Posts Tagged ‘Scales’
Thursday, March 22nd, 2012
There’s predatory pressure in the sea, so some of the shallow-water vertebrates, seeking food and refuge ashore, gradually acquired legs, lungs, scales and the shelled egg, and thus developed as last into land reptiles which were able to forage for insects in the forest.
The process, of course, was not quite that flowing and easily traced. There is a good deal of controversy among experts about the order in which the separate innovations appeared and what immediate selective advantage was gained in each case. One fact is clear, however. Of all the adaptations that fitted the vertebrates into their increasingly refined roles on land, none was more fundamental than the reptilian egg.
Most people, thinking of an egg, think of a bird; but they are being led astray by seeing eggs mainly at breakfast. The birds did not invent the shelled egg, they inherited it, and it has undergone no important evolution in their possession. The first shelled land eggs were reptilian, and the reptiles were reptiles only when they had evolved such an egg. The old riddle, “which came first, the hen or the egg,” is just whimsey when the hen is a bird. But applied to reptiles the question is valid, and paleontologists are still getting testy with each other trying to answer it.
The reptiles came from amphibian ancestors. The egg of the usual amphibian is almost naked, enclosed only by a jelly envelope. The jelly supports each egg separately in the mass, keeps out small invaders and discourages predation by larger animals, but it gives almost no protection against drying up. A typical frog egg on land on a clear day will quickly wither. Thus, no matter how far the adult frog may be able to move from water in the course of its own daily activities, when it comes time to provide new frogs most species have to go home to the water. The sons of male frogs all over the world calling the females to the ponds show how strong the obligation is.
The egg as the reptiles developed it – which was essentially as we know it today – had no such limitation. Its smooth shell tightly shut in white and yolk. Like any egg, as it incubated it got more complex inside, and the complexity was not just in the forming body of the new animal but also in the structures required to keep the embryo alive in its shell – to keep it supported, fed, unpoisoned and unasphyxiated.
The structures that did this are known as the embryonic membranes. They were evolved by the reptiles and kept by the birds; and, with modifications, they also serve as embryonic structures of the mammals. Because they occur both in the shelled egg and in the uterine development of the mammal, all three higher vertebrate classes – mammals, reptiles and birds – are collectively called amniotes. The name refers to one of the embryonic membranes, the amnion, which shuts in a fluid in which the embryo is able to go on leading an essentially aquatic existence as it develops. A yolk sac is stalked from the belly region of the embryo, and just behind its attachment is that of the allantois, another sac which partly fills the space between the amnion and a third membrane, the chorion, which lies just beneath the shell. The allantois receives and stores embryonic waste, serving as a sort of bladder. It also has blood vessels that pick up oxygen that passes through the shell and conduct it to the embryo. The shell cuts down evaporation, but it is porous and does not wall the embryo off completely. It shuts out prying small animals, for example, but not the oxygen the embryo requires to live. For the embryo to thrive, such an egg must be kept warm and not too dry.
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Tags: Adaptations, Amphibian, Ancestors, Forage, Frog, Frog Egg, Frogs, Hips, Insects, Lungs, Male Frogs, Ponds, reptiles, Riddle, Scales, Selective Advantage, Shallow Water, Shelled Egg, Vertebrates, Whimsey
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Thursday, December 15th, 2011
A clear luster, but some genera, notably Trachydosaurus and Tribolonotus, have rough or keeled scales. Many forms lack limbs or possess but one pair; there may be five or fewer fingers.
Probably the most problematic genus has been Lygosoma, practically world-wide in distribution and having all stages of limb development. The genus Eumeces is common in the United States and includes the golden Great Plains skink, E. obsoleta, a foot-long lizard of the central states. Trachydosaurus rugosus looks like an animated pair of pinecones, having large scales and a tail resembling the head. The family giant is Corucia zebrata, a two-foot long tree dweller of the Solomon Islands.
The skinks are active, often nervous lizards. They hide under large boulders or in other inaccessible spots but sometimes take to hilly woodsides. They are mainly insectivorous but many also eat plants.
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Tags: Boulders, Central States, Fingers, Genus Eumeces, Giant, Great Plains, Limb Development, lizard, Lizards, Luster, Nervous Lizards, Plants, Scales, Skink, Skinks, Solomon Islands, Species Of Lizards, Tree Dweller
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Friday, November 4th, 2011
A strictly American family, found in the United States, Cuba, Mexico, and parts of South America. There are four currently accepted genera, all being similar to geckos in having soft skin with small scales, lacking eyelids, and having a flat tongue. They lack toe pads and vocal sacs, however, and possess head shields and ventral plates. The genus Xantusia is viviparous.
The genus Cricosaura is monotypic (C. typica), inhabiting Cuba and possibly some of the nearby islands. It is probably the smallest member of the family.
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Thursday, September 29th, 2011
Easily the largest lizard family in numbers, species, and range, skinks occur everywhere a lizard can, except in the sea. Skinks are unique among lizards in having a secondary palate. Osteoderms are present. Frontal bones distinct except in the Feylininae; this subfamily (often considered a full family, Feyliniidae) also lacks the jugal bone and is viviparous or oviparous. Skinks have movable eyelids, except for Ablepharis, which has a clear spectacle. In addition, the lizards formerly classified as the full family Feyliniidae are now included in the Scincidae by most herpetologists; this group includes forms lacking both functional eyes and eyelids. Ear openings are usually present, as is the power of autotomy. The scales are usually smooth.
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Sunday, September 25th, 2011
This small family has not yet been seriously allied with any other group, so it maintains the distinctiveness of its own family status. There are but two species, one with two subspecies, found only in California and Baja California. They are limbless lizards lacking an external ear but possessing eyelids and functional eyes. They are very thin bodied, and a giant may be nine inches long. The upper temporal arch is absent. Osteoderms reduced, the scales smooth and subequal. The head is conical, the upper jaw extending far beyond the lower. The tongue is smooth, dark, bifid, and protrusible. Columella cranii absent.
Teeth few, large, recurved, resembling those of Heloderma. The taxa are as follows: silvery legless lizard, Anniella pulchra pulchra; black legless lizard, A. pulchra nigra; and Geronimo legless lizard, A. geronimensis.
These lizards are fossorial and prefer loose soil near moisture, such as beaches. They feed on small invertebrae animals including earthworms. The species are known to be viviparous.
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Tags: Baja California, Bifid, Columella, Distinctiveness, Earthworms, Edmonton, External Ear, Eyelids, Legless Lizard, Limbless Lizards, lizard, Lizards, Loose Soil, Mazda3, Nigra, Scales, Subspecies, Taxa, Temporal Arch, Upper Jaw
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Sunday, September 18th, 2011
Eyelids well developed. Ear exposed. Limbs well developed, pentadactyl, bearing strong claws. Head blunt. The body is stocky and bulky, the tail thick and short. Osteoderms are present. The lower teeth are grooved and venom glands are located in the posterior section of the lower jaw. The scales are non-overlapping, looking like Indian beadwork. The two species are oviparous and are confined to Arizona and western coastal Mexico. These are the only venomous lizards.
The exact nature of the venom is not well known. It is apparently neurotoxic, causing paralysis, but a lethal dosage has not been universally agreed upon. Human fatalities have been few and were probably not attributable solely to the lizard, as the victims were usually well intoxicated by alcohol. In at least one death the nature of the victim, being juvenile, probably didn’t help.
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Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011
The Chaco tortoise is a relatively small tortoise that reaches an adult size of approximately 10 inches. The carapace shape is round to slightly oval and tends to be more flat over the top than domed. The marginal scutes show a hint of being serrated but not to an extreme. Even then they are usually warn down to where it is hardly noticeable. The scales on the forelimbs are very pronounced. The head shape is the most distinguishing aspect in that it appears disproportionately large and blocky in form. Another distinctive aspect of the head is that the beak is noticeably cuspid under the nasals. The color of the tortoise can range from gray to caramel to dark brown, depending on the age. In general, lighter animals are older and darker animals younger.
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Tags: Adult Size, Animals, Beak, Caramel, Carapace, Distinctive Aspect, Forelimbs, Head Shape, Honda, Honda Accord, Nasals, Scales, Scutes, Serrated, Tortoise, Winnipeg
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Friday, June 17th, 2011
The tegu lizards, also known as racerunners and whiptails, include some 240 species. They are found in the southern United States and in Mexico, Central America and throughout most of South America, save the southernmost tip. Teiids also occur in the West Indies. Most teiids are only about 5 or 6 inches long, but a few grow much longer, with body lengths of 20 inches or more. Almost all have well-developed limbs on a sturdy body. They have movable eyelids, often covered with scales.
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Saturday, May 28th, 2011
The Xenosauridae, or knob scaled lizards, are a small family of four species, three found in Mexico south to Guatamala and one, the Crocodile Lizard (Shinisaurus crocodilurus), found in southern China. They get their common name from the fact that their dorsal (back) region scales are heavily armored with rows of knoblike projections. These lizards occur in moist, semi moist as well as dry scrubland environments.The Chinese Crocodile Lizard is semiaquatic, entering the water to feed on fish and other aquatic organisms. These lizards may grow up to 16 inches in length, including the tail, and are relatively heavy bodied. They have sharp, fang-like, cutting teeth and can inflict a painful wound when they bite. Local Chinese myths say the Crocodile Lizard is venomous, which it isn’t, though its tiny red eyes lend credence to the belief.
All members of this family give birth to live young. They are rarely offered as pets and are subject to international treaties that regulate their trade. Captive-bred and -reared Crocodile Lizards are available from time to time, but their prices remain high.
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Sunday, December 19th, 2010
Snakes are clearly derived from some ancient kind of lizard, and the two are put together in the order Squamata. One of the features distinguishing the lizards and snakes from other reptiles is a drastic reduction of bones in the temporal region of the skull, which reaches its extreme among the snakes. Another is that the anal opening in lizards and snakes is transverse, instead of longitudinal as in crocodilians and turtles. Finally, both snakes and lizards have paired copulatory organs, and both have distinctive sets of sensory cells in their mouths, called Jacobson’s organs.
As to differences between snakes and lizards themselves, most lizards can close their eyes, but a snake’s eyes remain permanently open behind a clear covering called the spectacle. The unblinking stare of snakes may account for some of the superstitious fears people have about them. Snakes also generally have a single row of widened scales under the belly, while the scales of lizards tend to be more nearly the same size above and below. Lizards typically have some sort or external ear; snakes have none. In most lizards the tail can be readily shed, evidently as an escape mechanism. In some, the broken-off section snaps and jumps about in an irresponsible way. It is easy to imagine that this allows the rest of the lizard to slip quietly away from the scene while its attacker is preoccupied with the twitching tail. Later, a new tail generally grows again, sometimes lighter in color, with a different scale pattern and shorter than the one that was left behind.
The most obvious difference between typical lizards and snakes, however, is the leglessness of the latter. Although there are lizards that have no legs and that superficially resemble snakes, it is still generally easy to draw the line between the two groups. At the same time, it also is helpful to keep in mind that snakes are really a specialized and quite successful sort of lizard.
Of the two groups of the Squamata, the lizards are of course the older. They have the conventional body plan of a typical land vertebrate: four legs, five toes to a foot, and the sprawling gait of the earliest reptiles. Most of the adaptations that have allowed them to spread and prosper are relatively unspectacular changes in the old four-legged look – exceptions being the various groups in which the legs have been lost completely. As vertebrates, lizards are a fairly representative group and it has been suggested that the lizard would be more suitable as a type with which to introduce freshman biology students to vertebrate anatomy than the universally used frog. Perhaps it sounds cynical to say so, but I think the answer there is that the frog, being tailless, fits dissection pans more gracefully.
In spite of their fundamentally conventional body plan, modern lizards are a diverse lot. They range in length from two inches to 10 feet. They may look like dragons and they may look like worms, and they show a complex adaptive range through terrestrial, arboreal, subterraneous and aquatic environments.
Out at my farm lizards are all over the place on warm days. The large family of the Iguanidae is there, represented by the slender anole that stalks insects on the screens, and by the scaly-backed fence lizards that bask on almost every log or stump. This is, as the name suggests, the group to which the big tropical arboreal and marine iguanas belong, and it includes a host of smaller forms. Its counterpart in the Old World is the family Agamidae, which has a curiously similar structural and ecological spread.
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