and locomotion
Hands and feet are a property of ______________________ already present in fishes; no new genetic information required
differential expression of genes
adaptive radiation
divergence into different adaptive forms; taxa usually differ in use of resources or habitats -Hawaiian honeycreepers
sea lions locomotion
dorsoventral movements of the back and hindlegs derived type of axial swimming
which blood circuit do tetrapods have?
double circuit; • SYSTEMATIC CIRCUIT supplies OXYGENATED blood to the BODY • PULMONARY CIRCUIT supplies DEOXYGENATED blood to the LUNGs • More separation of oxygenated/deoxygenated blood; metabolic efficiency
Which groups have the double and single pulley astragalus
double= artiodactylas single= perissodactylas
eutherian uterus
duplex, bipartite, bicornuate simplex
Catarrhine trichromatic vision comes from?
duplicaiton of the LWS opsin gene into an L form with maximum sensitivity at 530 nm (more sensitive to green) and M form with maximum sensitivity at 563 nm (more sensitive to red)
for many mammals the composition of milk changes during the course of lactation
early and late stages of lactation -more protein/ less sugar middle stages less protein/more sugar
Euprimates
early eocene of North america and eurasia defintiive evidence that euprimates reached africa by the mid-eocene
Convergent evolution
ecologically similar species originating in different areas from different ancestors
Monotreme characteristics
edentate electroreceptor bill cloaca platypus genome has more bird characteristics than therian genome
ovulation
egg(s) released from the ovaries
gestation
embryo develops within placenta
afrotheria
endemic group of african mammals indicative of a long period of independent isolated evolution of mammals on the african continent consistent with cenozoic geography: Africa was isolated from Eurasia during first half of the era( until Miocene)
modern primates limbs and digits
enhanced digit mobility leaping claws compress into nails sensile tactile pads on distal ends of digits
Rigid bones
enhanced remodeling capacity(adaptation to increased stress) Internal structure continuously changes: activity increases bone mass Allows broken bones to heal
In Amniotic tetrapods, ___________& ____________muscles are ________________; allows lung ventilation
epaxial; hypaxial; differentiated
In fish & modern amphibians, _______muscles (dorsal side of trunk) & ________muscles (ventral side of trunk) are _________________
epaxial; hypaxial; undifferentiated
which group has a post-orbital bar?
eutherians metatherians don't
stem eutherians are
eutherians outside the grouping of the extant orders
speciation
evolution of reproductive isolation within an ancestral species, resulting in two or more descendant species
heterotropy
evolutionary change of physical location of a developmental process
Diversification
evolutionary increase of the number of species in a lineage. Usually accompanied by divergence in phenotypic characters
Eutherians chorioallantoic placenta
extensive villi, strong connection to uterine lining, increased surface area for rapid and efficient exchange of nutrients, gases, and wastes feedback from the eutherian placenta maintains the life of the corpus luteum, suppresses ovulation, allows extension of gestation past a single estrus cycle
Current research indicates that internal testes in Afrotherians and Xenarthas is an ancestral trait.
false
Feedback from the metatherian placenta maintains the life of the corpus luteum , suppresses ovulation, allows extension of gestation past a single estrus cycle
false
In non-amniotes & basal amniotes, the urinary, alimentary, and reproductive tracts exit the body via two openings
false
The middle ear of extant members of Mammalia is connected to the dentary bone true or false
false
True seals can turn hindlegs forward & move on land with vertical flexions of the vertebral column.
false
the nipple or teat is a characte found in all extant mammals true or fals?
false
milk composition
fats proteins lactose(milk sugar) vitamins salts
Foregut fermentation product
fatty acids
marsupium
female abdominal pouch poor diagnostic feature not all marsupials have a marsupium echidnas have a marsupium
Mate selection
female choice of traits linked with quality -physical appearance -sounds -smells
delayed ovulation -sperm storage
female stores sperm until after hibernation is over and then ovulates the rest of the reproductive cycle is as normal
copulation
female/male mating
epitheliochorial placenta
fetal tissues contact the lining of the uterus but do not penetrate it ungulates and non-anthropodi primates
endotheliochorial placenta
fetal tissues penetrate lining of teh uterus, but not the lining of the maternal blood vessels carnivorans and elephants
amniotic egg probable ancestral condition
flexible leathery eggshell
Two systems for breaking down cellulose
foregut fermentation(mouth to intestine) hindgut fermentation (intestines)
Allopatric speciation
formation of a new species from ancestral species due to the geographic separation of the breeding population
encephalization quotient
frugivorous diet may be linked to to increase in this -brain size in relation to body size
chorioallantoic membrane
fusion of the chorion and allantois membranes
vicariance
geographic isolation of populations of a once-widespread species by development of a physical barrier within the ancestral species range -Geographic isolation leads to speciation -Gondwana Marsupials
euarchontoglires
glires -rodentia -lagomorpha Euarchonta -scandentia -dermoptera -primates
continental drift impacts
global climate variation faunal interchange
xenarthra prehistoric diversity
glyptodonts ground sloths notoungulates: all extinct
_______and _______are low in _________and high in _______
grass stems and sheaths low in protein high in lignin
convection
heat transfer between the animal and the air(or water) Results in heat gain or loss: 1) Heat loss= air temp< animal surface temp. 2) heat gain=air temp> animal surface temp When the air is moving the rate of heat exchange is greatly increased
Foregut fermenters( ruminants) are adapted to using
high quality foods;
milk composition for northern mammals
high-fat, high protein milk young of these animals need to increase weight quickly to avoid cold after they are weaned
fetal cetaceans have ____________that form then disappear
hindlimb buds
morphology of cetaceans
hindlimb lost, vestige of the pelvis remains -muscles run from vestigial pelvis to genitals compressed neck vertebrae zygapophyseal articulations lost between vertebrae in trunk and tail no sacral vertebrae long fingers
Convergence, parallelism, and reversal are forms of
homoplasy;
Hominine
humans, chimps, gorillas, and extinct forms more closely related to these taxa than to orangutans Homo sapiens is the only extant species
morpohological data indicated interrelationships between?
hyraxes, sirenians, and proboscideans
pelvic girdle
ilia connects limbs to vertebral column
How does the middle ear function?
impedance matching
Where does the pectoral girdle rest?
in a muscular sling. Does not articulate directly with vertebral column
alternatives: induced ovulators
in some species, like cats and some rodents, copulation comes first. copulation triggers ovulation in these species
crown group
include extant species AND fossils that have all of the derived characters of extant species (monophyletic)
stem groups
include fossils with some derived characters (paraphyletic)
Dual use of axial muscles for locomotion and ventilation can be?
incompatible; When a lizard runs it has difficulty using its ribs for lung ventilation
area effect
increase ratio of the area of the tympanic membrane to that of the oval window. As the ratio increases, sound pressure increases
when linear dimensions double, volume
increases eightfold. --an animal 2x as tall as another is 8x as heavy
Which of the following skull features first seen in cynodonts functions as a pathway for sensory nerves from the snout to the brain?
infraorbital foramen
corpeus luteum produces progesterone and estrogen that _______________and maturation of new follicles
inhibit GnRH ;
Trapezius muscle derives from fish gill musculature
innervated directly from the brain via cranial nerves; not by spinal cord people with spinal injuries can still shrug shoulders other remnants of the brachiometric musculature in the larynx and vocal chords allow quadriplegic people to control prosthetic devices
lympathic system mammals- lymph nodes
intercept pathogenic material, e.g., cancer cells
Narrow blue lines show?
interrelationships only; they do not indicate: times of divergence nor unrecorded presence of taxa in the fossil record
Coprophagy
lagomorphs ingest fecal material for further extraction of nutrients
why do larger mammals have more stable body temperatures than small mammals?
larger animals have a smaller surface area to volume ratio which results in less heat loss and a more stable body temp
Hominin derived cranial traits
larger brain case vertical forehead reduced brow ridges and sagittal crest larger nose shroter rostrum
When did extant orders of mammals originate?
late cretaceous. before KPG Angiosperms--> cretaceous terrestrial revolution(KRT)
_______are high in __________and low in __________
leaves and forbes; high in protein low in lignin
Bigger animals exchange energy with the enviroment________rapdily than smaller species
less; Bigger animals exchange energy with the environment less rapidly than smaller species
Which of the following hormones causes the egg to burst from the follicle, i.e., ovulation
leutanizing hormone
Olecranon process on ulna function
lever for the extensor muscles that straighten the elbow joint
Locomotion=
limb movements, NOT trunk bending
Appendicular skeleton
limbs and limb girdles(pelvic, pectoral) in bony fish, pectoral girdle is joined to head
Tetrapod distinguishing character
limbs with carpals, tarsals, and digits
monotreme sexes urogenital system
little differences between the sexes, other than the uteri and ovaries in place of internal testicles retained within the abdomen
axial muscles in lizards and salamanders
locomotion due to bending the backbone laterally
evolution of bipedalism alternative hypothesis
locomotion of extant great apes and humans derived from a large ancestral ape capable of hand-assisted aboreal bipedalism with extended lower limbs Orangutan ancestors became arboreal specialists, moving mostly aboveground in tropical forests • Ancestors of gorillas and chimpanzees, in response to changing habitats, moved vertically in and out of trees, and thus independently acquired knuckle walking • Hominins retained existing adaptations for extended-limb bipedalism and eventually became committed terrestrial bipeds.
Small ruminants have relatively greater metabolic demands, and the necessary ___________________________in the rumen means they have t consume_________________
long retention of food high quality forage(low fiber/ high degestibility)
tetrapod adaptations
longer snout; tongue; salivary glands simple tidal-flow lung stouter ribs urinary bladder middle ear -- independently derivedi n non-amniotes and amniotes
The heat capacity of air is?
low; as is its ability to conduct heat
Hominoidea vs cercopithecoidea derived dental traits
lower molars have 5 cusps--hominoid cercopithecoid-4 cusps
locomotion in birds and mammals
mainly due to limb movements
Solution for Consequences of Maintaining High Blood Pressure
maintain different blood pressure in the systemic(body) and pulmonary (lung) circuits
tetrapod solutions for gravity pools fluids
maintain high blood pressure with powerful heart have valves in limb veins that resist backflow
Amniotes definition
mammals and reptiles
synapsid
mammals; amniote descended from an ancestor with a single large opening in the skull
Main difference between metatherians and eutherians
marsupials have epipubic bone- pouch, locomotion function?
hemochorial placenta
maternal blood in direct contact with fetal tissues probable ancestral condition
stem placentals were thought to have been limited to which period?
mesozoic New evidence indicates some early Cenozoic eutherians(e.g. Taeniodonta) fall on the placental stem
Small ruminants have higher ____________relative to their rumen size than do large ruminants
metabolisms
Differences between miocene platypus and modern platypus
miocene= small infraorbital canal modern platypus= larger infraorbital canal; better developed electrosensory system
Newer character approach
molecular characters -base sequences of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA -functional significance is usually unknown -massive number of characters -computer-based analyses
anthropoids
monkeys, apes, and humans derived traits: diurnal (except for owl monkeys) brachiation : swinging from the underside of one branch to the underside of the next using hands to grasp branches
Prosimians
more forward-ooking orbits aboreal life, slender hindlimbs
classic character approach
morphological characters; anatomical traits functional significance is known small number of characters human-based analyses
clavicle retained in which group
most Therians but lost in many cursorial eutherians
artiodactyla
most diverse, large, terrestrial mammal group alive today Fifth largest order of mammals, consisting of 10 families, 80 genera, and approx. 210 species
therians are more closely related to __________________than monotremes
multituberculates
what are proteins made up of?
nitrogen
which ventricular septum do ancestral amniotes have?
none
molecular evidence indicates a ___________origin for eutherians as a whole
northern;
Cross-sectional area of bone does _____________ in proportion to the stress that bones experienc
not increase; Limbs of large animals are relatively more fragiles
developmental atavism
occasionally dolphins have been found that have hind flippers thought to have arisen from one or more mutations that turn the development of the hindlimbs back on.
Catarrhines origin timing and location
oligocene and africa molecular studies indicate split occured about 28 Ma
synapsid distinguishing character
one temporal fenestration, one temporal bar
homo sapiens
only surviving species of the tribe Hominini,originating in Africa 300 ka
Why do testicles descend?
optimal sperm production requires temperatures lower than that of rest of the body, but they don't understand why
hominid
orangutans, gorillas, chimps, humans and extinct forms more closely related to these taxa than to gibbbons and siamangs.
Typical order of reproductive events
ovulation copulation fertilization implantation gestation parturition lactation Oscar canned fruit implanting grapes probably late
the gut is an ___________free
oxygen free(anaerobic)
semiaquatic mammals adaptations
paddlike limbs dense fur coat
Pholidota
pangolins
quotations indicate?
paraphyletic groups
which ventricular septum do non-mammalian synapsids have?
partial
estrous
period of time shortly before and after ovullation
which era did endothermy evolve?
permian
Diversification does not always mean
phenotypic divergenec
Xenarthra: south american endemics
pilosa cingulata
artiodactyla key physical character
plane of symmetry of each foot passes through 3rd and 4th digits. "Even-toed ungulates" Most are foregut fermenters -astragalus facilitiates rapid locomotion
What drives continental drift?
plate tectonics
the great american interchange originated in which epoch
pliocene
hindgut fermenters are adapted to using
poor quality foods digestive speed
differentiated hypaxial muscles function
postural support of the body and ventilation of the lungs --Transversus abdominis: expiration of the lungs -- Rectus abdominis: postural support, "six-pack
Dark bars indicate ______________________-
presence in fossil records
choriovitelline placenta (enlarged yolk sac cavity)
primary site of gas and nutrient exchange lack extensive villi, weak connection to uterine lining first placental structure to appear after implantation of a fertilized egg in all therians; but it is transitory in eutherians
Gravity Pools fluids
problem for blood circulation on land
axial muscles in fish
provide simple side-to-side bending; allows for locomotion
buccal pumping
raising and lowering of the floor of the mouth draws water (or air) into and out of mouth: buccal pumping. This only works because of the distance between thee mouth and gills is short
radiation
rapid diversification over a relatively short interval of geologic time
evolutionary radiation
rapid diversification without assuming that phenotypic difference are adaptive
A hierarchical classification reflects not a mystical ordering of the universe, but a ____________ that has produced organisms with true genealogical relationships
real historical process;
metatherian urogential system
rectum splits off from the urine and birth canal creating its own opening in the body wall Didelphous Testicles outside of body wall, in front of the penis Penis generally kept within the body and serves as a urine and sperm channel only in therian mammals is the penis a conduit for urine
Costal ventilation of the lungs
reduces cutaneous water loss since skin does not have to be moist for gas exchange. Allows for longer necks
Hox genes
regulate expression of the hierarchical network of developmental genes.
Heat cannot flow rapidly _________or ________a large body through its _____________
relatively small surface;
Phylogeny
represents a hypothesisabout the evolutionary relationships among taxa; illustrated by a branching diagram (cladogram).
diapsids have what?
reptiles and birds; 2 temporal bars
zygapophysis function
resists compression and the pull of gravity; allows the spine to transfer weight of viscera to limbs --tetrapods that have permanently returned to the water have lost this
carnivore milk
resource rich. Higher in percent fat, protein, and energy content than the milk of either herbivores or omnivores
Morphology of Pinnipeds
retain zygapopyhses retain hind legs -modified and turned backwards -true seals cannot change position of hind legs and are clumsy on land
________________become inoculated with the appropriate microorganisms by _______________
rodents and lagomorphs; eating maternal feces
forgut fermentation process
rumen reticulum salivary amylase omasum abomasum
There are more species of ____________________than ____________________________ among the ungulates.
ruminant artiodactyls perissodactyl hindgut fermenters;
Hindgut fermentation process
salivary enzymes stomach small intestine caecum fermentation
Mid-Triassic importance
sauropsids replace synapsids as dominant tetrapod
skin elaborations
scales, hair, feathers, nails, beaks, horns All derived from keratin -- Fibrous protein seen only in vertebrates and found mainly in the outer skin (epidermis) of tetrapods
which animals can turn their hind legs forward
sea lions and walruses
What is the functional consequence of the evolution of the squamosal-dentary joint?
separates feeding from hearing
Synapomorphy
shared derived character
What kind of character is the astragalus?
shared derived character
bones withstand compressive forces much better than?
shearing forces;
hominoidea vs cercopithecoidea derived skeletal traits
shoulders, thorax, and hips broader than in monkeys. More curved ribs place vertebral column closer to the center of gravity -caudal vertebrae reduced to vestiges(coccyx)
Derived tetrapod fishes had most of the
skeletal features we find in ourselves today
characteristics of modern primates
skull and teeth -reduced number of teeth -reduced snout and olfactory apparatus, with most of the skull lying posterior to the orbits -presenceof post-orbital bar binocular eyes -possible adaptation to a frugivorous diet
xenarthra
sloths, anteaters, armadillos south american endemics sometimes known as edentates , but only anteaters are toothless pangolins are in the order carnivora
lever effect
small vibration in malleus generates larger vibration in stapes as this ratio decreases, sound pressure increases
Hominin derived dental traits
small, blunter canines diastema disappeared less sexual dimorphism->monogamy humans: jaws are V or U shaped, arched palate Catarrhine dental formula: 2.1.2.3/2.1.2.3
Monotremes embryo
smaller yolk sac yolk is not sufficient to sustain embryo until hatching eggs are retained in the uterus where they are nourished by maternal secretions eggs increase in size before the shell is excreted; young hatch 12-48 days after eggs laid choriovitelline membrane -fusion of the chorion and yolk membranes
Hypselodont
some mammals have molars that are ever-growing -derived trait
____________in the same genus are similar because they stem from a _______________
species; recent common ancestor;
fertilization
sperm fertilizes egg (zygote)
Which of the following is the defining characteristic of Mammaliaformes?
squamosal-dentary jaw that serves as the primary jaw joint
Surface area increases as the ...
square of the change in linear dimensions
To reduce the effect of shearing forces, bigger animals stand how?
stand more erect on straighter legs.
Which ossicles do all other derived tetrapods have?
stapes
fossil record of cetaceans
staring in the eocene of Pakiston and along the ancient Tethys Seas Progression from terrestrial forms with a full set of legs to aquatic forms with reduced and modified legs.
characteristics of fully aquatic mammals
streamlined bodies elongated spine all use blubber for insulation(subcutaneous fat) limbs converted to flippers
moose must consume?
sufficient energy and sufficient sodium aquatic plants are high in sodium but are bulkier and yield less energy
skeletomuscular system must?
support actual weight and withstand forces generated during locomotion
volume increases more rapidly than?
surface area
when linear dimensions double...
surface area quadruples --An animal 2x as tall as another has 4x as much surface area
Olecranon process on ulna symplesiomorphy or synapomorphy?
symplesiomorphy among tetrapods synapomorphy compared to fishes
Which lineage was first group of amniotes to radiate widely in terrestrial habitats?
synapsid lineage
To the early Permian to into the early Triassic, which lineage was the top carnivores in the food web?
synapsids
Which group was the dominant terrestrial tetrapod before and immediately after the Permain-Triassic extinction?
synapsids
Afrotheria: molecular data indicated three other groups were related to these larger african mammals
tenrecs, golden moles, elephant shrews, and aardvark
phenotypic plasticity
the ability of an organism to change its phenotype in response to changes in the environment.
delayed ovulation
the best time for mating might not be the best time for offspring to be born, especially in seasonal enviroments
Darwinian fitness
the contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation relative to the contributions of other individuals
Volume increases as
the cube of the change in linear dimensions
Structure of the tetrapod skeletomuscular system is sensitive to absolute body size because of?
the effects of gravity on land
The most likely phylogeny is the one requiring _______________given that any change is an unlikely event
the fewest number of character changes(most parsimonious)
epigenetics
the study of environmental influences on gene expression that occur without a DNA change
Allometry
the study of scaling, or how shape changes with size
delayed implantation
the zygote floats in the reproductive tract without implanting in the uterine wall Months-long delays: 5-7 months is common across species that do this -protective coat on zygote, seasonal, nursing young
Taxonomy
theory and practice of classifying organisms
the tympanum originated in which of the following groups
therapsid
only in _____________do the ____________________tracts have separate openings
therians alimentary and urogenital tracts
only __________have precise control over excretory processes
therians;
estrous cycle
timespan fro one period of estrus to the next -monoestrous: one cycle per year (canids) -polyestrous multiple cycles per year (rodents, rabbits, hares)
Excreting urea is an ancestral character of amniotes true or false?
true
Lactation is thought to have evolved before precise occlusion and diphyodonty because (a) precise occlusion cannot develop until jaws reach adult size, and (b) an animal can only be diphyodont only if it is fed milk during it early life
true
The loop of Henle is a derived character of mammals true or false?
true
the ability to suckle is a uniquely mammalian trait
true
eutherian urogenital system
twin vaginas fuse to become one; paired uteri fuse to varying degrees penis typically outside body wall, but often sheathed agianst the belly/abdomen most males "drop"testicles behind the penis most males develop a bone in the penus(baculum) which lends support during mating
sister groups
two monophyletic groups that are each other''s closest relatives
closest living relatives of cetaceans?
ungulates
young_________typically consume soil to obtain their microorganisms
ungulates
in male therians, urine and sperm both exit the
urethra; in other male amniotes the penis is used only for sperm transmission
Mammalian urogenital tracts
urinary alimentary reproductive -all three have cloaca
didelphous
uteri, oviducts, and vaginal canals are paired
Ventricular septum
venctricle divided by : fixed or temporary barrier caused by muscle contraction
retina
vertrebrate retina conains two types of cells that respond to light rods cones SWS1 and SWS2: blue/purple RH2: blue/green LWS: green/yellow/red
Marsupial disperal followed by what?
vicariant isolation
origin of the tetrapod middle ear
was not present in the earliest tetrapods it evolved independently several times in non-amniotes and sauropsids the DMME evolved independently in Prototheria and Theria -Convergent evolution?? - in each case it involved the stapes(or columella), tympanum, and inner ear -Hyomandibula(now technically the stapes) detaches from the hyoid arch and may have controlled passage of air through the spiracle
deer are more closely related to horses or whales?
whales
lympathic system immune function:
white blood cells(macrophages) travel lymph vessels
Vertebrates have what with embryo?
yolk sac food source; shrinks over time
precocial
young born in a relatively developed state no monotremes or marsupials some placentals
altricial
young born or hatched very immature or helpless all monotremes and marsupials some placentals
implantation
zygote implants in uterine wall
Basic principles of acoustics
• A sound wave traveling in a medium of certain physical properties, namely density and elasticity, will not pass readily into a medium with different properties • The more different the characteristics of the two media are, the more sound energy will be reflected at the boundary
diaphragm
• Ancestrally, contraction of the trunk muscles created the reduced pressure with the thorax that draws air into the lungs for inspiration. • But this situation was modified with the development of a diaphragm in mammals, possibly as early as in some derived therapsids.
key disadvantage of amniotic egg?
• Eggs cannot be laid in water because the embryo bypassess the larval stage typical of amphibian embryos and does not form gills. - Gill-less embryo would drown •Marine amniotes must lay eggs on land or bear live young (viviparous)
synapsid(aveolar) lung
• Elaboration of earliest tetrapod lung • Tidal ventilation (in-and-out airflow) • Mixture of fresh air & retained air • Treelike pattern of branching - Humans: 23 levels • Alveoli are tiny & thin-walled - Thin blood-gas barrier • Extensive surface area - Humans: 70-m2
What's the advantage of changed musculature?
• Enhanced feeding ability • Fishes and non-amniotic tetrapods can only close their jaws with a single snap (inertial feeding) • Amniotes can also apply pressure with teeth when jaws closed (static pressure feeding)
Which selective pressures might have triggered the origin of tympanic hearing in synapsids?
• Non-burrowing, nocturnal lifestyle: • Finding food • Avoiding predators • Communicating with conspecifics • Upright posture: • Diminished contact between skull and substrate
lymphatic system
• One-way system of blind-ended, veinlike vessels that parallel the veins. • Allows fluid to drain back into the venous system at the base of the neck .• Valves prevent backflow • Muscle/tissue contractions maintain flow
Key advantage of a longer neck
• Provides space for elaboration of the nerves that supply the forelimb • These nerves leave the spinal cord at the neck and join together in a nerve complex called the brachial plexus • Simple plexus in amphibians (2 nerves), complex plexus in amniotes (>5 nerves) • Improves limb control and manipulation
Potential Effects of Mesozoic O2 Bottleneck for the Evolution of Synapsids
• Small body size • Enucleate Red Blood Cells - No nucleus; more oxygen-carrying hemoglobin molecules can be packed into each cell.
Sauropsid (Faveolar) Lung
• Through-flow ventilation • Air passages on the periphery of lung • Gas exchange occurs in faveoli • Air flows one way, blood flows in opposite direction (cross-current exchange) • Air flow is UNIDIRECTIONAL • Birds: Lungs relatively immobile - Parabronchi walls extremely thin - Thinner blood-gas barrier than mammals
Ancestral tetrapod lung
• Tidal ventilation(in-and-out airflow) • Mixture of fresh inhaled air & retained air from previous breaths • Limited surface area • Surfactant substance reduces water tension, helps re-inflate lung
Role of Contingency
•Evolutionary history depends on whether a particular lineage of animals was in the right place at the right time •Effects of continental movements on (a) climate, (b) isolation of animals, and (c) dispersal of animals are key drivers of mammal evolution