Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

How did early tetrapods tend to be?

A

. Scales (like their Sarcopterygian fish ancestors)
. Superficially crocodile-like
. Non-amniotes tetrapods

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2
Q

What are temnospondyls?

A

Sister group to modern amphibia (number of digits reduced to 5)

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3
Q

When were most non-amniote tetrapods wiped out? But when did some survive until? When did the Lissamphibia (modern day amphibia (Lisa=smooth) diverge?

A

In Permian/ Triassic mass extinction (250mya) but some Temnospondyls survived until the early Cretaceous (130mya)
Lissamphibia (modern day amphibia) diverged from them in early Triassic

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4
Q

What is cutaneous respiration?

A

Means they can take up oxygen across the skin, so not just reliant on lungs

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5
Q

What is the only modern day amphibian that is associated with the marine environment?

A

The crab-eating frog (however it can only survive short periods in the marine environment, cannot live there)

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6
Q

Why can’t modern day amphibians eat and breath at the same time?

A

Their lungs employ force pumps- they have no diaphragm and so to fill the lungs they have to force air in (like in the lung fish), this means that these animals cannot breath and eat at the same time

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7
Q

What amphibians have gills?

A

Aquatic larvae and neotenic forms (some retain gills even in the adult form)

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8
Q

Describe Urodela (salamanders and newts) (body shape, how many species, courtship)

A

. Unspecialised body form (probably most like the ancient amphibians)
. Undulate swimming (so have an undulate motion when on land walking)
. They have retained the tail
. Paedomorphosis common
. 400 species
. Troglodyty common (means many species live in caves)
. Precise courtship ritual for spermatophore transfer. Specialised reproduction e.g. could mean going back into the aquatic environment and broadcasting
. Example is a salamander or newt- has a very undifferentiated vertebral, has transverse processes but no ribs

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9
Q

What does Troglodyty common mean?

A

Means many species live in caves

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10
Q

What does an= and what does Uro= mean?

A
An= without 
Uro = tail
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11
Q

Describe Anura (simply means without tail): frogs and toads (how many species, body shape/ features, skeleton)

A

. 3750 species
. Enlarged hind legs
. Urostyle (fused posterior vertebrae). Reduced vertebral column- few vertebrae
. Fast, powerful, hindlimb muscles
. Has an adapted skeleton to deal with the powerful muscles

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12
Q

What does short, squat bones tend to suggest?

A

The attachment of large muscles

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13
Q

Describe gymnophiona: caecilians (a rarer group of amphibians) (body form, where they live, reproduction)

A

. Legless and either burrowing in soil or aquatic
. Trophical Southern Hemisphere distribution
. Dermal scales (tend to have scales)
. Internal fertilisation
. Nests or viviparity (produce live young, get around having to use the aquatic environment or reproduce)
. Lost all external limbs

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14
Q

Describe what the teeth of Lissamphibia (urodela, Anura, gymnophiona)/ modern day amphibia are like

A

. Pedicellate teeth- crown and vase dentine with uncalcified area in between
. The tooth has a crown and a pedicel. As the crown wears (but pedicel stays in the same place), it breaks off and is replaced by a new one

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15
Q

Describe the amphibian skin/ the skim of modern day amphibia (Lissamphibia)

A

Moist (mucus) permeable skin, poison glands

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16
Q

What are the two types of skin glands in the skin of modern day amphibians? Example why they are good/ explain the answer- give an example

A

. Mucous glands maintain moist skin for respiration
. Granular glands produce toxic secretions- making them distasteful and absolutely toxic to predators (protection for the animal against predation). Can be found all across or just in particular glands such as the paranoid gland in frogs and toads

17
Q

What is the type of skin gland that is only found in some species of amphibians? What is it for/ found in?

A

Hedonic gland produce pheromones used during courtship (only in males)

18
Q

The epidermis/ skin of amphibians is very thin/ minimal. Why is this? What is an issue with this?

A

This is linked to its role as a respiratory organ (for oxygen to diffuse across the skin you need as thin a layer as possible
The problem is that it is in danger as it is easily broken