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Chapter 11 Reptiles and Birds © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Key Concepts • The evolution of the amniotic egg gave reptiles a great reproductive advantage. • The Asian saltwater crocodile lives in estuaries and is adapted to life in the marine environment. • Sea turtles have streamlined bodies and appendages modified into flippers. © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Key Concepts • Sea turtles mate at sea and lay eggs on the same beaches where the females hatched. • Sea turtles may migrate long distances between their breeding grounds and their nesting beaches. • Sea turtle populations are endangered by a number of human endeavors. © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Key Concepts • The marine iguana of the Galápagos Islands is the only marine lizard. • Several species of venomous sea snake live in the marine environment. • Shorebirds have long legs for wading and thin, sharp bills for finding food in shallow water and sand. © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Key Concepts • A variety of bird species, including gulls, pelicans, and tubenoses, are adapted to feeding on marine organisms. • Penguins are the birds most adapted to life in the sea. © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Marine Reptiles • Reptiles adapted for success on land, then used the same characteristics to return to the sea and gain success there as well • Modern-day reptiles include: – crocodilians – turtles – lizards – snakes © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Amniotic Egg • An amniotic egg is covered by a protective shell and contains: – amnion—a liquid-filled sac in which the embryo develops – yolk sac—sac where yolk (food) is stored – allantois—sac for disposal of waste – chorion—a membrane lining the inside of the shell which provides a surface for gas exchange during development • Copulatory organs allow efficient internal fertilization © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Physiological Adaptations • Advanced circulatory system in which circulation through the lungs is nearly completely separate from circulation through the rest of the body – more efficient method of supplying oxygen • Kidneys are efficient in eliminating wastes while conserving water • Skin covered with scales and lacking glands decreases water loss © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Marine Crocodiles • Best adapted to the marine environment is the Asian saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) • Large animals (up to 6 m long) • Feed mainly on fishes • Drink salt water and eliminate excess salt through salt glands on their tongues • Lives along the shore, where it nests © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Adaptations to life at sea – protective shells that are fused to the skeleton and fill in the spaces between the vertebrae and ribs protect their bodies • outer layer of shell composed of keratin • inner layer composed of bone • carapace—dorsal surface of the shell • pastron—ventral surface of the shell – leatherback turtle lacks shell and has a thick hide containing small bony plates © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Adaptations to life at sea (continued) – shell is flattened, streamlined,d reduced in size and weight, for buoyancy/swimming – large fatty deposits beneath the skin and light, spongy bones add buoyancy – front limbs are modified into large flippers – back limbs are paddle shaped and used for steering and digging nests © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Behavior – generally solitary, don’t interact – remain submerged while at sea; breathe air but can stay under water for as long as 3 hours – alternate between feeding and resting during the day – sleep on the bottom under rocks or coral © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Feeding and nutrition – have a beak-like structure instead of teeth – green sea turtle is the only herbivore – leatherback sea turtles eat jellyfish • pharynx is lined with sharp spines to hold slippery prey • digestive system adapted to withstand stings – large amounts of salt consumed with food and water are eliminated as concentrated tears through salt glands above the eyes © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Reproduction – courtship – males court females before mating; males may compete for a female, or 1 female may mate with several males – nesting – females dig shallow pits on the beach, usually at night, and bury eggs – development and hatching • temperature determines development time and sex ratio • hatchlings rush for the safety of the sea after hatching © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Turtle migrations – females migrate from feeding grounds to the beaches where they were born to nest – green sea turtles feed on grasses in warm, shallow continental waters, but breed on remote islands • some breed on a 2- or 3-year cycle – method for navigation over long distances is unknown © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Turtles • Sea turtles in danger – beach erosion – artificial lighting near nesting beaches – sea turtles are killed when trapped in fishing nests, especially those used for shrimpers • turtle exclusion devices can reduce turtle mortality by as much as 95% when used for shrimp nets – turtles are hunted by humans for meat, eggs, leather and shells © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Marine Iguana • The marine iguana of the Galápagos Islands off Ecuador is the only marine lizard • Most are black, but some are mottled red and black – dark coloration is thought to allow more absorption of heat energy – raising body temperature allows them to swim and feed in cold Pacific waters © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Marine Iguana • Feeding and nutrition – herbivores with a short, heavy snout for grazing on dense mats of seaweed – swallow small stones to reduce buoyancy for feeding under water – excess salt from consumed seawater is extracted and excreted by specialized tear and nasal glands © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Marine Iguana • Behaviors – good swimmers, using lateral undulations of the body and tail – each male occupies a small territory on the rocks, usually with 1 or 2 females – intruders or challengers are attacked when they enter the male’s territory • fights between male iguanas rarely result in serious injury © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Snakes • Adaptations to life in the sea – scales are absent or greatly reduced for streamlining – tail is laterally compressed into a paddle – nostrils are higher on the head • valves in the nostrils prevent water from entering when the snake is submerged – single lung reaches to the tail, and trachea is modified to act as an accessory lung by absorbing oxygen © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Snakes • Adaptations to life in the sea (cont.) – can exchange gases through the skin while under water – can lower metabolic rate to use less O2 • Feeding and nutrition – eat mainly fish and eels, sometimes eggs – most ambush prey and strike with venomous fangs – can swallow prey more than twice their diameter © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Sea Snakes • Reproduction – 3 oviparous species lay eggs on land – others are viviparous, with females retaining the eggs within their bodies until they hatch; young can swim at birth • Sea snakes and humans – sea snake venom is toxic to humans – being timid, sea snakes rarely bite humans; people eat them in Japan © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Seabirds • 250 of 8,500 bird species are adapted to live near or in the sea • Seabirds feed in the sea • Some spend months away from land, but all must return to land to breed • Types of seabirds: – shorebirds – gulls and their relatives – pelicans and their relatives – tubenoses – penguins © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Adaptations for Flight • Homeothermic—maintaining a constant body temperature • Feathers aid in flight and insulate • High rate of metabolism to supply energy for active flight/nervous system • Strong muscles, quick responses, great deal of coordination • Advanced respiratory system with 4chambered heart • Keen senses © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Adapting to Life in the Sea • Large amounts of salt are consumed with food and salt water – salt glands above the eyes produce tears to remove excess salt – these tears have twice the salt concentration of seawater © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Shorebirds • Waders with long legs and thin, sharp bills used to feed on intertidal organisms • Oystercatchers, curlews & turnstones – oystercatchers use long, blunt, verticallyflattened orange bills to slice through adductor muscles of bivalve molluscs – long-billed curlew uses its bill like a forceps to extract shellfish from burrows © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Shorebirds – heavyset turnstones use slightly upturned bills as crowbars to turn over stones, sticks and beach debris in search of food • Plovers – have short, plump bodies with bills resembling a pigeon’s, and are shorter than other waders – have nests characteristic of waders, built in depressions or hollows on the ground © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Shorebirds • Avocets, stilts, and sandpipers – avocets and stilts have very long legs, elongated necks, and slender bodies – avocets wade through shallow water, moving a partially opened beak from side to side through the water, to feed – stilts probe the mud for small animals (e.g. insects, crustaceans) with their bills – sociable sandpipers feed on small crustaceans and molluscs as the surf retreats © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Shorebirds • Herons (e.g. egrets and bitterns) – most stand still and wait for prey to come in range to feed – some stalk prey or stir up the bottom to frighten prey into motion so it can be caught © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives • Gulls have webbed feet and oil glands to waterproof their feathers • They are not true ocean-going birds, and do not stray far from land • Have enormous appetites • Are not very selective feeders • Relatives of gulls include terns, skuas, jaeger birds, skimmers and alcids © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives • Gulls – herring gulls are the most widespread, and are vocal, gray and white, and travel in large groups – feeding • noisy, aggressive, efficient predators and scavengers • may drop prey with hard shells on rocks or parking lots to break the shell open • highly successful at finding food and surviving © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives • Gulls (continued) – nesting • highly gregarious; gather in large colonies • not picky about nesting sites or materials • both sexes assist in incubating 2-3 eggs • chicks hatch in 3-4 weeks, and remain in the nest until almost fully grown, camouflaged by speckled down • chicks are vulnerable to predation by other animals and by other gulls © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives • Terns – small, graceful birds with brightly-colored and delicately-sculpted bills, forked tails – hunt by plunging into the water for fish and invertebrates; will steal food – usually gregarious nesters • Skuas and jaegers – very aggressive omnivores and predators – “hawks” or “vultures” of the sea – jaegers will pursue other birds to steal their prey © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives • Skimmers (scissorbills) – small birds with pupils that are vertical slits and a flexible lower jaw protruding much farther than the upper bill – fly over water and use the lower bill to create ripples at the water’s surface that attract fish – fish are then collected by flying along the same path over the water a second time © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives • Alcids (e.g. auks, puffins, murres) – look like penguins but are related to gulls • convergent evolution—similar selective pressures brought about similar adaptations in unrelated groups of animals • ecological equivalents—different groups of animal that have evolved independently along the same lines in similar habitats, and therefore display similar adaptations – major difference is that alcids can fly © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Gulls and their Relatives – nesting and reproduction • alcids gather in dense, noisy colonies in the cliffs along the northern Atlantic and Pacific oceans in early spring • both parents care for 1 pear-shaped egg – parental care of the young • young murres plunge into the water to be joined by the parents, and swim out to sea • alcid parents spend most of their time gathering food for hungry chicks • adult puffins abruptly leave chicks to learn to swim and survive by themselves after 6 weeks of constant care © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Pelicans and their Relatives • E.g., gannets, boobies, cormorants, darters, frigatebirds, tropicbirds • Have webs between all 4 toes • Upper mandible is hooked in pelicans, cormorants and frigatebirds • Many are brightly colored, or have head adornments © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Pelicans and their Relatives • Pelicans – large birds preferring warm latitudes and estuary, coastal and inland waters – require a large fish population to support colonies of large birds – feed just under the water’s surface using gular pouches as nets • gular pouch—a sac of skin that hangs between the flexible bones of the bird’s lower mandible © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Pelicans and their Relatives • Boobies – dive into the sea from 18-30 m up to fish – species lay differing numbers of eggs; this is thought to reflect the reliability of the food supply around where they nest • Cormorants – swim along the surface scanning for fish, then plunge deep to pursue them – lacking oil glands, they must periodically dry their wings in order to fly © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Pelicans and their Relatives • Cormorants (continued) – most are strong fliers, but the Galápagos Island species is flightless – guano cormorant of the coast of Peru valued for its guano (bird manure) • Frigatebirds – lightweight body and near 2 m wingspan – lacking oil glands, they feed by skimming with their bills – pursue/attack©other birds to steal prey 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Tubenoses • E.g. petrels, albatrosses, shearwaters • Have obvious tubular nostrils on their beaks which join with large nasal cavities within the head • Nasal glands secrete concentrated salt solution • Stomachs contain a large gland that produces a yellow oil composed of liquefied fat and vitamin A, used for feeding hatchlings and defense © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Tubenoses • Albatrosses – gliders with wings nearly 3.5 m long – most live in the Southern Hemisphere where winds circle the earth without encountering land – usually come to land only to breed – courtship displays precede mating – 1 egg is incubated by both parents on a volcano-shaped nest, and the young are fed on stomach oil, then regurgitated fish © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Tubenoses • Petrels – storm petrels are small birds with long legs with a characteristic, fluttering flight • feed with legs extended and feet paddling rapidly just below the surface • form long-term pair bonds for breeding – diving petrels resemble auks • live only in the Southern Hemisphere in yearround cold water • spot prey from the air, perform a headlong dive, and pursue prey by “flying” underwater © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Penguins • Bird most adapted to marine lifestyle • Awkward on land, but swift swimmers – flap their wings to swim – torpedo-shaped bodies are streamlined – flat, webbed feet are used for steering – leap from the water to breathe • Eat fishes, squid and krill • Eaten by leopard seals and killer whales © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Penguins • Reproduction in Antarctic species – adelie penguins lay eggs in summer; emperor penguins in mid-winter – female emperor penguin lays 1 egg, which the male incubates for 2 months while she visits her feeding grounds • egg sits on his feet, covered by a fold of skin • male can feed the chick a secretion from his crop if it hatches before female’s return • crop—a digestive organ that stores food before it is processed © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole Penguins – female returns with food in her crop for the chick, and male can feed – both parents help to feed the chick once it reaches 6 weeks – by summer, the chick can feed itself, and is ready to enter the sea © 2006 Thomson-Brooks Cole