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REPTILE NOTES

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REPTILE NOTES NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS Rattlesnakes and other pit vipers have heat-sensitive pit organs on each side of the face between the eye and nostril. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: REPTILE NOTES


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REPTILE NOTES
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REPTILES
  • The lifestyles of most reptiles have major
    adaptations for living on land.
  • For example, the chuckwalla, which is a lizard
    common to the deserts of the southwestern United
    States, can survive when temperatures get over
    104 degrees and during arid conditions when there
    is little or no rain.

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REPTILES
  • To survive, chuckwallas disappear below ground
    and aestivate (becoming dormant during the
    summer).
  • He will not come out until March, when rain
    falls.
  • He will find water and drink, storing water in
    large reservoirs under the skin.
  • If threatened, a chuckwalla will hide in the
    nearest rock crevice.
  • It will inflate its lungs with air, making it
    fatter and press up against the rock.
  • Friction of its body scales make him nearly
    impossible to dislodge.

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EXTERNAL STRUCTURE AND MOVEMENT
  • The skin of reptiles has no respiratory function.
  • Their skin is thick, dry, and contains keratin.
  • Reptile skin also secretes pheromones that
    function in sex recognition and defense.

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EXTERNAL STRUCTURE AND MOVEMENT
  • All reptiles periodically shed the outer layer of
    skin in a process called ecdysis.
  • This process usually begins in the head region
    and the skin usually comes off in one piece.

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EXTENAL STRUCTURE AND MOVEMENT
  • Chromatophores in reptiles are similar to those
    in amphibians.
  • Cryptic coloration, mimicry, and aposematic
    coloration occur in reptiles.

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Support and Movement
  • The reptile skeleton has a lot of bone to provide
    greater support.
  • The skull is longer than an amphibian skull.
  • They also have a plate of bone, the secondary
    palate, that partially separates the nasal
    passages from the mouth cavity.

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Support and Movement
  • Reptiles have more cervical vertebrae than
    amphibians do.
  • The first two cervical vertebrae, the atlas and
    axis, provide greater freedom of movement for the
    head.
  • The atlas allows nodding and the axis allows
    rotation of the head.

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Support and Movement
  • The ribs of reptiles are also different.
  • For instance, the ribs of snakes have muscular
    connections to large belly scales to help with
    movement.
  • The cervical vertebrae of cobras have ribs that
    may be flared to show aggression.

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Support and Movement
  • The tail vertebrae of many lizards have a
    vertical fracture plate.
  • When a lizard is grasped by the tail, these
    vertebrae can be broken, and a portion of the
    tail is lost.
  • Tail loss, or autotomy, is an adaptation that
    allows a lizard to escape from a predators
    grasp, or the disconnected piece of tail may
    distract a predator from the lizard.
  • The lizard will later regenerate the lost
    portion.
  • Movement in reptiles is similar to salamanders.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Most reptiles are carnivores, but turtles will
    eat almost anything organic.
  • The tongues of turtles and crocodiles do not come
    out and are helpful for swallowing.
  • Some lizards and the tuatara have sticky tongues
    for capturing prey.
  • The tongue extension of chameleons exceeds their
    own body length.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • The most remarkable adaptation of snakes involve
    the changes in their skull for feeding.
  • The bones of the skull and jaws loosely join and
    can spread apart to ingest prey much larger than
    a normal head size.
  • Each half of the upper and lower jaws can move
    independently of each other.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Teeth that point backward prevent prey escape and
    help force the food into the esophagus.
  • The glottis, or respiratory opening, is far
    forward in the mouth so the snake can breathe
    while slowly swallowing its prey.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Vipers have hollow fangs.
  • These fangs connect to venom glands that inject
    venom when the viper bites.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • The upper jaw bone of vipers is hinged so that
    when the snakes mouth is closed, the fangs fold
    back along the upper jaw.
  • When the mouth opens, the upper jaw bone rotates
    and causes the fangs to swing down.
  • Because the fangs project outward from the mouth,
    vipers may strike at objects of any size.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Rear-fanged snakes have grooved rear teeth.
  • Venom is sent along these grooves and into the
    prey to quiet them during swallowing.
  • These snakes usually do not strike, and most are
    harmless to humans.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Coral snakes, sea snakes, and cobras have fangs
    that rigidly attach to the upper jaw.
  • When the mouth is closed, the fangs fit into a
    pocket in the outer gum of the lower jaw.
  • Some cobras spit venom at their prey.
  • If not washed from the eyes, the venom can cause
    blindness.

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NUTRITION AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
  • Venom glands are modified salivary glands.
  • Most snake venoms are mixtures of neurotoxins and
    hemotoxins.
  • The venoms of coral snakes, cobras, and sea
    snakes are primarily neurotoxins that attack
    nerve centers and cause respiratory paralysis.
  • The venoms of vipers are primarily hemotoxins
    that break up blood vessels attack blood vessel
    linings.

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CIRCULATION, GAS EXCHANGE, TEMPERATURE REGULATION
  • The circulatory system of reptiles is similar to
    amphibians.
  • Because reptiles are larger than amphibians,
    their blood must travel under higher pressure to
    reach distant body parts.

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CIRCULATION, GAS EXCHANGE, TEMPERATURE REGULATION
  • Like amphibians, reptiles have 2 heart atria that
    are completely separated and a ventricle that is
    incompletely divided.
  • Blood low in oxygen enters the ventricle from the
    right atrium, leaves the heart and goes to the
    lungs.
  • Blood high in oxygen enters the ventricle from
    the lungs and leaves through a left and right
    artery.

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CIRCULATION, GAS EXCHANGE, TEMPERATURE REGULATION
  • When turtles go into their shells, their method
    of lung ventilation does not work.
  • They also stop breathing during diving.
  • During periods of apnea (no breathing), blood
    flow to the lungs is limited, which conserves
    energy and allows more efficient use of the
    oxygen supply.

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Gas Exchange
  • Reptiles exchange gases across internal surfaces
    to avoid losing large amounts of water.
  • They do have a larynx, but usually not vocal
    cords.
  • Lungs are divided into spongy, connected
    chambers.
  • These chambers provide a large surface area for
    gas exchange.

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Gas Exchange
  • The ribs of turtles are a part of their shell, so
    movements of the body wall that have ribs
    attached is impossible.

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Temperature Regulation
  • Unlike aquatic animals, terrestrial animals may
    face temperature extremes that are not good for
    their life.
  • Temperature regulation is very important for
    animals that spend their entire lives out of
    water.
  • Most reptiles use external heat sources for
    temperature regulation, and are ectothermic.
  • Brooding Indian pythons, however, can use their
    metabolism to increase temperature.
  • Female pythons will coil around their eggs and
    elevate their body temperature as much as 45
    degrees above the air temperature.

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Temperature Regulation
  • Some reptiles can survive wide temperature
    fluctuations (28-105 degrees).
  • To sustain activity, body temperatures have to be
    within a certain range (77-98.6).
  • If that is not possible, the reptile will seek a
    retreat where body temperatures can be in this
    range.

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Temperature Regulation
  • Most temperature regulations of reptiles are
    behavioral, especially in lizards.
  • To warm itself, a lizard places itself at right
    angles to the suns rays, often on a warm
    surface, facing the sun.
  • It then presses its body to the surface to absorb
    heat by conduction.
  • To cool itself, a lizard places its body parallel
    to the suns rays, seeks shade or burrows, or
    will extend its legs and tail to reduce contact
    with warm surfaces.
  • In hot climates, many reptiles are nocturnal.

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Temperature Regulation
  • As temperatures rise, some reptiles begin
    panting, which releases heat through evaporation.
  • Marine iguanas divert blood to the skin while
    basking in the sun and warm up quickly.
  • When diving into cool waters, however, marine
    iguanas reduce heart rate and blood flow to the
    skin, which slows heat loss.
  • Chromatophores also help temperature regulation.

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Temperature Regulation
  • In temperate regions, many reptiles handle cold
    winter temperatures by entering torpor (decreased
    activity in daily life).
  • Reptiles that are usually solitary may migrate to
    a common site called a hibernaculum, to spend the
    winter.
  • Heat loss from individuals in a hibernacula is
    reduced because of clumping together.

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Temperature Regulation
  • Unlike true hibernators, a reptile body
    temperature in torpor is not regulated, and if
    the winter is too cold or the retreat too
    exposed, they will freeze and die.
  • Death from freezing is a major cause of mortality
    for temperate reptiles.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • The reptile brain is similar to that of other
    vertebrates, although larger than the amphibian
    brain.
  • This increase in size is associated with improved
    sense of smell.
  • The optic lobes and cerebellum are also larger,
    which indicates increase reliance on vision and
    more coordinated muscle function.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • Reptiles have very complex sensory systems, as
    seen in a chameleons method of feeding.
  • Its large eyes swivel independently, and each has
    a different field of vision.
  • Initially, the brain keeps both images separate,
    but when prey is spotted, both eyes look at it.
  • Their vision then determines if the prey is
    within range of the tongue.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • Vision is the dominant sense in most reptiles.
  • Snakes focus on nearby objects by moving the
    lens forward.
  • Reptiles also have a greater number of cones than
    amphibians do and probably have well-developed
    color vision.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • Upper and lower eyelids, a nictitating membrane,
    and a blood sinus help protect and cleanse the
    surface of the eye.
  • The blood sinus, which is at the base of the
    nictitating membrane, swells with blood to help
    force debris to the corner of the eye, where it
    may be rubbed out.
  • Horned lizards squirt blood from their eyes by
    rupturing this sinus to try and startle
    predators.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • Some reptiles have a median eye that develops
    from the roof of the forebrain.
  • In the tuatara, it is an eye with a lens, a
    nerve, and a retina.
  • In other reptiles, the parietal eye is less
    developed.
  • They are covered by skin and probably can not
    form images.
  • They can tell the difference between light and
    dark periods and are used to help them orient to
    the sun.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • The structure of reptile ears varies.
  • The ears of snakes detect underground vibrations.
  • Snakes can also detect airborne vibrations.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • In other reptiles, a tympanic membrane may be on
    the surface or in a small depression on the head.
  • The inner ear of reptiles is similar to
    amphibians.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • The sense of smell is better developed in
    reptiles than amphibians.
  • Many reptiles have Jacobsons organs, which are
    used to detect smells.
  • The forked tongue of snakes and lizards are
    organs for tasting chemicals in the air.
  • A snakes tongue goes out and then goes to the
    Jacobsons organ, which picks up odors.
  • Tuataras use Jacobsons organs to taste objects
    held in the mouth.

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NERVOUS AND SENSORY FUNCTIONS
  • Rattlesnakes and other pit vipers have
    heat-sensitive pit organs on each side of the
    face between the eye and nostril.
  • These are used to detect objects with
    temperatures different from the snakes
    surroundings.

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EXCRETION AND WATER REGULATION
  • The kidneys of reptiles are similar to fish and
    amphibians.
  • However, life on land, increased body size, and
    higher metabolism require kidneys that can
    process waste with little water loss.
  • Most reptiles excrete uric acid.
  • It is not toxic.

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EXCRETION AND WATER REGULATION
  • Nocturnal habits and avoiding hot surface
    temperatures during the day helps reduce water
    loss.
  • When water is available, many reptiles store
    large quantities of water in lymphatic spaces
    under the skin or in the urinary bladder.
  • Many lizards have salt glands below the eyes for
    helping the body get rid of excess salt.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • The amniotic egg is not completely independent of
    water.
  • Pores in the eggshell allow gas exchange and also
    water evaporation.
  • These eggs require a huge amount of energy from
    the parents.
  • Some reptiles do provide parental care and they
    may have to provide high humidity around the
    eggs.
  • These eggs are often supplied with large
    quantities of yolks for long development periods,
    and parental energy can be invested in
    post-hatching care.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Fertilization must occur in the reproductive
    tract of the female before protective egg
    membranes can be laid down around the egg.
  • All male reptiles, except tuataras, possess an
    external organ for depositing sperm in the
    female.
  • Lizards and snakes have hemipenes (a pair of
    penises) at the base of the tail that are turned
    inside out, like a glove.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Sperm may be stored in the female reproductive
    tract.
  • It may be stored for up to 4 years in some
    turtles, and up to 6 years in some snakes.
  • Sperm can be stored during the winter.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Parthenogenesis (fertilization with no male
    present) has been observed in six families of
    lizard and one species of snake.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Reptiles often have very complex reproductive
    behaviors that may involve males actively seeking
    out females.
  • Head-bobbing displays by some male lizards reveal
    bright patches of color on the throat and folds
    of skin.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Courtship in snakes is based mainly on touch.
  • Tail-waving displays are followed by the male
    running his chin along the female, entwining his
    body around hers.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Lizards and snakes also use sex pheromones to
    assess the reproductive condition of a potential
    mate.
  • Vocal sounds are only important to crocodiles.
  • During breeding season, males are hostile and may
    bark or cough as a warning to other males.
  • Roaring is used to attract females, and mating
    occurs in water.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • After eggs are laid, reptiles usually abandon
    them.
  • Most turtles bury their eggs in ground, under
    debris, or in burrows.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • About 100 species of reptile provide care for
    their eggs.
  • One example is the American alligator.
  • The female builds a nest of mud and grass.
  • She hollows out the center, partially fills it
    with mud, lays her eggs, and then covers them.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Temperatures within the nest within the nest
    influences the sex of the hatchlings.
  • Temperatures at or below 88.7 will result in
    female offspring.
  • Temperatures between 90.5 and 91.4 will result in
    male offspring.
  • Temperatures around 89.6 results in male and
    female offspring.

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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
  • The female remains near the nest throughout
    development to protect the eggs from predators.
  • She helps hatchlings from the nest in response to
    high-pitch calls and carries them in her mouth to
    water.
  • She may remain with them for up to 2 years.
  • Young eat scraps she drops when she feeds and
    will eat some small vertebrates they can catch on
    their own.

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