Chapter 15FIG 1 Figure 15.1 The unique dual jaw-closing mechanism present in all four major clades of caecilians consists of the mechanism ancestral in.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cat Muscles Test 2013/2014. Head end tail abdomen.
Advertisements

Biogeography Chapter 11 History of Lineages and Biotas.
Cranial bones Cranial bones support and serve as attachment sites for the teeth, the masticatory muscles and many oro- pharyngeal structures. Cranial bones.
HUMAN ANATOMY Fifth Edition Chapter 1 Lecture Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Chapter 11 Lecture Chapter 11 The.
What is the name of this muscle?. Posterior view.
America’s History Sixth Edition
Warm-Up 3/24 What is a derived characteristic? What is a clade?
Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies
Phylogeny and Systematics
1 Apply Concepts To an evolutionary taxonomist, what determines whether two species are in the same genius 2 Explain What is a derived character 3 Review.
TITD: 1/26 and 1/27 On your “What is Cladistics?” paper make sure you have answered all 8 questions and used CUBS on all paragraphs. We will be going.
PHYLOGENY AND SYSTEMATICS
Chapter 20 Cladograms.
Are dinosaurs more closely related to birds or reptiles? Give support for your answer. WARM-UP.
Figure 1.1 The observer in the truck sees the ball move in a vertical path when thrown upward. (b) The Earth observer views the path of the ball as a parabola.
Mammals By Myles & Clifford & Marcus & Emy. Taxonomic Classification  One type of mammal is a human  Kingdom: Animilia  Phylum: Chordata  Class: Mammalia.
Carl T. Bergstrom and Lee Alan Dugatkin
Ma.Luisa V. Cuaresma Biological Sciences Department Chapter 3 Evolution, Systematics and Phylogeny.
The Linnean system, first formally proposed by Linneaus in Systema naturae in the 18th century, has two main characteristics. –Each species has a two-part.
PHYLOGENY AND SYSTEMATICS Phylogeny- the evolution history of a species Systematics- the study of the diversity of life and its phylogenetic history.
Phylogeny & the Tree of Life
Order Gymnophiona Order Apoda if including extinct forms Extant forms lack limbs and girdles Extant forms have: – Annulated bodies – Specialized dual jaw.
Warm-Up In a population of 500 rabbits, 320 are homozygous dominant for brown coat color (BB), 160 are heterozygous (Bb), and 20 are homozygous white.
Cladograms or Phylogenetic Trees. Phylogenetic Trees or Cladograms By studying inherited species' characteristics and other historical evidence, we can.
Interpreting Cladograms
I. I.Phylogeny and Systematics A. A.Cladistics Analysis of phylogenetic relationships based on shared characters Characters may be primitive or derived.
Chapter 17 Organizing Life’s Diversity Section 1 Classification.
Evidence for Macroevolution. Fossil Record When fossils are arranged according to their age, a progressive series of changes are seen. By dating rocks,
Oral Cavity Oral cavity means mouth cavity or buccal cavity. The oral cavity structures : 1. Lips. 2. Palate. 3. Pharynx. 4. Oral Glands. 5. Tongue. 6.
Order Apoda Caecilians -no limbs or girdles -burrowers (fossorial) -short or absent tail -terminal vent -no or few caudal vertebrae -small eyes -eyes under.
10 families, 33 genera, 204 species
People’s Place in Nature
Systematics and Phylogenetic Revolution
Evidence for evolution
Phylogeny & the Tree of Life
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Warm Up Who was Charles Darwin?
1.6: Phylogenetic trees and cladograms are graphical representations (models) of evolutionary history that can be tested. 1. Phylogeny.
Salamander diversity. Salamander diversity Sirenidae two genera, 4 species SE USA elongate, paedomorphic external gills, lack eyelids nonpedicellate.
الكسور والجبائر.
20 Phylogeny.
Applications of the Derivative
Cladistics.
Cladograms.
Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.
Chapter 2 Neurologic Complications of Aortic Disease and Surgery
BIOL 3300 Vertebrate Zoology: Ectotherms - Herpetology
Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.
Daily Warm-up February 26th
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Bellringer Answer on your bellringer sheet:
Fungus-Growing Termites Originated in African Rain Forest
Chapter 18: Classification
Chapter 20 Phylogenetic Trees. Chapter 20 Phylogenetic Trees.
Learning Targets Explain the purpose of a cladogram and use a cladogram to explain evolutionary relationships between species. Describe hominid evolution.
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Cladograms.
Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.
Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.
Phylogenetic Trees and Cladograms
Figure 2: Muscle activity (% of maximal extension strength test) of the spinal erector muscles performing the core stability (light grey) and back endurance.
Phylogenetics: Attempts to show evolutionary relationships among living and once-living organisms Cladogram: Branching tree diagram that hypothesizes common.
Interpreting Cladograms Notes
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 15FIG 1 Figure 15.1 The unique dual jaw-closing mechanism present in all four major clades of caecilians consists of the mechanism ancestral in vertebrates, the masseter adductor mandibulae, a muscle that pulls up on the lower jaw, and a new mechanism, the masseter interhyoideus posterior, which pulls down on the processus retroarticularis (pret) an extension of the dentary bone. The result is that the lower jaw swings up. This mechanism is progressively more developed in more derived caecilian clades. Redrawn from Nussbaum, 1983.

Chapter 15FIG 2 Figure 15.2 A cladogram depicting relationships among the families of extant caecilians. Based on Wilkinson and Nussbaum, 2006.

Chapter 15FIG 3 Figure 15.3 Geographic distribution of the extant Caeciliidae.

Chapter 15FIG 4 Figure 15.4 Representative caecilians. Clockwise from upper left: Sao Tome caecilian Schistometopum thomense, Caeciliidae (R. A. Nussbaum); monarch tailed caecilian Ichthyophis monarchus, Ichthyophiidae (L. L. Grismer); Bannan caecilian Ichthyophis bannanicus, Rhinatrematidae (E. D. Brodie, Jr.); African buried-eyed caecilian Scolecomorphus vittatus, Scolecomorphidae (L. W. Porras).

Chapter 15FIG 5 Figure 15.5 Geographic distributions of the extant Ichthyophiidae and Rhinatrematidae.

Chapter 15FIG 6 Figure 15.6 Geographic distributions of the extant Typhlonectidae, Scolecomorphidae, and Uraeotyphlidae.

Chapter 15FIG 7 Figure 15.7 Representative caecilians. From left: Water caecilian Typhlonectes natans, Typhlonectidae ( C. Schwalbe ); Kannan caecilian Uraeotyphlus cf. narayana, Uraeotyphlidae (D. J. Gower, The Natural History Museum, London).