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Reptiles All Materials © Cmassengale |
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Evolution of Reptiles:


Amniote Egg:

Terrestrial Adaptations:
Dry, watertight skin covered by scales made of a protein called keratin to prevent desiccation (water loss)
Toes with claws to dig & climb
Geckos have toes modified into suction cups to aid climbing
Snakes use scales & well developed muscular & skeletal systems to move
Lungs for respiration
Double circulation of blood through heart to increase oxygen to cells
Partial separation in ventricle to separate oxygenated & deoxygenated blood
Ectothermic - body temperature controlled by environment
May bask or lie in sun to raise body temperature or seek shade to lower body temperature; known as thermoregulation
Water conserved as nitrogen wastes excreted in dry, paste like form of uric acid crystals
Modern Reptiles:
Rhyncocephalia:

Tuatara
Spiny crest running down back
Grows up to 60 cm in length
Has 3rd eye on top of head (parietal eye) that acts as a thermostat
Most active when temperatures are low (nocturnal)
Often burrow during the day
Feed on insects, worms, & small animals at night
Chelonia:
Includes turtles and tortoises
Aquatic, but lay eggs on land
Body covered with shell composed of hard plates & tough, leathery skin
Carapace or dorsal surface of shell fused with vertebrae & ribs
Plastron is ventral shell surface
Shape of shell modified for habitat
Dome shaped shell helps to retract head & limbs in tortoises

Water-dwelling turtles have streamline, disk shaped shell to rapidly move in water
Forelimbs of marine turtles modified into flippers

Marine Turtle
River & sea turtles migrate to breeding areas where they hatched to lay their eggs on land
Crocodilia:
Includes crocodiles, alligators, caimans, & gavials
Direct descendants of Archosaurs
Carnivorous (wait for prey to come near & then aggressively attack)
Eyes located on top of head so they can see when submerged
Nostrils on top of snout to breathe in water
Valve in back of mouth prevents water from entering airway when feeding underwater
No parental care of young in most species except Nile crocodile that carry young in their jaws & guards nest
Crocodiles are tropical or subtropical, usually nocturnal, reptiles found in Africa, Asia, South America, & southern Florida

Australian Crocodile
Alligators are found in China & the southern United States

American Alligator
Caimans are native to Central America & resemble alligators

Black Caiman
Gavials, living only in India & Burma, are fish eating reptiles with very slender, long snouts
Gavial
Squamata:
Includes snakes & lizards
Snakes probably evolved from lizards during the Cretaceous period
Snakes have 100-400 vertebrae each with a pair of ribs & attached muscles for movement
Interaction of bone, muscles, & skin of snakes allows them 3 ways to move --- lateral, rectilinear, & side winding
Lateral undulations:
1. Most common
2. Head moves side to side
causing wave of muscular contractions
3. Snake uses sides of its body to
push off of ground
4. Snake moves forward in S-shaped
path
Rectilinear Movements:
1. Muscular
force applied to belly & not
sides of snake
2. Scutes or scales on belly catch
on rough surfaces
3. Body relaxes & then moves
forward slowly
Sidewinding:
1. Used by some desert snakes
2. Sideways movement of body
3. Head vigorously flung from side to side
4. Whiplike motion moves body along
Do not hear or see well but locate prey using forked tongue that gathers chemical scents
Swallow prey whole:
1. Jaws
unhinge for mouth to stretch
2. Small teeth used to hold prey
in mouth
3. Windpipe thrust into throat
while swallowing so snake can swallow & breathe
4. Swallowing may take several
hours
5. Saliva begins digestion
during swallowing
Constrictors wrap body around prey & squeeze them to death (boas, pythons, etc.)
Snakes may inject venom
or poison:
1. Hemotoxin
- poisonous proteins attacking red blood cells (water
moccasin & rattlesnake)
2. Neurotoxin
- poison that works on nervous system affecting heart rate & breathing (copperhead)
Venomous snakes with 3 types of fangs --- rear-fanged, front-fanged, & hinge- fanged snakes
Rear-fanged snakes bite prey & use grooved back teeth to guide venom into puncture (boomslang)
Front-fanged snakes inject poison through 2 small front fangs that act like a hypodermic needle (cobra)

Spitting Cobra
Hinged- fang snakes have hinged fangs in roof of mouth that swing forward to inject poison (rattlesnake, water moccasin, copperhead)
Often camouflaged for defense
May use signals such as cobra expanding its hood, rattlesnake shaking its rattle, or hissing for defense
Most snakes locate females by scent
Internal fertilization with no parental care
May be oviparous (eggs hatch outside body) or ovoviviparous (eggs held inside body until hatch)
Lizards:
1. Four
limbs
2. Includes iguanas, geckos,
skinks, chameleons, etc.
3. Rely on speed, agility, &
camouflage to catch prey
4. Feed on insects & small worms
5. Some, such as anole &
chameleon, can change colors for
protection
6. May use active displays such as squirting blood, hissing, or inflating
bodies
7. Some show autotomy
(breaking off tail to escape predators)
8. Two poisonous U.S. species
include Gila Monster & Beaded
Lizard

Gila Monster
Komodo dragon of Indonesia is largest lizard reaching 3 meters in length