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Deutrostomia Available at http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/Eco_people/Presentations/ PHYLUM: CHORDATA   CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII (LOBE FINNED FISH AND TERESTRIAL VERTEBRATES) This class of fish are not well resolved and more information is needed. At the moment there are seven clades  Onychodontiformest X  Coelacanthimorpha  Porolepimorpha X  Dipnoi  Rhizodontimorpha X  Osteolepimorpha X  Terrestrial vertebrates X = extinct PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII SUBCLASS: COELACANTHIMORPHA  Coelacanth characteristics  Stub-nosed  Small jawed  Highly specialized deep sea fish  Lack internal nostrils  Heavy cosmoid scales  Fleshy fins  Lungs are large sac-like and filled with fat and connective tissue  Bone has been reduced and replaced with cartilage  Heart is a simple series of linear chambers  Brain case is large, but the brain within is very small  No pineal foramen PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII SUBCLASS: COELACANTHIMORPHA  Coelacanth characteristics  Loss of salts is prevented by maintaining a high osmotic concentration achieved through retention of urea in the blood  Eggs are large (100 mm) and develop within the maternal oviduct (ovoviviparous) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII SUBCLASS: DIPNOI (Lungfish)  Three living genera.  One in South-America South Africa Australia  Dipnoi Characteristics  Cosmoid scales  Fleshy fins  Reduction in ossification of bone  Functional lungs  Australian forms can survive in stagnant water by air-breathing. The other genera can survive complete drying up of the water by burrowing and aestivating (dormancy phase). The African Lungfish are so dependent on air that if kept underwater they will drown PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES  21,100 extant species  Distributed worldwide  Tetrapoda is now a crown group including the last common ancestor of the lissamphibia and amniotes PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES  LISSAMPHIBIA  Early amphibians- subclass Lepospondyli   Small and similar to modern salamanders Labyrinthodonts  Large  Probably ancestral to the amphibians of today. These animals possessed a long fish-like tail and were very similar to the Crossopterygian fish, except they were the first amphibian to walk on land PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA   Adaptations to terrestrial life  Legs  Lungs  Nostrils connecting to the mouth cavity  Sense organs that function in water and air The transition from water to land involves the following: Change in skin to facilitate respiration  Replace gills with lungs  Changes in the circulation  Sense organs that are land/water compatible PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  Respiration  Most number of techniques for respiration of all vertebrates  Used for respiration:  Gills  Skin  Lungs  Buccopharynx PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  The heart in frog larvae is fish like with one atrium and a ventricle: it receives only unoxygenated blood which is pumped directly to the gills  Adults have two atria and one ventricle. The left atrium receives oxygenated blood from the skin and lungs, the right, unoxygenated blood from the general circulation  Three pairs of external gills occur in most embryos and larvae but persist only in those adult forms that are strictly aquatic (e.g. Salamanders) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  In tadpoles water is drawn in through the mouth and nostrils and is then forced over the gills and out through the spiracles  Salamanders aid respiration by moving their gills  Lungs have few internal partitions that are vascularised- lungs are not very efficient  In aquatic species lungs serve as hydrostatic organs  Skin of all amphibians is highly vascularised  Many species have buccopharyngeal respiration PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  Reproduction  Mating usually occurs in the water  Frogs -external fertilization  The eggs are deposited and grow until they metamorphose into the adult stages  The male enters the water, clasps the female, and as the female extrudes her eggs the male discharges sperm over them  The amphibian eggs are covered in a gelatinous coating PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  Reproduction  Salamanders have elaborate courtship where the male deposits a gelatinous spermatophore on the bottom of the stream. The spermatophore is taken into the female cloaca where the spermatozoa are stored in the seminal receptacle and are fertilized (internally) at a later stage PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  Larvae  Salamanders resemble their parents in general form.  Larvae of frogs initially has external gills, replaced by internal gills. Limbs develop at a later stage. The mouth is horny with labial teeth and is used to scrape food material. The intestine is long and slender  Metamorphosis involves  Growth of a wide mouth, loss of horny jaws and the development of conical teeth  Loss of gills, closure of gill slits and development of lungs.  Development of the protrusible tongue  Emergence of the four limbs (paired appendages)  Reduction in length of the intestine from long herbivore type to short carnivore type  Re-absorption of tail and median fins  Biochemical changes include a change in the excretory products from toxic ammonia to less toxic urea.  A change in the capacity of the blood to release oxygen to the tissues, an adaptation reflecting a more active life style PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES LISSAMPHIBIA  SALENTIA (Frogs)  Highly vascularised skin with many mucous glands  Skeleton/ muscles Vertebra: Up to 100 in the anurans Pelvic girdle: Well developed in the anurans  Most amphibians have fine teeth (upper jaw and roof of mouth) and a long prehensile tongue which is situated as far forward as possible  CAUDATA (Salamander and Newts)  Head and neck region distinct  trunk Long and either cylindrical or depressed dorsoventrally and possess a long tail  GYMNOPHONA (Caecilians)  Limbless and worm like, with a skin containing many small internal scales   PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA  There are three extant clades  Synapsida (mammals)  Testudines (turtles etc.)  Diapsida (lizards and birds etc.)  Along with ten extinct taxa  Includes most of the land dwelling vertebrates alive at present  There are over 20,000 species  They are distributed across the globe PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  This group has two extant clades  Testudines- turtles and tortoises  Diapsida- lizards, crocodiles, birds and Sphenodon  There are ten orders of reptiles that are extinct including the dinosaurs and the pterosaurs (the flying forms)  First group of vertebrates adapted for life in dry places  Their dry horny skin and scales resist loss of moisture PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS  Body is covered with dry cornified skin with scales or scutes  Few surface glands  Two pairs of limbs each typically with five toes ending in horny claws  Suited for running, crawling or climbing  Limbs may be paddle-shaped as in marine turtles and are reduced in some lizards, and are absent in the snakes  The skeleton is completely ossified  The heart is imperfectly four chambered, there are two atria and a partly divided ventricle  Respiration is via lungs; pharyngeal and cloacal respiration occurs in some aquatic turtles PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS  Twelve pairs of cranial nerves  The body temperature in living forms is variable (poikilothermic)  Fertilization is internal via copulatory organs  The eggs are large with much yolk and have either a leathery or limy shell  Segmentation is meroblastic  Eggs have an amnion, chorion, yolk sac and allantois  The young when they hatch, resemble the adults with no metamorphosis PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  ADVANCES OVER AMPHIBIANS  Dry skin  Limbs which permit rapid running locomotion  Greater separation of oxygenated and unoxygenated blood  Complete ossification of the skeleton  Eggs suited to development on land with membrane and shells to protect the embryo PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  REPTILES ARE NOT AS ADVANCED AS MAMMALS  Lack insulated body coverings  No internal regulation of body temperature  True internal development of embryo does not occur (eggs are simply retained in the oviduct) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  TESTUDINES (TURTLES AND TORTOISES)  These are not resolved in the Amniota group but are split into two extant groups  Pleurodira (side neck turtles)  Polycryptodira (most living turtles)  With six extinct clades  They have an oval shell composed of plate-like bones  Dorsal surface - carapace  Ventral surface –plastron  Soft-shelled turtles have a leathery carapace  The jaws lack teeth and bear cornified beak-like structures to cut/tear/crush vegetation PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  DIAPSIDA  This is split into two extant groups  Archosauromorpha (crocs and birds)  Lepidosauromorpha (lizards and sphenodon etc) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  DIAPSIDA  LEPIDOSAUROMORPHA  This is the group that contains the lizards, snakes, Sphenodon and their extinct relatives  ORDER SQUAMATA Lizards & snakes  These are scaled reptiles. The phylogeny is not resolved but there are ten clades PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  DIAPSIDA  LEPIDOSAUROMORPHA  ORDER SQUAMATA Lizards & snakes  LIZARDS  Varied body shapes  Limbs can be long, short, vestigial (reduced) or absent PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA  DIAPSIDA  LEPIDOSAUROMORPHA  ORDER SQUAMATA Lizards & snakes  SNAKES  Characterized by a loss of appendages and extreme elongation  Most snakes lack limb girdles, sternum, eyelids, external ear openings and a bladder  Snakes have numerous vertebrae (200 to 400)  Locomotion without limbs is achieved by backward pressure of the lateral loops of the body against surface irregularities  Snakes can travel in straight lines by hitching scales against the ground surface PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA LEPIDOSAUROMORPHA ORDER SQUAMATA Lizards & snakes  SNAKES  Can ingest whole, large-sized prey items due to modifications to the jaw Two mandibles connected with flexible connective tissue Loose attachment of other jaw bones Movement of the bones of the palate and slender backward pointing teeth    PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA LEPIDOSAUROMORPHA  ORDER SPHENODONTIDA Tuatara (Sphenodon)  Lizard-like animal but very much more primitive  Found only in New Zealand  Have a median pineal eye  No copulatory organs PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  Two extant clades Dinosaura (dinosaurs and birds) Crocodylomorpha (crocodiles and extinct relatives)   PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  External Features of the Crocodiles Head, neck, trunk and tail are clearly discernable Long mouth and conical teeth set in sockets Tip of the snout has two small valvular nostrils Eyes are large with a nictitating membrane Opening to the ears behind the eye, under a moveable flap The vent is a longitudinal slit behind the base of the hind limbs       PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators) External Features of the CrocodilesBody Covering Horny scales arranged in transverse and lengthwise rows. Adult crocodiles have an almost “exoskeleton” of separate bony dermal plates There are two pairs of epidermal musk glands     PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Skeleton  Massive skull  The long lower jaw articulates at each side of the posterior margin of the skull on the quadrat bone  The ventral surface of the cranium is the long hard palate above which are the respiratory passages  The vertebral column consists of      9 Cervical vertebrae (short and free ribs) 10 Thoracic vertebrae (connected to sternum) 5 Lumbar vertebrae 2 Sacral vertebrae +39 Caudal vertebrae PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Skeleton Between the sternum and the pubic bones there are seven pairs of V shaped abdominal ribs  Features of the Crocodiles- Muscular System Muscles of the head, neck and limbs are well differentiated   PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Digestive System  Buccal cavity, large mouth,unspecialized teeth  Flat tongue  Oesophagus: slender tube  Stomach: large spherical divided into fundus and pyloric portions  Coiled small intestine  Larger rectum  Cloaca and vent  Accessory organs to the stomach are the liver and a pancreas PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles and alligators)  Features of the CrocodilesCirculatory System  Heart comprises a small sinus venosus, two atria and two ventricles  From blood travelling in the veins it enters the sinus venosus  right ventricle  pulmonary artery  lungs  pulmonary veins  left atrium  Left ventricle  emerges as a pair of aortic arches.  Arterial System  Carotid arteries  neck & head  Subclavian  forelimbs  Aortic arch 8 dorsal aorta  body cavity PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Circulatory System  Venous System  Anterior vena cava  Collects from neck, head and forelimbs  Single mid dorsal posterior vena cava  reproductive organs and kidney  Hepatic portal  digestive tract PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Respiratory System  Paired nostrils  Internal nares  Palatine valve, prevents water entering  Glottis  Larynx (cartilaginous with paired vocal cords)  Tubular trachea reinforced with cartilage  Divides into two short bronchi  Lungs spongy with greater partitioning PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Excretory System  Two flat lobular kidneys  ureter  cloaca  Features of the Crocodiles- Nervous System/ Sense Organs  Two olfactory Lobes connected to the large cerebral hemisphere  Two oval optic Lobes  Median pear-shaped cerebellum  Medulla oblongata spread laterally  Narrows into a spinal cord  optic tracts/optic nerves, infundibulum and hypophysis, twelve pairs of cranial nerves and paired spinal nerves PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Senses Include  Taste buds on the tongue  Olfactory cells in nose  Eyes (colour vision) with Lachrymal glands  Ears short external auditory canal, tympanic membrane, middle ear houses one ear bone (stapes) and the inner ear consists of three semicircular canals PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA REPTILIA DIAPSIDA  ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)  CROCODYLOMORPHA (Crocodiles & alligators)  Features of the Crocodiles- Reproductive system  Paired gonads  Mature male has two round testes, a ductus deferens and a single median penis  Mature female has two ovaries, an open funnel of the oviduct running to the cloaca PHYLUM: CHORDATA   CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII  TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES  AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)DINOSAURA –THEROPODA AVES (BIRDS)- Characteristics Body covered with feathers Two pairs of limbs Skeleton, thin-walled bones but possessing great structural strength, fully ossified Mouth possessing a projecting beak or bill Teeth are absent Skull with one occipital condyle Neck very flexible Pelvis fused Sternum enlarged and usually possessing a median keel Tail vertebrae fused and compressed posteriorly           PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA – ARCHOSAUROMORPH (Crocodiles and Birds)DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS)- Characteristics  Heart four chambered  Red blood cells are nucleated, oval and biconvex  Respiration is by way of compact lungs attached to ribs and connected to thin-walled air sacs extending between internal organs, voice formed from the syrinx at the base of the trachea  No ordinary bladder, excretion in semi solid form uric acid  Females usually only have the left ovary and oviduct  Twelve pairs of cranial nerves  Body temperature internally regulated (homeothermy)  Fertilization internal, eggs with large yolk, covered with a hard limy shell and deposited externally for incubation  Cell division is meroblastic, embryonic membranes present during development. Young hatchlings are cared for by parents PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) - significant advances  Insulated body coverings  Complete separation of venous and arterial circulation in the heart  Regulated body temperature  High rate of metabolic activity  Ability to fly  Specialized care for young PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) - Birds are different from mammals in  Body covering not of hair  Mode of reproduction very different  Their ability to fly (limited to bats in the case of mammals) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) -External Features  Distinct head, long flexible neck, a stout spindle-shaped body or trunk  The mouth is extended as a pointed bill/beak with a horny covering  On the upper mandible are two slit-like nostrils  The eyes are large and lateral with an upper and lower eyelid  Possess a nictitating membrane  Below and behind each eye is an ear opening, hidden under special feathers  The two forelimbs are modified into wings  The hind limbs are generally adapted to bipedal hopping, running, climbing or swimming  The short tail bears a fan-like group of long tail feathers PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) -Body Covering  The soft flexible skin is loosely attached to the muscles beneath  One oil gland above the base of the tail  The feathers grow from follicles in the skin  Feathers- Distinctive epidermal structures Lightweight Flexible but resilient body coverings Create air pockets which insulate the body covering, protect the skin Create wings and tail for support in flight     PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) -The Growth of a Feather  Begins like the scale of a reptile  The base of this feather bud sinks into a circular depression: the future follicle PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) -The Growth of a Feather  The outermost epidermal cells on the bud become a smooth cornified sheath (periderm): other epidermal cells become arranged in parallel ribs, a large median one forming the future shaft, the others producing barbs  The central soft, dermal pulp (original dermal papilla) contains the blood vessels and is wholly nutritive, drying on completion of growth, so that the feather is purely an epidermal structure. The pigments for coloration are deposited in cells when the growth is completed, the sheath breaks and crumbles away or is removed by preening PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) -Contour Feathers  The external covering and includes the enlarged flight feathers of the wings and tail  Consists of a vane, central shaft, a hollow quill attaching to the follicle. Each half of the vane is composed of many narrow parallel and closely spaced barbs joining the sides of the shaft  On the proximal and distal side of each barb are numerous smaller, parallel barbules, these are provided with minute barbicels or hooklets, serving to hold opposing rows of barbules loosely together PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) -Down Feathers  Young chicks and other hatchlings are covered with soft downy plumage - providing excellent insulation  Down feathers have short quills, reduced shafts and a long flexible barb with short barbules  Down is also present beneath the contour feathers on ducks and other water birds  Filoplumes  Minute, hairline feathers, sparsely distributed over the body.  Grow in clusters near the follicles of some contour feathers  Each has a long threadlike shaft with a few week barbs and barbules at the tip PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Bristles  Hair-like growths that are modified feathers  Short quill and a slender shaft  Few vestigial barbs at the base  Seen about the mouths      Feather Colouration/Patterning/ Moult Feather's colour due to pigment deposition during growth Iridescence is due to microscopic, thin plates on the surface structure of feathers Feathers only grow in defined areas called feather tracts Feather replacement is called moult, and is usually an orderly gradual process PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA – ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds - DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Skeleton  Delicate compared to that of mammals  Many of the bones possess cavities  Skeleton is modified for flight, for bipedal locomotion, and the laying of relatively large eggs with hard shells  Bones of the cranium are separate in young, but are fused in adults  The braincase is rounded, large orbits occur for the eye  Lower jaws hinge on the moveable quadrate connecting to the squamosal bone  The skull articulates on a single occipital condyle with the first neck vertebrae PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Skeleton  16 cervical vertebrae are saddle shaped and permit free movement of the neck for feeding and preening  The trunk vertebrae are closely fitting, they have rib articulations that are lateral in the thorax region, but are otherwise fused into a solid synsarcun to which the pelvis is attached  No lumbar region is evident  Four free caudal vertebrae  Compressed terminal pygostyle (fused) permits movement of the tail  A large thoracic cavity formed from ribs which protects the internal organs and provides a rigid support for flight and permits a slight expansion/contraction for respiration PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Skeleton  The ribs are lateral and the sternum is ventral with a large median keel below which the pectoral muscles attach  Each thoracic rib has a distinct vertebral and sternal part, the two joining nearly at a right angle. The first four or five thoracic ribs has a posterior flat process overlapping the ribs behind to strengthen the thorax  The pectoral girdle consists of a sword-like scapula lying parallel to the vertebrae and over the ribs. The coracoid bone occurs between the scapula and the sternum  Clavicle hanging ventrally from the scapula: the two clavicles are fused at their ventral ends to form the “V” shaped furcula wishbone) attaching to the sternum PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Skeleton  The scapula, coracoid and clavicle meet dorsally to form a circular canal as a pulley for the tendon  Each forelimb is attached high on the dorsal surface: the humerus pivoting in the glenoid fossa on the coracoid  The fore-arm contains the radius and the ulna, other wing bones are modified to promote a stable support for the flight feathers  There are two carpels and three digits  Other carpels are fused to the metacarpals to form the carpometacarpus  The second digit bears the alula  The third digit is the longest (composed of two segments)  The fourth digit is the innermost (composed of a single segments) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA – ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Skeleton  The principal flight feathers (primaries) are supported on digits three and four and on the carpometacarpus  The secondary flight feathers are supported on the ulna  The tertiary flight feathers are supported on the humerus  The pelvic girdle is broad: united with a synsacrum that is widely opened ventrally, permitting the passage of large eggs  The pelvic girdle consists of an anterior ileum, a posterior ischiun, a slender ventral pubis where these three bones meet, and a socket where the acetabulun receives the head of the femur  The Leg consists of a -Femur Tibiotarsus Slender/incomplete Fibula Fused tarsometatarsus Patella Four toes: three in front and one behind PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) – Muscular System  Birds have a greater proportion of nonsegmented muscles  The contraction of the pectoral muscle moves the wing downwards and lifts the bird’s body in flight  Forlimb is raised using a ventral muscle called the supracoracoideus  The muscles of the femur and the tibiotarsus are used for running and perching  The shank and feet contain little muscle: an adaptation to reduce heat loss  Toes are moved by tendons that are connected to muscles in the upper segments of the legs. Tendons move through spaces lubricated by fluid PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA – ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Digestive System  Tongue, small and pointed with horny covering  Mouth cavity: roofed with long palatal folds  Short pharynx  Tubular/muscular oesophagus  Stomach: soft anterior proventriculus  Disk shaped ventriculus or gizzard and walls of thick, dense musculature - Lined internally by epithelial secretion -, food ground up by action of muscular wall and with gravel/stones etc which function as teeth  Intestine is slender and consists of several coils of the large rectum at the junction of the two caeca or blind pouches  Cloaca: dorsally bears an outgrowth: the Bursa of Fabricus  Large red liver is bi-lobed with a gall bladder and two bile ducts  Pancreas: three ducts discharge into the anterior loop of the intestine PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Circulation  Heart Four chambered, two thin-walled atria and two thick walled ventricles Completely separate venous/arterial bloodstreams Sinus venosus is incorporated in the right atrium Blood from two precaval and one post caval enters the right atriumright ventricle pulmonary artery capillaries of the Lung  “oxygenated” returns via pulmonary veins to left atrium left ventricle single right aortic arch which gives off two innominate arteries each with three large branches: the carotid to the head/neck, the branchial to the wing and the pectoral to the breast. The arch continues as the dorsal aorta supplying the rest of the body A hepatic-portal system exists A renal portal system is reduced       PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Respiratory System  Nostrils: connected to internal nares and a slit - like glottis  Trachea: reinforced with hoop-like cartilage that is partly calcified  Syrinx: possess vocal muscles  Bronchus: 4 lungs which are small interconnecting chambers that open into larger chambers,Parabronchi, which communicate with the bronchi and air sacs which extend between organs in the body cavity and space around the neck vertebrae and into the larger bones  Air is brought in by movement of muscles between the ribs bowing laterally and by abdominal muscle  Contraction of the thorax reverse the flow PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA – ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Excretory System  Paired kidneys: three-lobed and attached dorsally under the pelvis  From each is a slender ureter which extends posteriorly to the dorsal wall of the cloaca  No bladder  Semi-solid nitrogenous waste (uric acid) passes down the greeters and out of the cloaca via the vent PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) – Nervous System and Sense Organs  Proportionately larger than reptiles  Olfactory lobes are small (poor sense of smell)  Cerebral hemispheres are large and smooth  Optic lobes on the midbrain are well developed  Cerebellum has an increased surface with many superficial folds  Nerve cord and paired spinal nerves similar to other vertebrates  The thoracic or branchial plexus serves the large pectoral muscles for flight  The eyes are proportionately very large  Hearing is not as acute as for mammals  Chemoreception (smell and taste) is unlikely to be well developed except in a few cases PHYLUM: CHORDATA  CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII  TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES  AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Endocrine Gland  Pituitary: below the base of the brain  Thyroid: two lateral lobes beneath the jugular and at the origin where the subclavian and carotid meet  Adrenals: ventral surface of the kidneys  Pancreas: with islets of Langerhans  Endocrine secretions of the gonad regulate secondary sexual characters (e.g. plumage) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Reproductive System  Male  Two oval, whitish testes arising from a much convoluted ductus deferens which extends posteriorly parallel to the ureter. In many birds it is dilated as seminal vesicles before entering cloacal. Some birds have vestigial penis (nonfunctional)  During breeding testis becomes enlarged, sperm accumulates in the ductus deferens and is transferred to the cloaca of the male during copulation PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Reproductive System  Female  System develops only on the left side, the ovary is near the left kidney: Close by is the open expanded funnel or infundibulun of the oviduct. The duct extends posteriorly to the cloaca  In non-laying birds, the ovary is small containing minute eggs and the duct is small. In the season of egg-laying the ovary enlarges, a mature ovum receives a full quota of yolk before being released. The mature ovum escapes from the ovarian follicle into the abdominal cavity and enters the funnel at the top end of the oviduct (movement is by ciliated epithelium)  Fertilization occurs in the upper oviduct, albumen is added by glands in the middle portion and the shell membranes are secreted by glands in the posterior part PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Reproduction (birds in general)  Eggs are laid with much yolk and a hard limy shell. The shell is incubated during growth of the embryo  The young hatchlings of chickens and ducks are precocial  Chicks of song birds, canaries, pigeons are altricial  Birds generally have different and characteristic seasons for breeding  Breeding commences with a courtship display, defence of territories, followed by construction of nests, laying of eggs, incubation of eggs and the caring of the hatchlings PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Flight  The spindle-shaped stream-lined body results in minimal resistance  The shape of the wings and the manner in which they are moved results in forward propulsion with as little expenditure of energy as possible  The wing is an air foil with a leading edge that is thick and a trailing edge that is thin  The upper surface of the wing is curved convexly, whereas the lower surface is slightly concave  Consequently air passing over the curved upper surface must move faster than the air underneath the wing  This causes a slight negative (low) pressure on the upper surface in relation to the lower surface PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA- REPTILIA- DIAPSIDA - ARCHOSAUROMORPHA (Crocodiles and Birds)- DINOSAURA –THEROPODA  AVES (BIRDS) –Flight  These differences in pressure creates an upward force called lift. Increasing the angle of attack (raising the position of the leading edge in relation to the trailing edge) causes an increased amount of lift until a stall is induced  A stall is where the smooth air flow is disrupted and turbulence is induced, the result is that no lift now occurs and flying is no longer possible  The outer part of the major flight feathers (trailing edge) are semi flexible and can be separated, creating slots which reduce the turbulence and avoid a stall when there is a high angle of attack  The shape of the wing is related to the type of flight PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA  SYNAPSIDA (mammals and their extinct relatives)  These are the dominant large terrestrial animals and are also found in the sea in the form in Whales and in the air in the form of Bats  All synapsids have a hole in the lateral surface of the skull although it is modified in modern day mammals PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA  CLASS MAMMALIA  This refers to animals possessing mammary glands  Possess body hair  Homeothermic  Endothermic  Majority of mammals are viviparous  There are approximately 4000 living species of mammals PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA- Evolution  Evolved from mammal-like reptiles (synapsids)  The synapsid line eventually leads to the therapsids, one line of which was the theriodonts. The theriodonts were half-way between a reptile and a mammal, and were small animals occupying similar life-styles to the modern day shrews  The distinctive mammalian characteristics that evolved with these early mammals included  An endothermic physiology  Insulating hair  Increased circulation efficiency  More effective locomotion  Viviparity  Greater parental investment in their young PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA- Evolution  Extinction of the dinosaurs opened up many "niches" on land, sea and in the air and an explosive species radiation of mammals followed during the Cenozoic period  The mammals are divided into the  Monotremata (egg-laying primitive mammals)  Marsupialia (pouched animals)  Eutheria (placental mammals) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MOMOTREMATA (egg laying mammals)  These are the most primitive, surviving mammals of today  Before hatching the embryo lives on the yolk contained within the pliable egg  After hatching the young are nourished by milk from the mother's mammary glands  There are no teats; the young lap up milk as it oozes from the tubular glands  There are five living species of spiny anteater (Echidna) and one species of duck-billed platypus (Ornithorhynchus) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MOMOTREMATA  They left the main mammalian stock far back in the Mesozoic era.  The skull has many primitive and/or reptilian features  The vertebra are very like that of reptiles, especially the cervical vertebrae which bear separate ribs as occurred in the synapsid reptiles  The differentiation of the atlas, axis and seven cervical vertebrae is the least for any mammalian group  There are 17 and 16 thoracic vertebrae for the platypus and the spiny anteater respectively  Limbs are supported on pectoral and pelvic girdles, and more similar to those of a reptile, and have far less muscle than the average advanced mammal  Both the platypus and spiny anteater are highly specialized animals and have no teeth in their adult phase, therefore we cannot deduce the primitiveness of these PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MOMOTREMATA -reproduction  The pattern of reproduction is unique amongst mammals and involves laying of eggs  They show the beginning of the process of substitution of post-natal nutrition from ovarian nutrition  Eggs are incubated for 10 days. The female platypus makes long burrows where the nest is made. At birth the young monotremes possess an “egg tooth” a unique character for mammals  After incubation and hatching the young enter the pouch and are fed by milk. Postnatal care obviously preceded the egg laying characteristic  Both the echidna and the platypus produce milk from about 120 large specialized sweat glands on the ventral abdomen. There are no ducts uniting this secretion. ALL other mammals have nipples which do unite such secretions PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MOMOTREMATA  Have hair suggesting that Mesozoic mammals and even synapsid mammals had made progress with temperature regulation  Able to regulate their body temperatures at around 32 °C in an ambient temperature range of 5 to 30 °C  A curious feature found in monotremes is a grooved erectile poison spine on the tarsus of the male  The circulation system is relatively advanced  In conclusion the monotremes are mammals with respect to their brain, hair (insulation), warm-bloodedness, heart, larynx and diaphragm. However, they have obvious reptilian affinities with respect to their ovoviviparous reproduction and their skeleton PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MARSUPIALIA (Kangaroos, Wombats, Metatheria etc)  These are the pouched animals  250 living species  Show a strong anatomical resemblance to placental animals  Marsupials diverged from an early stage in the evolution of the mammals  The marsupials parallel the adaptive radiation accomplished elsewhere by the placental mammals except for forms like bats, whales or seals  Their features are specialized suggesting not a single stage on the way to the placental evolution, but a specialized side branch  There are 172 marsupial species in Australia  There are successful representatives in North and South America e.g. opossums which have survived in competition with the placentals PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MARSUPIALIA  Temperature control less well developed than in the placental animals  Learning skills, visual discrimination and problem solving is equal to that of similar placental mammals  The skull is similar to that of the primitive placentals such as the insectivores, with a rather small cranium  The teeth are not easy to interpret the primitiveness of the group. The incisor teeth are more numerous than in placental mammals There are three and four premolar and molar teeth respectively in each side of the upper or lower jaw whereas in placental there are four and three premolars and molars   PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MARSUPIALIA  The skeleton is generally similar to that of the placentals and has greatly changed from the monotremes and the reptiles  The thoracic region consists of 13 pairs of rib-bearing vertebrae as in placentals and there are usually 7 lumbar vertebrae  The pectoral girdle is similar to that of the placentals  The pelvic girdle differs with the presence of the epipubic bones and is similar to that of the monotremes  The hands usually carry five digits and armed with claws, but the number of toes is often reduced and may bear hoof-like structures PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MARSUPIALIA- Marsupial Reproduction  The pattern is very different to that of placentals.  Pregnancy is very short  Hormones normally associated with development during pregnancy of placentals can be removed in marsupial animals without terminating the pregnancy  There is no special immune suppressant system protecting the foetus from the mother’s antibodies as has to occur in placental mammals  The life of the mother is not interrupted by any dramatic birth  The marsupial mother risks less and retains more freedom  After birth the young have long protection in the pouch  These young can be easily abandoned if the mother is stressed PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MARSUPIALIA- Marsupial Reproduction  The marsupial egg has a very unequal cleavage, there is virtually no placental development and instead uterine milk may be taken up by the yolk sac  The embryo may be born as young as 8 days from conception (e.g. the opossums)  At birth the young embryo will leave the vaginal opening and crawl to the pouch and become attached to the teat  The embryo has well-developed forelimbs and nervous system. Its mouth and olfactory system are well developed and are highly specialized for suckling  In the pouch the neonate attaches to the teat, and the sides of the lips grow around the teat, making it almost impossible to remove PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  MARSUPIALIA- Marsupial Reproduction  Milk is then injected into the neonate  The length of time in the pouch is variable between marsupial forms. A wallaby may remain some 8 to 9 months in its mother's pouch  Marsupials also have delayed implantation  Copulation can take place within a day of birth, but an 80 cell blastocyte can remain dormant for up to 11 months  Suspension of development is controlled by suckling of the young in the pouch PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA (PLACENTAL MAMMALS) – Origins  Earliest forms found in the cretaceous period and were all small insect-eating forms  During the Palaeocene both carnivore and primates evolved, in the Late Cretaceous/Palaeocene the ungulates had evolved PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA - Characteristics of Placental Mammals  Possess neither marsupial bones nor a pouch  The foetus develops directly and entirely within the body of the female  The embryo is connected indirectly to the mother via a placenta to the wall of a uterus  A placenta permits the embryo (called a foetus) to remain in contact with its mothers uterus for a long time  A placenta is a flat disk that becomes attached to the wall of the uterus and is connected to the foetus by an umbilical cord  The junction of the placenta with the uterine wall is highly convoluted this is where the exchange takes place  Blood does not pass from the mother to its foetus, but oxygen from her lungs and nutrients derived from her food diffuse across the junction to the foetus  The waste products produced by the foetus are absorbed by the mother’s blood and then excreted through her kidneys PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA - Characteristics of Placental Mammals  The placental foetus promotes the secretion of hormones which suppresses the mothers sexual cycle during pregnancy  The foetuses tissues are not the same genetically as the mother's since it contains genetic material from the father. When it becomes connected to the mother's body, it risks immunological rejection  Placental mammals can stay in the uterus until they are fully mobile and care carries on after birth  The placental breeding technique spares the young the hazardous journey outside their mother’s body at a very early age  Placentals are the most widespread and diverse modern mammals PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  INSECTIVORA - small, primitive insect-eating Order insectivora includes are variety of insect-eating forms. The moles which live in underground tunnels, hedgehogs which are spiny and roll into a ball as a defence against predation, the desmans which swim with webbed feet and have a long snout which act as a snorkel and shrews which are small active predators on insects. In Madagascar there is a group called the tenrecs, which are extremely diverse being aquatic and terrestrial and some even resemble hedgehogs PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  DERMOPTERA - flying lemurs Order dermoptera (= skin-winged) evolved from insectivores and are commonly called flying lemurs. These animals do not have true wings, but a furred skin extending from behind the ears outwards to the digits, along the sides of the body to the tail. These flaps of skin only allow them to glide rather than to fly PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  MACROSCELIDA - elephant shrews Order Macroscelidia are also closely allied to the insectivores and are commonly called the elephant shrews which are highly specialized for running with very large hind limbs. Their eyes are better developed than the poorly sighted insectivores PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  SCANDENTIA - tree shrews  Order scandentia include animals called tree shrews (Tupaia)  They are an intermediate group between the insectivores and the primates (apes and monkeys) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  CHIROPTERA – bats Order chiroptera includes the only true flying mammals the bats. Although they have obvious insectivore origins, their entire bone structure is modified for flight. The wings are formed by the elongated finger bones over which is stretched a naked skin membrane. Bats can be divided into small carnivore forms and large fruit eating forms. The small carnivorous bats hunt using echolocation. These bats emit high frequency clicking sounds, which strike objects and the echo is returned to the bats using its large ears to receive them PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  PHOLIDOTA – pangolins Order pholidota are commonly called pangolins or scaly anteaters. They possess large scales which are modified hairs and shield the animal form predators. They also have no teeth, but do have an exceptionally long sticky tongue (anchored to the pelvis) which is used to eat ants and termites PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  TUBULIDENTATA – aardvarks Order tubulidentata are commonly called aardvarks and specializes in eating ants and termites and only occur in southern Africa. Like the pangolins they have long sticky tongues, but they are not toothless and possess five upper and four lower cheek teeth on each side of their jaws (incisor and canines are absent) PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  EDENTATA – ant eaters and sloths Order edentata are a varied group that are confined to the new world (North and South America) and includes anteaters, sloths and armadilos. Anteaters are toothless and have similar adaptations to pangolins and aardvarks for eating ants and termites (convergent evolution). Sloths and armadillos lack incisors and canines, but do have simple cheek teeth that lack enamel and grow continuously from their roots. The armadillo has 100 such teeth. The armadillo has bony plates on its back for protection against predators. Sloths are slow moving furred animals that live up in the trees. The prehistoric ground sloths reach immense sizes up to 5 metres (Megatherim) as did some armadillos (Glyptodon) whose bony plates formed a carapace that was about 1,6 m in length PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  PRIMATES - lemurs, tarsiers, monkeys, apes, humans Order primates includes lemurs, monkeys, apes and man. They are essentially tropical in distribution and evolved from ancient, arboreal insectivores sometime in the late Cretaceous period. Their tree-dwelling existence demanded dextrous limbs, hands and fingers (including an opposable thumb), close set eyes with overlapping fields of vision for depth perception, excellent eye-hand co-ordination and extended parental care for their young. They are characterized by considerable development of the brain, a process that eventually resulted in the evolution of man. The earliest ape-man was Australopithecus Africans, a small-brained formed, followed in sequence by the larger brained Homo hails (who used tools) and Homo erectus (had use of tools and fire) . From this stock two forms of modern man Homo sapiens evolved, one called Neanderthal man survived in cold northern climates during the ice ages, the other form survives today as Homo sapiens sapiens PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  RODENTIA - gnawing animals except rabbits and hyraxes Order rodentia, is the most abundant of placental mammal forms and includes, rats, mice, mole-rats, squirrels (including forms that can glide like the flying lemurs), porcupines, prairie dogs. They are all characterized by a long pair of prominent upper and lower incisors. These teeth are kept sharp through differential wear of their enamel and are very effective for gnawing. Canine teeth are absent PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  LAGOMORPHA – rabbits Order Lagomorpha includes rabbits and hares and all are strictly ground dwelling forms. Despite their similarities to rodents they are not closely related. Like rodents they do have continuously growing incisors with a total of four in the upper jaw (two of which are reduced) as opposed to only two in the rodents PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  CETACEA - whales, dolphins and porpoises Order Cetacea includes the most aquatic forms of mammals; the whales, dolphins and porpoises. The blue-whale is the heaviest animal ever to have lived on the earth. Their modifications for an aquatic existence include loss of the hind-limbs, forelimbs have developed into flippers, the tail is flattened and most have a dorsal fin, the nasal opening (blow hole) is on the top of the head, no external ears, hair is almost absent and insulation is by way of blubber. They can be divided into toothed forms which are active predators, and toothless forms which have long plates of stiff hair - like material that forms a baleen which acts as a sieve to filter plankton. Cetaceans are intelligent , social animals, which can communicate with each other and use echolocation to navigate the waters they swim in. They probably evolved from insectivores in the early Cenozoic PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  CARNIVORA - modern meat-eating Order Carnivora are meat eating placentals that have prominent canine teeth. These are long, curved, pointed, very strong and particularly effective for stabbing. Most carnivores are predominantly meat-eaters and also have short, but sharp incisor teeth for nipping. The fourth upper premolar and first lower molar teeth have become specialized into shearing blades called carnassial teeth (these are absent in aquatic carnivores such as seals). Cats, dogs, lions leopards, cheetahs, hyenas mongooses, bears, pandas (secondarily adapted to an herbivorous diet), seals, walruses, sea lions and elephant seals are all members of Carnivora PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  PROBOSClDEA – elephants Order Proboscidea is represented by two species of elephant. Elephants are characterized by an immense size, and a long trunk that is really a highly modified nose. The tusks are elongated upper incisors. Elephants have no canines or premolars and their molars are used to grind up herbaceous food and are replaced successively from behind as they wear down. They are naked skinned since they live in tropical climates and their large ears act as radiators to dissipate excess heat. Their extinct relatives, the mammoths, had fur and had colonized cold, northern latitudes until they were hunted to extinction by prehistoric man PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  HYRACOlDEA – hyraxes Order Hyracoidea includes the hyrax or dassie, which although superficially resemble rodents and lagomorphs, are actually more closely related to elephants. They are herbivores with continuously growing chisel-shaped incisors. There feet are completely distinctive, there being four toes on the front feet, three on the hind, terminating in small, hoof like nails PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  SIRENlA - seacows, manatees and dugongs Order Sirenia are the aquatic dugongs and manatees (sometimes called sea cows). They are large, hairless herbivores (possessing only functional cheek teeth) that have their forelimbs modified into paddles and no hind limbs. Possibly share a similar ancestry with elephants PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  PERISSODACTYLA odd-toed ungulates Order Perissodactyla are odd-toed, hoofed animals (=ungulates) and include, horses, asses, zebras, tapirs (all having a single digit) and rhinoceroses (having three digits). They are all large herbivorous animals, and many have elongated limbs for faster running speeds (horses and zebras). Their cheek teeth are massive, strong and modified for grinding plant material PHYLUM: CHORDATA CLASS: SARCOPTERYGII TERRESTRIAL VERTEBRATES AMNIOTA SYNAPSIDA CLASS MAMMALIA  EUTHERIA  ARTIODACTYLA - even-toed ungulates Order Artiodactyla are the even-toed hoofed animals and include antelope, deer, hippos, giraffes, camels, llamas, cattle, sheep, pigs and goats. These are generally herbivorous, and with the exceptions of pigs and hippos are ruminant animals (having a large fore-stomach called a rumen in which plant fibres are initially digested). Many are grazing animals and occur in enormous herds and also have elongated legs for faster running and to avoid predation. Their cheek teeth are large, complex and designed for grinding plant material (upper canine and incisors are reduced or absent