Lesson 24: Synapsids and Origin of Birds Flashcards

1
Q

whales

A

use of axial swimming instead of paraswimming
- propelling by flexing axial musculature
- whales do it by using a vertical motion

nasal opening on top of their head
- allow them to be more aquatic

zigapophyses are lost
- torsion and bending

hindlimbs having been lost
- ^^arose out of a terrestrial lifestyle

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2
Q

live, adult bottle nose dolphin with hindlimbs caught by hunters

A
  • over evolutionary history those genes have been turned off
  • there was a mutant and the gene was turned on
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3
Q

sociality

A

-being social is defined as group living
- the bigger the group, the more social
- being social does not mean you’re nice, it just means you are in a group

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4
Q

distribution

A

refers to the area used by species

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5
Q

homerange

A

refers to an individual

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6
Q

territory

A

a subset of the homerange that is successfully defended
- some species are not territorial but they all have a homerange

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7
Q

homerange vs. body mass

A
  • large animals have a large homerange
  • ^^^ the space needed to an individual animal to get the resources they needed
    – size of homerange increases disproprotionately
    —- think about really large animas - you need a larger homerange
  • you start to run into problems like fragmentation of the habitat
    ^^^ex: a pond if you are not aquatic – you have to go around it and you cannot use it
    ^^why it increase at such a rapid rate - resource distribution and needs also accounts for the rate
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8
Q

distribution of resources also affects the homerange size

A
  • this in turn affects sociality
    – if an animal is grazing with another one – animals tend to congregate with another and in turn be more social

if the resources are widely distribute, it does not pay off to share and eat with the friend, thus does not encourage group living/sociality

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9
Q

spotted hyena (40Kg)

A
  • at the individual level it is capable of taking a 30 or 20 kg animal – working on its own, it is not going to be able to catch 200 kg wildebeest
    — but when working in a group it can – highly social environment
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10
Q

vilagence

A

when you live in a group, the group itself can be more vilagent

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11
Q

diluton

A

when you’re in a group and a predator is coming, less likely for you to be singled out and attack

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12
Q

confustion

A
  • large group of fleeeting prey
  • very difficult to single out prey from a group
  • extremely difficult to track the single zebra in a herd of zebra
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13
Q

group defense

A
  • how useful it can be to defend against a predator as a herd
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14
Q

diet and size of african bovidae: small forest dwelling antelopes

A
  • highly selected in the choice of plants that they consume
  • type 1 diet
  • individual living, or sometimes living with mates
  • hide from predators
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15
Q

diet and size of african bovidae: medium sized

A
  • type 2 diet
  • less selective
  • intermediate sociality
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16
Q

diet and size of african bovidae: large

A
  • type 3
  • less selectve
  • often migratory
  • use group defense
17
Q

small animals

A

very asexual

18
Q

larges species stomach

A
  • large species have a large stomach while small animals have a large stomach
  • metabolism of large species does not increase with species size as fast as stomach ratio
  • large animals especially an endotherm is not as expensive per gram to maintain - overall, yes – but per gram, now (much less SA ratio)
19
Q

as an animal gets larger, its stomach gets larger

A
  • easier for stomachs of larger animals to be more efficient on a per gram basis
  • have the ability to be less selective
  • decreased metabolism??
20
Q

type 1 diet

A
  • has to be highly selective
  • if a type 1 animal comes across a plant with leaves and buds and the leaves are less energy filled…
    —- will eat all the buts
    —– changes the distribution of the resource
21
Q

less selective diet

A

does not change the distribution of the diet

22
Q

horns/antlers use

A

social/self defense/communication

23
Q

horns

A

have a bony core and are covered by a keratin sheath

24
Q

antlers

A
  • usually confined to males
  • branched
  • made of only bone
  • covered by highly vascularized skin
25
Q

evolution and sexual dimporhism of animals: antlers/horns

A

in the miocene the eurasian woodlands became more open (form a closed environment)
- there were ruminants living there who experienced this –> they go bigger and became more territorial –> have more polygeny
^^ this fules intense male-male fighting
- sexual selection from evolution of territoriality
- exactly why the ruminants that evolved in north America instead of Eurasia did not evolve horns ( camalids - llamas, alpacas, cammels, horses)

^^^^ in north america during the changing climatem there was not percistent open woodland stage –> transitioned from forests to grasslands
- the OPEN grasslands FULES the intense territorality
– go from dense woodlands to open/sparse woodlands
– don’t get territorality between the extreme