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What Is Morphology?

The document discusses morphology and key concepts related to the structure and form of organisms. It defines morphology as the study of the structure and function of organisms and how their design evolves over time. Some key concepts covered include homology, analogy, and homoplasy which describe similarities between structures based on ancestry, function, or appearance. It also discusses symmetry types like bilateral, radial, and spherical symmetry as well as segmentation, or the repetition of body sections.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
133 views26 pages

What Is Morphology?

The document discusses morphology and key concepts related to the structure and form of organisms. It defines morphology as the study of the structure and function of organisms and how their design evolves over time. Some key concepts covered include homology, analogy, and homoplasy which describe similarities between structures based on ancestry, function, or appearance. It also discusses symmetry types like bilateral, radial, and spherical symmetry as well as segmentation, or the repetition of body sections.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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What is Morphology?

- Greek word, morphos = form/shape + logos = study of


- embraces the study of the structure and function
- how structure and function becomes an integrated design
- how the design becomes a factor in the evolution of a new form

MORPHOLOGICAL CONCEPTS
A. SIMILARITIES
- parts are considered similar by means of three criteria namely:
1. Ancestry (Homology)
2. Function (Analogy)
3. Appearance (Homoplast)

1. HOMOLOGY
- applies to two or more features that share a common ancestry
a1. Serial Homology
- similarity between successively repeated parts in the same organism
-e.g. series of vertebrae, several of gill arches

2. ANALOGY
- features of two or more organisms that perform a similar function
- example:
- wings of a bat & wings of a butterfly
- same function however neither structure can be traced to a similar part in a common ancestry
- turtle & dolphin forelimbs
- function as paddles & can be traced to a common ancestor
- recognizes similarity based upon similar function

3. HOMOPLASY
- features in two or more organisms that look alike
- may or may not be homologous or analogous
- ex. Turtle & dolphin flippers

B. SYMMETRY
- balanced proportions or correspondence in size & shapes of parts on opposite sides of median plane
1. BILATERAL SYMMETRY
- a body in which right & left halves are mirror images of each other

2. RADIAL SYMMETRY
- a body that is laid out equally from a central axis so that any of several planes passing through the
center divides into equal or mirrored parts

3. SPHERICAL SYMMETRY
- any plane passing through the center dividing the body into equivalent or mirrored halves
- occurs chiefly among same protozoan group & is rare in animals
- best suited for floating & rolling

C. SEGMENTATION
- a body which is made up of repeating sections known as segments or metameres

TERMS USED FOR LOCATING REGIONS OF ANIMAL BODIES


 ANATOMICAL PLANES
 FRONTAL & CORONAL PLANE
- divides a bilateral body into a dorsal & ventral halves by running through the anteroposterior axis & the
right left axis at right angle to the sagittal plane
 SAGITTAL & MEDIAL PLANE
- the plane that divides the body into right & left halves
 TRANSVERSE PLANE & CROSS SECTION
- cuts through a dorsoventral & a right-left axis at right angle to both the sagittal & frontal planes
- separates the body into anterior & posterior portions
ORIGIN OF THE CHORDATES
 Chordate Phylogeny
 Chordate Characteristics
 Notochord
 Pharyngeal Slit
 Endostyle of Thyroid Gland
 Dorsal & Tubular Nerve Cord
 Post anal Tail
 Chordate Body Plan
 Protochordates
 General Protochordate Features
 Hemichordata
 Cephalochordata
 Urochordata
 Chordate Origin

CHORDATE PHYLOGENY
 Presence of coelom - fluid-filled cavity
 Part of a major radiation with Bilateria
- Animals built upon bilateral symmetrical body plan
- apparently with two distinct & independent evolutionary lines
- Protostomes - mollusks, annelids, arthropods &
many smaller groups

- Deuterostomes - ambulacranial echinoderms,


hemichordates & chordates

 CHARACTERISTICS OF CHORDATES
 DIFFERENCES
- presence of an endoskeleton for the vertebrates
- cephalochordates & urochordates have rods of collagenous materials for their support system

 SIMILARITIES
1. Notochord
- slender rod that develops from the mesoderm in all chordates
- axis for muscle attachment

2. Pharyngeal gill slits


- longitudinal series of openings that pierce the wall of the embryonic pharynx

* gill proper
- specialized, derived structure of fish & larval stage of amphibians
- composed of tiny plates or folds that harbour capillary beds for respiration in water

3. Endostyle or Thyroid Gland


- a glandular groove in the floor of the pharynx
*endostyle is involved in filter feeding
*both are involved in iodine metabolism
*endostyle is the predecessor of the thyroid
- example: in lampreys, true endostyle in the larval stage & becomes a true thyroid gland in
adult stage

4. Dorsal & Tubular Nerve Cord


- presence of a dorsal hollow nerve cord derived from the ectoderm
- CNS of all animals is ectodermal in origin
- however, it is only in the chordates does the nerve tube form by invagination

5. Post-anal Tail
- represents a posterior elongation of the body extending beyond the anus
- primarily an extension of the locomotor apparatus, the segmental musculature & notochord
 PROTOCHORDATES
- informal assemblage of animals including a prechordate (hemichordate) &
two primitive chordates (cephalochordates & urochordates)
- not a proper taxonomic group, however, a collection of convenience
where members share some or five features of the fundamental chordate body plan

 GENERAL FEATURES
 Marine animals that feed by means of cilia & mucus
 They are pelagic in there larval stage
 Benthic in the adult stage
* live on or bottom of a marine substrate
* some burrow into the substrate or are sessile
* some are solitary (live alone)
* some are dioecious (2 houses)
Others are monoecious (hermaphrodites)
 Protochordates w/ simple, unpaired photo receptors & statocysts;
vertebrates w/ well-developed paired sensory organs
>>for vision, chemo reception, hearing, balance, electroception, & vibration sensitivity

 PHYLUM HEMICHORDATA
 Most live in mucus-lined burrows
 Other species are suspension feeders,
extracting tiny bits of organic material & plankton directly from the water
 Muscular lip of the collar can be drawn over the mouth to reject/sort larger food particles
 Digestive system is complete
 Sets of adjacent slits open into a common chamber, the dorsally placed branchial pouch,
that in turn pierces the outer body wall to form the branchial pore
>> an undivided opening to the outside environment
 Single coelomic pouch in proboscis but paired pouches in collar & trunk triploblastic

 CLASS PTEROBRANCHIA
- evolved from the acorn worms
- composed of 2 genera & live in secreted tubes of oceanic water
- small & colonial, & each individual known as a zooid
- they bear arms with tentacles containing extensions of the coelomic compartments of the mesozones

 PHYLOGENY:
- Echinoderms left an extensive fossil record with 20 currently recognized classes
- Only five classes survived today
- Ancestors of the extant (present) echinoderms were sessile,
became radial as an adaptation to that existence
& then gave rise to free moving groups
- the relationship with chordates is they share pharyngeal slit;
- with echinoderms, they share a similar ciliated larva,
a 3 part coelom &
a kind of filtration structure known as axial complex
- phylogenetic analyses of 18s rDNA sequences & Hox genes support a close relationship between
echinoderms & hemichordates
- Echinoderms & hemichordates from a clade known as Ambulacraria

EARLY CHORDATE EVOLUTION


 Ancestral chordates may have resembled lancelets
 Genome sequencing of tunicates has identified genes shared by tunicates & vertebrates
 Gene expression in lancelets holds clues to the evolution of the vertebrate form

WHAT ARE CHORDATES?


- neither the most diverse nor the largest animal phyla
- fourth in terms of the number of species trailing behind the arthropods, nematodes & mollusks
GENERAL FEATURES SHARED by CHORDATES
1. Eukaryote
2. Multicellular
3. Bilateral-deuterostomes
4. Heterotrophic

 Live in marine, freshwater, & terrestrial habitats;


many are capable of flight

 Free-living but very few fishes are ectoparasitic

 Bilateral symmetry:
Segmented but segmentation in incomplete in many
Three germ layers

 Well-developed coelom

 Triploblastic

 Epidermis present in all;


dermis in vertebrates;
keratinized or bony structures often present in vertebrate integument;
glands often diverse &
abundant in vertebrates

 Smooth, skeletal & cardiac muscles present;


segmented myomeres in fishes & amphibians

 Nerve cord hollow & dorsal;


distinct three-lobed brain present in vertebrates

 Respiration primarily via gills, lungs & skin;


swim bladder present in many fishes functioning in buoyancy

 Closed circulation;
chambered hearts & red blood cells in vertebrates;
distinct aortic arches in all except sea squirts

 Digestive system is complete;


muscular gut in vertebrates;
pharyngeal pouches present in early development erupting to outside as gill slits in aquatic form

 Paired glomerular kidneys & ducts in vertebrates

 Sexes usually separate;


hermaproditism in sea squirts & some fishes;
fertilization internal & external;
oviparous or viviparous;
distinct larval stage in some;
crocodilians, birds, mammals & some fishes & amphibians w/ parental care of the young

 Asexual reproduction by parthenogenesis in some fishes, amphibians & reptiles

3 Groups of Living Chordates:


 Cephalochordates
- amphioxi or lancets
 Urochordates
- tunicates or sea squids
 Vertebrates
- fishes, amphibians, reptiles & mammals
1. SUBPHYLUM CEPHALOCHORDATA
CEPHALOCHORDATES

 Lancelets originally bear the name amphioxus (Gk. Amphi, both ends + oxys, sharp)
but later the genus reverted to the older name Branchiostoma (Gk. Branchia, gills + soma, worth)

 Amphioxus is still used as a convenient CN in the approximately 29 species

 Despite the name cephalochordate, Cephalization is only moderately developed in amphioxus

1. They are built upon the characteristic chordate pattern that includes pharyngeal slits, tubular nerve cord,
notochord, & post anal tail

2. Nervous system is centered around a hollow nerve cord


*Nerve cord is not expanded anteriorly into a distinct brain
*No distinctive brain

3. Flow pattern is similar to the fishes although absence of a heart


*Closed system of circulation
*Blood is pumped forward in the ventral aorta by peristaltic
- like contraction of the vessel walls & pushes upward through the Branch arteries (aortic arches)
in pharyngeal arches to paired dorsal aortas
*Blood is distributed to the body tissue by capillaries & in veins which return it to the ventral aorta
*Blood circulates nutrients but not respiratory gases
- No erythrocytes & hemoglobin

4. Gas exchange occurs over the surface of the body


*No gills for respiration
*Lack the paired species sense organs that appear in vertebrates

5. Sense organs are simple, including an anterior, unpaired cellulose that function as photo receptors

6. Suspension feeding based on a pharyngeal filtering apparatus surrounded by an atrium


*Diet consists of microorganisms & phytoplantons
*Sexes are dioecious

7. Gametes are released in the atrium & then pass through the atriopore to the outside where fertilization
occurs
*Larvae soon hatch after the eggs are fertilized & gradually assume the shape of an adult

2. SUBPHYLUM UROCHORDATA
UROCHORDATES/TUNICATES
 Urochordate literally means “tail back string” a reference to the notochord
 All are marine organisms
 Tunicate also called “Sea Squirt”
 Free Swimming Larva
 Tunicates (Subphylum Urochordata) exhibit all four characteristics of other chordates during embryonic
development only
 No tail in adult

1. Possess a bag-like, simplified body especially in adults

2. Tunicates is inspired by characteristic flexible outer body cover the tunic secreted by the epidermis
*In a few species, the filtering apparatus is secreted by the epidermis & surrounds the animal

3.

4. Pharynx is expanded into a complex straining apparatus known as branchial basket for most
5. Urochordates are specialist at feeding on suspended matter, especially very tiny particulate plankton
6. Dorsal nerve cord is reduced to a single ganglion

7. The tubular nerve cord extends into a tail supported internally by a turgid notochord

8. Possess pharyngeal slits

9. The notochord & the tail disappear in the adult


- Notochord is confined to the tail
- Notochord is lost during metamorphosis into sessile adult
- Notochord present only in free swimming larva
- Notochord does not extend into head

 Reproduction - sexual (hermaroditic) & asexual (budding)


 Larvum is free-swimming but not feeding
 Larval form resembles a microscopic tadpole
 Adult: sessile filter feeder

 Settled Larva:
 Tail, notochord, dorsal nerve cord disappear
 Settle after brief free-swimming larval existence
 Attaches at anterior end
 Metamorphosis begins
 Body turns 180ᴼ

A. CLASS ASCIDIACEA
 Ascidians or Sea Squirts
 Sessile as adults, but have swimming larvae
 Solitary, colonial or compound
 Nervous System of adult is restricted to a nerve ganglion & a few nerves
 Circulatory system consists of a ventral heart & two large vessels
 Heart drives the blood in one direction for a few beats, pauses, reverses & drives the blood in
the opposite direction
 Hermaphroditic
 Gametes are carried out of the excurrent siphon into the surrounding water for fertilization
 With only 2 pharyngeal gill slits & an endostyle

B. CLASS APPENDICULARIA/LARVACEA
 known as larvaceans
 builds & inhabits its hollow transparent sphere of mucus
 inside the sphere feeding filter traps & ingest tiny planktons
 small tadpole-shaped forms resembling the larval stage of the ascidians

C. CLASS THALIACEA
 known as salps (free-swimming)
 Many have luminous organs & emit a brilliant light at night
 Barrel or lemon-shaped forms surrounded by circular muscle bands
 Ocean currents transport them as planktons

3. VERTEBRATE HIGHER CLASSIFICATION


 Superclass Agnatha - w/o jaws
 Class Myxini - hag fishes
 Class Cephalaspidormorphi - lampreys
 Superclass Gnathostoma - w/ jaws
 Class Chondricthyes - sharks, rays, chimera
 Class Actinopterygii - ray-finned fishes
 Class Sarcopterygii - lobe-finned fishes
 Class Amphibia - frogs, salamanders
 Class Reptilia - snakes, lizards, crocodiles
 Class Aves - birds
 Class Mammalia - mammals
CRANIATES: CHORDATES w/ a HEAD
 The origin of a head opened up a completely new way of feeding for chordates; active predation
 Craniates share some same characteristics: a skull, brain, eyes & other sensory organs

Derive Characteristic of Craniates:


 Craniates have two clusters of Hox genes, lancelets & tunicates have only one cluster
 Neural crest, a recollection of cells near the dorsal margins of the closing neural tube in an embryo
 Neural crest cells give rise to some of the bones & cartilages of the skull
 In aquatic craniates, the pharyngeal clefts evolved into gill slits
 Craniates have a higher metabolism & are more muscular than tunicates & lancelets
 Craniates have a heart w/ at least two chambers, red blood cells, w/ hemoglobin & kidneys

Vertebrates are craniates that have a backbone


 During the Cambrian Period, a lineage of craniate evolved into vertebrates
 Vertebrates became more efficient at capturing food & avoiding being eaten

Origins of Bone & Teeth


 Mineralization appears to have originated w/ vertebrate mouth parts
 The vertebrate endoskeleton became fully mineralized much later

Tetrapods are Gnathostomes that have limbs


 One of the most significant events in vertebrate history
 When the fins of some lobe-fins evolved into the limbs & feet of tetrapods

 Tetrapods have some specific adaptations:


 Four limbs & feet w/ digits
 Ears for detecting airborne sounds

 AMNIOTES ARE TETRAPODS that have a TERRESTRIALLY ADAPTED EGG


 Amniotes are group of tetrapods whose living members are the reptiles, including birds & mammals
 Named for the major derived character of the clade, the amniotic egg, which contains membranes that
protect the embryo
 The extraembryonic membranes are the amnion, chorion, yolk sac & allantois

EVOLUTION OF VERTEBRATES
 Vertebrates derive their name from vertebrae
 About 52,000 species of vertebrates, including the largest organisms ever to live on Earth
 Vertebrates have great disparity, a wide range of differences with in the groups

PHARYNGEAL SLITS
Function:
 Develop into parts of ear, head & neck in tetrapods
 Suspension - feeding structures in many invertebrate chordates
 Gas exchange in vertebrates (except vertebrates w/ limbs, the tetrapods)

MUSCULAR, POSTANAL TAIL


 Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals
 Chordates have a tail posterior to the anus
 In many species, the tail is greatly reduced during embryonic development
 The tail contains skeletal elements & muscles
 It provides propelling force in many aquatic species
 Internal bony skeleton
 Backbone encasing spinal column
 Skull-encased brain
 Deuterostomes

VERTEBRATES: FISH
Characteristics:
 Bone structure
 bony & cartilaginous skeleton
 paired jaws & paired appendages (fins)
 Scales

 Body function
 Gills for gas exchange
 2 chambered heart; single loop blood circulation
 Ectotherms

 Reproduction
 External fertilization
 External development in aquatic egg

OSTEICHTHYES (bony fishes)


 Scales of body origin
 Smooth cycloid
 Spiny ctenoid
 Swim bladder
 Operculum (gill cover)
 Homocercal tail

A. SUPERCLASS AGNATHA (Jawless Fishes)


 Lack paired fins, scales & well-developed vertebrae
 Hag fish (slime eels)
 The least derived surviving craniate lineage is Class Myxini, the hag fishes
 Hag fishes have a cartilaginous skull & axial rod of cartilaginous derived from the notochord,
but lack jaws & vertebrae
 Mucus for protection
 Feed on decaying flesh
 Lampreys
 Lampreys (Petromyzontida) represent the oldest living lineage of vertebrates
 They are jawless vertebrates inhabiting various marine & freshwater habitats
 They have cartilaginous segments surrounding the notochord & arching partly over the nerve cord
 Parasitic
 Anadromous
 Marine adults, breed in freshwater

Characteristics of Hagfishes & Lampreys


1. Body slender;
No paired appendages

2. Skin lacks scales

3. Fibrous & cartilaginous skeleton;


notochord persistent;
vertebrate reduced or absent

4. …

5. Brain small but distinct;


10 pairs of cranial nerves

6. ….

7. Eyes poorly developed (hag fishes) or moderately developed (lampreys);


one pair (hag fishes) or two pairs (lampreys) of semi-circular canals

8. ….
9. Jaws absent;
Mouth w/ keratined plates (hag fishes) or teeth (lampreys);

10. Heart w/ a sinus venosus, atrium & ventricle;


Single circulation;
Accessory hearts in hag fishes

11. ….

12. No distinctive stomach

13. Excretory system of pronephric & mesonephric (hag fishes) or opistonephric (lampreys) kidneys;
kidneys drain via archinephric duct to cloaca;
ammonia is the main nitrogenous waste

14. Sexes separate;


External fertilization

15. Large yolky eggs & no larval stage in hag fishes;


Small eggs & long larval stage (ammocoete) in lampreys

16. Hag fishes w/ 5-16 pairs of gills;


lampreys w/ 7 pairs of gills

A1. CLASS MYXINI 14. Separate sexes;


1. Body slender, eel-like, rounded External fertilization

2. Naked skin containing slime glands 15. Large yolky eggs;


No larval stage
3. Fibrous & cartilaginous skeleton;
Notochord persistent 16. No paired appendages

4. . 17. 5 - 16 pairs of gills w/ variable number of gill


openings
5. Dorsal nerve cord w/ differentiated brain;
No cerebellum; 18. No dorsal fins
10 pairs of cranial nerves;
Dorsal & ventral nerve roots united A2. CLASS CEPHALASPIDOMORPHI
1. Body slender, eel-like, rounded
6. .
2. Naked skin
7. Eyes degenerate;
One pair semicircular canals 3. Fibrous & cartilaginous skeleton;
Notochord persistent
8. .
4. ….
9. Biting mouth w/ two rows of eversible teeth
5. Dorsal nerve cord w/ differentiated brain;
10. Heart w/ sinus venosus, atrium, & ventricle; Small cerebellu present;
Accessory hearts, aortic arches in gill region 10 pairs of cranial nerves;
Dorsal & ventral nerve roots separated
11. .
6. ….
12. Digestive system without stomach;
No spiral valve or cilia in intestinal tract 7. Eyes well-developed in adult;
Two pairs semicircular canals
13. Segmented mesonephric kidney;
Marine, body fluids is osmotic w/ seawater 8. ….
9. Suckerlike oral disc & tongue w/ well-developed
keratinized teeth 14. Sexes separate;
Single gonad without duct;
10. Heart w/ sinus venosus, atrium & ventricle; External fertilization;
Aortic arches in gill region Long larval stage (ammocoete)
11. ….
15. ….
12. Digestive system without stomach;
Intestine w/ spiral fold 16. One or two median fins, no paired appendages

13. Opistonephric kidney; anadromous & freshwater; 17. Seven pairs of gills each w/ external opening
Body fluids osmotically & ionically regulated

B. SUPERCLASS GNASTHOSTOMA
 are vertebrates that have jaws
 Today, they outnumber jawless vertebrates
 w/ jaws that might have evolved from skeletal supports of the pharyngeal slits
 Other characters common to gnathostomes
 Additional duplication of the Hox genes
 An enlarged forebrain associated w/ enhanced smell & vision
 In aquatic gnathostomes, the presence of a lateral line system, which is sensitive to vibrations

B1. CLASS ACTINOPTERYGII (RAY-FINNED FISHES)


1. Caudal fin heterocercal (ancestral condition) or homocercal;
paired pectoral & pelvic fins usually present, supported by bony rays;
muscle controlling fin movements w/ in trunk

2. Skin w/ garoid (ancestral condition), cycloid, or ctenoid

3. Skeleton w/ bone of endochondral origin, notochord present but reduced;


vertebrae distinct

4. …

5. Brain well-developed, but relatively small,


10 pairs of cranial nerves

6. Development of senses variable;


3 pairs of semi-circular canals

7. …

8. ….

9. Jaws present, usually w/ enameloid, polyphyodont (successive sets of teeth) teeth;


spiral valve present (ancestral condition) or absent

10. Heart w/ a sinus venosus, atrium & a ventricle;


single circulation;
nucleated red blood cells

11. Gills covered by a bony operculum;


swim bladder present usually functioning for buoyancy;
sometimes used for respiration

12. ….

13. Excretory system of opisthonephric kidneys which drain via archinephric duct or cloaca;
Main nitrogenous waste is ammonia
14. Separate sexes; many hermaphroditic;
very few reproduce asexually by parthenogenesis;
fertilization usually external, internal in some

15. Oviparous or vivaparous;


embryo of vivaparous species nourished by placenta or yolk sac (ovoviviparity);
larval stage often greatly different from adult

B2. CLASS AMPHIBIA


Characteristics:
 Body structure
 Legs (tetrapods)
 Moist skin

 Body function
 Lungs (positive pressure) & diffusion through skin for gas exchange
 Three-chambered heart
 Double loop circulatory system: veins from heart to rest of body
 Ectothermic: maintain its temperature by absorbing heat from the environment

 Reproduction
 External fertilization
 External development in aquatic egg
 Metamorphosis (tadpole to adult)

Characteristics:
 Cold blooded
 Returns to water to breed
 Some are poisonous
 Estivation - dry & hot - summer dormancy
 Hibernation - cold - dormant state while reserves body fat

Characteristics of Modern Amphibians


1. Limbs usually four (quadrupedal) in two pairs w/ associated shoulder/ hip girdle.
*salamanders have limbs only
* caecilians no limbs; no true nails; feet often webbed;
forelimbs usually w/ four digits & hind limbs w/ five

2. Granular glands secrete defensive chemicals;


integument modified for cutaneous respiration;
pigment cells (chromatophores) common & varied;
Skin smooth, moist & glandular

3. Skeleton mostly bony w/ ranging numbers of vertebrae;


*salamanders usually have distinct head, neck, trunk, tail;
*adult frogs have a fused head & trunk & usually no tail;
*caecilians have an elongated trunk not strongly demarcated from the head & a terminal anus;

4. Skull relatively light;


less ossifies,
flattened in profile &
w/ fewer bones than other vertebrates

5. Tripartite brain including forebrain (telencephalon),


midbrain (mesencephalon) coordinating vision &
hindbrain (rhombencephalon) coordinating hearing & balance;
10 pairs of cranial nerves
6. Ear w/ tympanic membrane & stapes for transmitting vibrations to the inner ear;

7. for vision in air, cornea rather than lens is principal refractive surface for bending light;
eyelids lachrymal glands protect & wash eyes

8. Paired internal nostrils open into a nasal cavity lined w/ olfactory epithelium at anterior part of
mouthy cavity
- incus - hammer
- malleus - anvil
- stapes - stirrup

9. Mouth usually large w/ small teeth in upper or both jaws & on the vomer/palate

10. Heart w/:


 A sinus venosus, two atria & one ventricle, conus arteriosus
 Double circulation through the heart in which pulmonary arteries & veins supply lungs
(when present)

11. Respiration by skin & in some forms by gills &/or lungs


varies among species by developmental state of the species

12. Excretory system of paired mesonephric or opistonephric kidneys;


main nitrogenous waste is urea

13. Separate sexes;


Fertilization internal in salamanders & caecilians;
Fertlization external in frogs & toads;

14. Fertilization mostly external in frogs & toads


but internal via a spermatophore in most salamanders & caecilians

15. Eggs moderately yolky (mesolecithal) w/ jelly-like membrane coverings;


aquatic larva often present w/ metamorphosis to a more terrestrial adult form;
predominantly oviparous; but some ovoviviparous or vivaparous

B3. CLASS AVES


Characteristics:
 Warm-blooded
 Horny bill
 Hard egg shell

1. Forelimbs modified as wings


Neck elongate & S-shaped

2. Epidermal covering of feathers & leg scales;


No sweat glands;
Oil glands at the base of the tail
Endothermic

3. Skull w/ one occipital condyle;


Many bones w/ air cavities;
Ribs w/ strengthening, uncinate processes;
tail short, caudal vertebrate reduced to a pygostyle;
pelvic girdle a synsacrum;
sternum usually large & keeled

4. Hollow Bones
5. Brain well developed, w/ large optic lobes & cerebellum;
12 pairs of cranial nerves

6. Middle ear w/ a single bones

7. Eyes large w/ pectin

8. …

9. No teeth;
Each jaw covered w/ a keratinized sheath, forming a beak

10. Heart w/ two atria & two ventricles;


separate pulmonary & systemic circuits;
persistent aortic arch;
nucleated RBC

11. Lung of parabronchi w/ continuous air flow;


syrinx (vocal organ of a bird) present;
air sacs among visceral (internal) organs & skeleton

12. Gizzard (stomach) present

13. Excretory system of metonephric kidneys & ureters that open into the cloaca;
Uric acid main nitrogenous waste

14. Sex determined by chromosomes; Separate sexes;


Internal fertilization;
Copulatory organ only in paleognathids, ducks, geese & a few others;
Females w/ a functional left ovary & oviduct only

15. Fetal membranes of amnion, chorion & allantois;


Oviparous - eggs hatch outside the mother’s body
Eggs w/ much yolk & hard calcareous shells;
Extensive parental care of the young

B4. CHONDRICHTHYES (Cartilagenous Fishes)


- sharks, skates, rays, chimera
- Largest & most diverse group of chondricthyans includes the sharks, rays & skates
 Heterocercal tail
 Two dorsal fins
 Paired pectorals
 5-7 gill slits
 Ureoosmotic

Characteristics of Chondrichthyes

1. Body fusiform or dorsoventrally composed;


caudal fin is heterocercal (sharks & rays) or diphycercal (chimaeras);
paired pectoral & pelvic fins

2. Skin w/ placoid scales of dermal origin

3. Skeleton is cartilaginous;
notochord present but reduced;
vertebrae is distinct;
*cartilaginous skeleton evolved secondarily from an ancestral mineralized skeleton

4. ….
5. Brain well-developed;
10 pairs of cranial nerves
6. ….

7. Vision & electroception are well-developed

8. Senses of smell, vibration reception (lateral line) ;


3 pairs of semicircular canals

9. Jaws present w/ polyphyodont teeth

10. Circulatory system of several pairs of aortic arches;


dorsal & ventral aorta, capillary & venous systems, hepatic portal & renal portal systems;
four-chambered heart w/ sinus venosus, atrium, ventricle and conus arteriosus

11. Respiration by means of five to seven pairs of gills leading to exposed gill slits in elasmobranchs;
four pairs of gills covered by an operculum in chimaeras

12. Stomach large (absent in chimaeras);


intestine w/ spiral valve;
liver often large & oil finned

13. Excretory system of opistonephric kidneys, which drain via archinephric duct to cloaca;
high concentration of urea & trimethylamine oxide in the blood;
rectal gland present

14. Sexes separate;


internal fertilization w/ claspers

15. Oviparous or vivaparous;


embryos of vivaparous species nourished by placenta, yolk sac (ovovivaparity) or cannibalism,
no larval stage

MOST SHARKS
 are carnivores
 have a streamlined body & are swift swimmers
 have acute senses
 have a short digestive tract; a ridge called the spiral valve increases the digestive surface area
 Shark eggs are fertilized internally but embyos can develop in different way:
 Oviparous: eggs hatch outside the mother’s body
 Ovovivaparous: the embryo develops w/ in the uterus & is nourished by the eggyolk
 Vivaparous: the embryo develops w/ in the uterus & is nourished through a yolk sac placenta
from the mothers blood

B6. CLASS MAMMALIA


Characteristics:
1. Four limbs adapted for many forms of locaomotion: terrestrial, aquatic, aerial

2. Body mostly covered w/ hair, but reduced coverage in some;


sweat, scent & sebaceous glands present;
skin underlain by a thick layer of flat keratinized cells/ squamous cells
Endothermic

3. …

4. Skull with two occipital condyles lower jaw w/ a single enlarged bone

5. Brain highly developed especially the cerebral cortex;


12 pairs of cranial nerves

6. Fleshy external ears;


middle ears w/ three bones

7. Movable eyelids

8. Olfactory sense highly developed;


convulated turbinate bones in the nasal cavity

9. Mouth w/ diphyodont (growing baby & adult teeth) teeth;


teeth heterodont (different type) in most

10. Heart w/ two atria & two ventricles;


separate pulmonary & systemic circuits;
persistent left aortic arch;
non nucleated RBC’s

11. Lungs w/ high surface area from alveoli & ventilated by aspiration;
larynx present;
secondary palate separates air & food passages;
muscular diaphragm ventilate the lungs;

12. …

13. Excretory system of metanephros kidneys w/ ureters that usually open ito a bladder

14. Sex determined by chromosomes; Separate sexes;


internal fertilization;
copulatory organ a penis

15. Embryonic membranes of amnion, chorion & allantois;


mostly vivaparous (the embryo develops w/ in the uterus & is nourished through a yolk sac
placenta from the mothers blood) w/ embryos developing in a uterus w/ a placental
attachment

SUBCLASSES
 Protheria - Echidna & platypus
 Metatheria - Marsupial
 Eutheria - True mammals

B7. CLASS REPTILIA


Characteristics:
 Body structure
 Dry skin, scales, armour
 Body function
 Lungs for gas exchange
 Thoracic breathing: negative pressure
 Most have a three-chambered heart
 Ectotherms - maintain its temperature by absorbing heat from the environment
 Reproduction
 Internal fertilization
 External development in amniotic egg

 Nonavian Reptiles
1. Two paired limbs, usually w/ five toes;
limbs vestigial or absent in many
2. Body covering of keratinized epidermal scales & sometimes body dermal plates;
integument w/ few glands

3. Skeleton well ossified

4. Skull w/ one occipital condyle (rounded end of bone);


lower jaws of several bones usually two sacral vertebrae

5. Brain moderately well developed w/ expanded cerebrum;


12 pairs of cranial nerves

6. Middle ear w/ a single bone

7. Eyes w/ color vision in some;


*snakes & some lizard w/ highly developed chemoreception using olfactory epithelia & Jacobson’s organ;
*some snakes w/ heat sensitive pit organs

8. ….

9. Teeth polyphyodont or absent;


when present usually homodont w/ a single point;
gizzard in crocodilians

10. Heart w/ sinus venosus, two atria, & ventricle incompletely divided by three ventricles
*Crocodilian heart w/ sinus venosus, two atria & ventricles,
pulmonary & systemic circuits incompletely separated;
nucleated RBC’s

11. Respiration by skin;


in some forms by gills &/or lungs
*varies among species by developmental state of the species

12. …..

13. Excretory system of mesonephric kidneys & ureters that open into a cloaca;
uric acid is the main nitrogenous waste

14. Sex determined by chromosomes or by the environment;


internal fertilization;
Usually separate sexes
copulatory organ a penis, hemipenis, or absent;
*lizards reproduce asexually by parthenogenesis

15. Fetal membranes of amnion, chorion & allantois;


Oviparous - eggs hatch outside the mother’s body; or
vivaparous - the embryo develops w/ in the uterus &
is nourished through a yolk sac placenta from the mothers blood
eggs w/ leathery or calcareous shells;
parental care absent except in crocodilians
COMPARATIVE ANATOMY OF THE INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM
LEARNING OUTCOMES
 to trace the embryonic development of the vertebrate integument
 to describe the general features of the skin
 to explain the phylogeny of the integument of the fishes
 to compare and contrast the integument of the tetrapods
 to describe the specializations of the vertebrate integument

 Embryonic Origin
 General Features of the Integument
 Dermis
 Epidermis
 Phylogeny
 Integument of the fishes
 Primitive Fishes
 Chondrichthyes
 Bony Fishes
 Integument of Tetrapods
 Amphibians
 Reptiles
 Birds
 Mammals
 Specialization of the Integument
 Nails, Claws, Hooves
 Horns and Antlers
 Baleen
 Scales
 Dermal Armor
 Mucus
 Color

I. EMBRYONIC ORIGIN
- dermis arises from the dermatome
- segmented epimeres (somites) divide to give rise to the sclerotome medially & the dermatome laterally
- inner cells of the dermyotome becomes arranged into the myotome
- Epidermis derived from the ectoderm
- gives rise to glands
- Dermis derived from mesoderm
a) GENERAL FEATURES OF THE INTEGUMENT
i. DERMIS
- dermis of many vertebrates produces plates of bone directly through intramembranous ossification
- known as dermal bones
- prominent in the ostracoderm fishes
- collagen fibers is the most conspicuous component
- plies
- collagen fibers which are woven into distinct layers
- found in amphioxus
- in fishes & aquatic vertebrates, including cetaceans & aquatic squamates
- collagen fibers of the dermis are usually arranged in orderly plies that form a recognizable
stratum compactum
- in terrestrial vertebrates
- stratum compactum is less obvious because locomotion on land depends more on the limbs &
less on the trunk
- any wrinkling of the skin is less disruptive to a terrestrial vertebrate moving through air
ii. EPIDERMIS
- epidermis of many vertebrates produces mucus to moisten the surface of the skin
- in fishes, mucus seems to afford some protection from bacterial infection & helps ensure the
laminar flow of water across the body surface
- in amphibians, mucus probably serves similar functions & additionally keeps the skin from drying
during the animal’s sojourns on land
 Keratinization & formation of a stratum corneum occur where friction or direct mechanical abrasion insult the
epithelium
 The stratum corneum may be differentiated into hair, hooves, horn sheathes, or other specialized cornified
structures
 Keratinizing system - elaborate interaction of epidermis & dermis that produces the orderly transformation
 Scales form within the integument of many aquatic & terrestrial vertebrates
 Scales are basically folds in the integument
 If dermal contributions predominate the form of ossified dermal bone is termed a dermal scale
 An epidermal fold, especially in the form of a thickened keratinzed laver produces an epidermal scale

II. PHYLOGENY OF THE FISH INTEGUMENT


 The skin of most living fishes is non-keratinized & covered instead by mucus
 The “teeth” lining the oral disk of lampreys, the jaw coverings of some herbivorous minnows, & the friction
surface on the belly skin of some semi-terrestrial fish are all keratinized derivatives
 In most living fishes, the epidermis is alive & active on the body surface, & there is no prominent keratinized
cells
 Two types of cells occur within the epidermis of fishes
 Epidermal cells
 Specialized unicellular glands
 Surface cells are often patterned w/ tiny microridges that perhaps hold the surface layer of mucus
 Mucous cuticle
 Mucous coat that resists penetration of the integument by infectious bacteria
 Probably contributes to laminar flow of water across the surface
 Makes the fish slippery to predators
 Often includes chemicals that are repugnant, alarming, or toxic to enemies
 Unicellular glands are single, specialized, & interspersed among the epidermal cell population
 Club cell is an elongate, sometimes binucleate, unicellular gland
 Granular cell is a diverse cell found in the skin of lampreys & other fishes
 Goblet cell is absent in lamprey skin but is usually found in other bony & cartilaginous fishes
 Sacciform cell that holds a large, membrane-bound secretory product that seems to function as a repellent
or toxin against enemies
 Collagen within the stratum compactum is regularly organized into plies that spiral around the body of the
fish, allowing the skin to bend without wrinkling
 In some fishes, the dermis has elastic properties
 The dermis often gives rise to dermal bone, & the dermal bone gives rise to dermal scales
 The surface of fish scales is sometimes coated with a hard, acellular enamel of epidermal origin & a deeper
dentin layer of dermal origin
 Enamel was thought to give way phylogenetically to “ganoin” & dentin to “cosmine”

a) PRIMITIVE FISHES
 In ostracoderms & placoderms, the integument produced prominent bony plates of dermal armor that encased
their bodies in an exoskeleton
 Dermal bones of the cranial region form the head shields; but more posteriorly along the body, the dermal
bones tended to be broken up into smaller pieces, the dermal scales
 Surface of these scales was often ornamented w/ tiny, mushroom-shaped tubercles
 The dermal bone supporting these tubercles was lamellar, organized in a layered pattern
 Skin of living hagfishes & lampreys lack dermal bones
 Skin surface is smooth & without scales
 Interpersed among them are unicellular glands, namely, the large granular cells & elongate club cells
 Skin of hagfishes includes thread cells that discharge thick cords of mucus to the skin surface when the fish is
irritated
 Within the dermis, hagfishes also possess multicellular slime glands that release their products via ducts to the
surface
b) CHONDRICHTHYES
 Dermal bone is absent, but surface dentricles, known as placoid scales, persist
 These scales give the rough feel to the surface of the skin
 Recent evidence suggests that these tiny placoid scales reduce friction drag as the fish swims forward
 Placoid scale itself develops in the dermis but projects through the epidermis to reach the surface
 A cap of enamel forms the tip, dentin lies beneath, & a pulp cavity resides within
 Chromatophores occur in the lower part of the epidermis & upper regions of the dermis

Types of scales of fishes


1. Placoid Scales
- consists of basal plate embedded in the dermis with caudally directed spine projecting through the epidermis
- plate & spine are compose of dentin
- each spine is also covered w/ enamel
2.
c) BONY FISHES
 Dermis of bony fishes is subdivided into a superficial layer of loose connective tissue & a deeper layer of
dense fibrous connective tissue
 Chromatophores are found within the dermis
 The scale most important structural product of the dermis
 Dermal scales do not actually pierce the epidermis, but they are so close to the surface they give the
impression that the skin is hard
 Several types of scales are recognized among bony fishes:
 Cosmoid Scales
 Cycloid Scales
 Ganoid Scales
 Teleost Scales
III. INTEGUMENT OF TETRAPODS
a) AMPHIBIANS
 Most primitive tetrapods had scales like the fishes from which they arose
 Among living amphibians, dermal scales are present only as vestiges in some species of tropical
caecilians (Apoda)
 Frogs & salamanders lack all traces of dermal scales
 Skin of the aquatic larvae of salamanders includes”
 A dermis of fibrous connective tissue, consisting of superficial loose tissue over a compact deep layer
 Cellular components of the epidermis:
 Surface apical cells
 Deep basal cells
 Leydig cells
 Scattered through out the epidermis
 Thought to secrete substances that resist entry of bacteria or viruses
 In terrestrial adults
 Dermis is similarly composed of fibrous connective tissue
 Presence of a thin stratum corneum
 Protection from mechanical abrasion
 Retards loss of moisture from the body without unduly shutting off cutaneous gas exchange
 Distinct regions of the epidermis
 Strata basale, spinosum, granulosum, & corneum
 Breeding season, nuptial pads may form on digits or limbs of male salamanders or frogs
*Nuptial pads - raised calluses of cornified epidermis that help the male hold the female during mating
 Two types of multicellular glands in the skin of frogs & salamanders
 Mucous glands
 Tend to be smaller,
 Each being made up of a little cluster of cells that release their product into a common duct
 Poison glands (Granular glands)
 Tend to be larger,
 Often contain stored secretions within the lumen of each gland
b) REPTILES
 Epidermis is generally delineated into three regions: stratum basale, stratum granulosum, & stratum
corneum
 Stratum intermedium, a temporary layer between old & new skin which is invaded by white blood cells
 The dermis of reptilian skin composed of fibrous connective tissue
 Reflects their greater commitment to a terrestrial existence
 Keratinization is much more extensive
 Skin glands are fewer than in amphibians
 Many lizards possess rows of femoral glands along the underside of the hindlimb in the thigh region
 Crocodiles & some turtles have scent glands
 In alligators, one pair of scent glands opens into the cloaca, another pair opens on the margins
 In some turtles, scent glands can produce quite pungent odors, especially when the animal is
alarmed by handling
 Most integumental glands of reptiles are thought to:
 To play a role in reproductive behaviour
 To discourage predators, but the glands & their social roles are not well understood
 Scales are present, but these are fundamentally different from the dermal scales of fishes, which are built
around bone of dermal origin
*reptilian scale - a fold in the surface epidermis, hence, an epidermal scale
*hinge - junction between two adjacent scales
*scute - large platelike epidermal scale
 Epidermal scales may be modified into crests, spines or hornlike processes
 Gastralia
 A collection of bones in the abdominal are are found in reptiles
 Not associated with dermal bones
 Osteoderms
 Dermal bones that support the epidermis
 Found in crocodilians, some lizards and some extinct reptiles
c) BIRDS
 Epidermis
 Comprises of the stratum basale & the stratum corneum
 Between them is the traditional layer of cells transformed into the keratinized surface of the corneum
 Principally of the epidermis & the keratinizing system
 Laid out along distinctive tracts, termed pterylae, on the surface of the body
 Dermis
 Near the feather follicles, is richly supplied with blood vessels, sensory nerve endings, & smooth
muscles
 Dermis in the breast of some birds becomes increasingly vascularized during the brooding season
forming a brood patch
- provides warmth to the incubated eggs
 Feathers
 The feathers of birds have been called nothing more than elaborate reptilian scales
 The feather is an example of yet another more fundamental homology of the underlying interaction of
the epidermal-dermal layers producing such a skin specialization
 Feathers are nonvascular & non-nervous products of the skin
 Presence of epidermal scales along the legs & feet of birds testifies to their dept to reptiles
 Modern bird feather is built from a tubular central shaft, the rachis, which carries on either side a vane
a series of barbs w/ interlocking connections termed barbules (hooklets).
 The rachis & attached vanes constitue the spathe
 The rachis continues proximally as the barbless calamus, or quill, which anchors the feather to the
body & often is moved by attached dermal muscles
 Flight feathers are long & the vanes asymmetrical about the stiffening rachis;
 Flight feathers on the wings are remiges (s. remix) & those on the tail are rectrices (s. retrix)
 Contour feathers, or pennaceous feathers
 cover the body and usually have symmetrical vanes about a rachis.
 Down feathers, or plumulaceous feathers
 lack a distinctive rachis and non-interlocking barbs extend out from the calamus as a fluffy
feather important in insulation

 Functions of the Feathers:


• Contour feathers aerodynamically shape the surface of the bird.
• Down feathers lie close to the skin as thermal insulation.
• Filoplumes are often specialized for display, and flight feathers constitute the major
aerodynamic surfaces.
• Flight feathers of the wings are a type of contour feather.
- characterized by a long rachis and prominent vanes
- primary function is locomotion
- for insulation
• Most feathers receive sensory stimuli and carry colors for display or courtship.
• Chromatophores in the epidermis provide color to the feathers
• Light refraction on the feather barbs and barbules creates some of the iridescent colors that
feathers display

GLANDS
o uropygial gland
located at the base of the tail
secretes a lipid and protein product that birds collect on the sides of their beak and then smear
on their feathers
o salt gland
located on the head of some birds
well developed in marine birds
excrete excess salt obtained marine foods and seawater
d) MAMMALS
 Epidermis
 sublayers/strata:
• Stratum corneum
• stratum lucidum
• stratum granulosum
• stratum spinosum
• stratum basale/germinativum
 Dermis
 sublayers:
 papillary layer
 reticular layer
 Function of the dermis
 produces dermal bones
 Functions of the dermal bone
 contribute to the skull and pectoral girdle
 rarely form dermal scales in the skin
*Glyptodon, a fossil mammal whose epidermis was underlaid by dermal bone
*living armadillo:
-- represent secondary developments of dermal bone in the mammalian integument.
Hair
• slender, keratinous filaments
Two general parts:
– hair shaft
– hair follicle
Fur or Pelage
Two general parts:
– guard hairs- guard hairs, the larger, coarse hairs, are the most apparent on the outer surface
of the fur
– underfur- underfur is stationed beneath the guard hairs and is usually much finer and shorter.

• Both function largely as insulators.


• In most marine mammals
– the underfur is reduced or lost entirely
– only a few guard hairs are evident

IV. SPECIALIZATION OF THE INTEGUMENT


a) NAILS, CLAWS, HOOVES
 Nails are plates of tightly compacted, cornified epithelial cells on the surface of fingers and toes
 nail matrix forms the new nail
Functions of the Nails:
 Protect the tips of digits from inadvertent mechanical injury
 Stabilize the skin at the tips of the fingers and toes, so that on the opposite side the skin can
establish a secure friction grip on objects grasped
 for aesthetic reason

 other vertebrates
– keratinizing system produces the claws and the hooves
• Claws, or talons
– curved, laterally compressed keratinized projections from the tips of digits
– seen in some amphibians and in most birds, reptiles, and mammals.
• Hooves
– enlarged keratinized plates on the tips of the ungulate digits
– The horse hoof consists of the hoof wall, sole and the frog
• hoof wall
– U-shaped and open at the heel
– consists of a keratinized stratum externa ( tectorium), a thin, shiny surface layer;
– stratum medium, thicker and also keratinized and permeated with coiled, tubular channels
– inner stratum internum ( lamellatum), a highly and regularly laminated, infolded layer that
interdigitates with the dermis ( corium) beneath
– The hoof wall grows out from its base, the germinal region (matrix cells), not from the
underlying dermis, at about 6 mm per month, taking 9 to 12 months overall for the toe to
renew.
Parts of the horse hoof:
• sole
– fills the ground surface space between the wall and triangular frog
– consists of epidermis and thickened dermis
• digital cushion, or pad
– a fatty derivative of the hypodermis located deep to the sole

bottom of the hoof (ground surface) includes:


 Frog
 wedge-shaped, a mostly keratinized derivative of the integument that fills the opening in the
heel of the hoof wall
 “Horned” lizards have processes extending from behind the head that look like horns but are
specialized, pointed epidermal
scales.
 Mammals, dinosaurs, and extinct turtles are the only vertebrates with true horns or antlers.

 MODIFICATIONS:
o Presence or absence of bone in the dermis
o Glands in aquatic forms
o Specializations in epidermis of land dwellers
o protection
o respiration
o temperature control
o nourishment of the young
o locomotion and reproductive structures

Fish skin
• No stratum corneum
• Many unicellular glands
– Like goblet cells that secrete mucus
• Photophores
Dermal Scales
• Dermal bone plates
became the skull
• Ancient armor
– Rhomboid scales
• Modern fish
– Cycloid and ctenoid scales
– Placoid and ganoid scales

Amphibian skin
• Loses dermal scales
– Exception: caecilian
• Epidermal multicellular glands are abundant
• Stratum corneum
INTEGUMENTARY GLAND TYPE
• Simple tubular
– Plethodontid mental glands associated with courtship glands
• Simple coiled tubular
– Sweat glands
• Simple branched tubular
– Female plethodontid- spermatotheca
• Simple alveolar (acinar)
– Mucous glands
• Compound tubular
– Mammary glands of monotremes
• Compound branched alveolar
– Mammary glands of placentals
– Courtship glands

Plethodontid (lungless salamander) Mating


• Internal fertilization
• Male: mental glands on chin, cloacal glands to form spermatophore, and caudal courtship glands
• Female: spermatheca for sperm storage
• Glands secrete pheromones

MODES OF SECRETION:
• Merocrine
– Cell body not injured
– Release particles by exocytosis
– Most sweat glands in mammals

• Holocrine
– Cell body discharged with contents
– Whole cell dies
– Sebaceous glands
• Apocrine
– Cellular products gather on surface then pinched off
– Apical portion pinched off
– Axillary sweat glands

Reptile skin
• Few glands (dry skin)
• Thick stratum corneum with modifications
• Epidermal scales
• Some reptiles have remnants of dermal armor (osteoderms)
• Osteoderms beneath some epidermal scales
• Gastralia- large osteoderms
• Alligator and skinks
• True dermal bones
• Turtles
• Turtles have epidermal scutes- large epidermal scales
• Snakes have scutes on their belly
• Spikes and spines are epidermal

Turtles
• Shell of dermal bone
• Carapace (shell) – dorsal
• Plastron- ventral
– Mesoplastron additional bone on primitive, extinct turtles
• Nuchal- diagnostic bone

Reptile Integumentary Glands


• Femoral pores
– Ventrally located with waxy excretion
• Many lizards, turtles and snakes have scent or cloacal glands
– Snakes use forked tongue to pick up scent (Jacobson’s organ)

Musk Glands
• Scent glands
• Along carapace in turtles
• Under lower jaw in crocodiles
• Musk deer
– Take secretions to make perfume

Skin of Birds
• Few epidermal scales
– Legs and beak
• Dermal scales are absent
• Claws- diversified
• Few glands
– Uropygial gland- preening gland
• Dermal scales absent

Feathers
• Modification of reptilian scales
• 3 types
– Contour- flight feather
• provides wing shape
– Down- beneath contour feather
– Filoplume- long shaft
• lost its vane

Skin of mammals
• Modifications of stratum corneum
– Hair, claws, nails, hooves
• Hair
– Like filoplume feather
– lack detail
• Vibrissae
– Specialized hairs
– Tactile in function
Cornified Structures
• Baleen Plate
– Toothless whale’s horny sheets of oral ectoderm
– Not a bone
– Used for filter feeding
• Tori pads
– Epidermal pads

b) HORNS & ANTLERS

HORNS
– In Bovine family
– Outgrowth of dermal core
– Unbranched
– Covered by epidermal horny, keratinized sheath
– Permanent

ANTLERS
• Antlers and horns of giraffe and deer
– Dermal bone of antler attaches to skull bone
– Shed off annually
– Outside layer is highly vascularized

DERMAL PIGMENTS
• Chromatophores
– contain pigment granules
– Melanophores (brown)
• Melanin granules
– Lipophores (yellow and red)
– Iridophores or guanophores (iridescent)
• Contain reflective guanine crystals

HORNS
– In Bovine family
– Outgrowth of dermal core
– Unbranched
– Covered by epidermal horny, keratinized sheath
– Permanent

ANTLERS
• Antlers and horns of giraffe and deer
– Dermal bone of antler attaches to skull bone
– Shed off annually
– Outside layer is highly vascularized

DERMAL PIGMENTS
• Chromatophores
– contain pigment granules
– Melanophores (brown)
• Melanin granules
– Lipophores (yellow and red)
– Iridophores or guanophores (iridescent)
• Contain reflective guanine crystals

c) BALEEN
d) SCALES
e) DERMAL ARMOR
f) MUCUS
g) COLOR

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