Mammals Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 mammalian groups?

A

Placental, marsupial and monotreme.

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2
Q

What is a monotreme?

A

A mammal that lays eggs.

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3
Q

What is a marsupial?

A

A mammal that has a pouch in which to carry their young which are born earlier than in placental mammals.

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4
Q

What is a placental?

A

A mammal that is nourished in the mother’s uterus and born developed.

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5
Q

What are some unique mammalian traits?

A
3 ear ossicles + a cochlea.
True heterodonty.
Hair.
Mammary glands/tissues in females.
Well-developed facial musculature.
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6
Q

From what anatomical structure are mammalian inner-ear bones derived?

A

Ancestral reptile-like jawbones.

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7
Q

How has the mandible of modern mammals become simplified from pre-mammalian cynodonts?

A

Cynodonts possessed a lower jaw made up of 7 bones. In contrast, modern mammals have a lower jaw made up of 1 bone.

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8
Q

What is the group synapsida?

A

Not reptiles but a phylogenetic group that includes mammals and early mammal-like lineages.

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9
Q

What drove the evolution of the mammalian ear?

A

Feeding pattern changes caused changes in the jaw structure leading to improved high frequency hearing.

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10
Q

Describe the features of Cetacea.

A
Mostly marine, some freshwater.
Highly intelligent + social.
Vertical tail propulsion.
Vestigial pelvis.
1 or 2 blowholes.
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11
Q

Describe Pakicetus, the earliest cetacean.

A

Wolf-sized, terrestrial/semi-aquatic mammal.
Whale-like premolars.
Molars resemble terrestrial vertebrates.
Found around streams/rivers 48-52 mya.

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12
Q

What are artiodactyls?

A

The even-toed ungulates. They bear weight on an even number of toes. Includes pigs, hippos, deer, sheep, cattle and cetaceans.

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13
Q

Describe Ambulocetus natans.

A

Sea lion sized.
Inefficient walker but strong swimmer.
Spine undulation + hind feet propulsion.
Found coastally around 49 mya.

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14
Q

Describe Rodhocetus kastani.

A

Reduced hind limbs.
Limb/Trunk swimmer with a longer, flexible vertebral column.
Found in shallow offshore habitat 46-47 mya.
Higher, farther back nostrils.

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15
Q

Describe Doradon.

A
Greatly reduced hind limbs.
Hands used as flippers.
Whale-like teeth.
Flattened caudal vertebrae.
Found in marine environments around 37 mya.
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16
Q

Describe the group Rodentia.

A

Make up 50% of mammals.
Lack canines but have 2 very large incisors.
Nearly exclusively herbivorous.

17
Q

Describe the group Carnivora.

A

Highly diverse.
Meat eaters.
Highly developed canine teeth.

18
Q

Describe the group Cetartiodactyla.

A

Includes Artiodactyla + Cetacea.
Hooves with even-numbered toes.
Mostly ruminants with 4 chambered stomachs.

19
Q

Describe the group Perissodactyla.

A

Odd-numbered toes.
Cellulose digestion occurs in the intestines.
Only includes horses, asses, zebras, rhinos and tapirs.

20
Q

Describe the group Primates.

A

Highly developed brains.
Often bipedal.
Shoulder gurdle.
High visual acuity, reduced sense of smell.

21
Q

What is the common term for the group Hominidae?

A

The great apes.

22
Q

Which came first, upright posture or larger brains?

A

Upright posture.

23
Q

What is the foramen magnum and what is it’s evolutionary significance?

A

It is an opening in the skull where the spinal cord exits the cranial cavity. It has been found that the foramen magnum appeared on the underside of the skull before brain enlargement.

24
Q

How do humans compare in terms of intraspecific sequence divergence to other apes? What does this show?

A

Humans show very little sequence divergence compared to other apes suggesting we have gone through an evolutionary bottleneck.

25
Q

What are the 2 theories of human expansion?

A

The Out-of-Africa Theory and the Multiregional Theory.

26
Q

What were the 2 Out-of-Africa events?

A

Homo erectus around 1.8 million years ago and Homo sapiens around 50,000 years ago.

27
Q

What is the Multiregional Model?

A

The theory that archaic Homo in different places around the world independently developed into Homo sapiens.

28
Q

Which theory of human expansion is favoured? What evidence supports this?

A

The Out-of-Africa Theory. The 3 earliest branches of Homo sapien exclusively lead to sub-Saharan lineages; only the 4th branch contains African and non-African lineages. Human Y chromosome phylogeny shows African is the oldest lineage.

29
Q

When was the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and Homo sapiens?

A

Around 500,000 years.

30
Q

Why do long shared haplotypes tend to be recent but short shared haplotypes tend to be older?

A

Haplotypes are broken down over time via recombination.