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Chapter 31
Reptiles and Birds
31.1: Reptiles
pgs. 796-805
Characteristics of Reptiles
Class Reptilia
First animals to adapt to land
Have dry scaly skin w/ claws
Have lungs
Legs at right angles from body
Means – to creep
Provides greater support and make walking and
running on land easier
Most have 3 chambered heart; some have 4
chambered heart (crocodilians)
Characteristics of Reptiles
Ectotherms (cold blooded)
Most are herbivores but some are carnivores
Internal fertilization (sexually)
Lay eggs on land (amniotic eggs)
Provides nourishment and protection to developing
embryo
Use sense organs to detect
prey or ID chemicals
What is a Reptile?
Ectotherms (cold
Blooded) with dry,
scaly skin, with
claws on their
toes
More advanced 3
chambered hearts
(crocs have 4)
What is a Reptile?
Amniotic eggs
Allows reptiles to be successful on land
Evolution Reptiles
Reptiles were the first animals
to adapt their eggs to dry
habitats
First reptiles are from 350 mya
Did not become common until
about 40-50 million years later
when the conditions of Earth
were drier
Mammal-Like Reptiles
At the end of the Permian Period ~245 mya, a
great variety of reptiles roamed the Earth
Mammal-Like Reptiles
Displayed a mixture of mammalian and
reptilian characteristics
Dominated many land habitats
Became extinct in just a few million years
Replaced by another group of reptiles…
Enter the Dinosaurs
Late Triassic and Jurassic
periods
Two groups of large aquatic
reptiles swam in the seas
Ancestors of modern
turtles, crocodiles, lizards,
and snakes populated many
land habitats
Enter the Dinosaurs
Dinosaurs were
everywhere!
Saurischia: lizard-hipped
dinosaurs
Ornithischia: bird-hipped
dinosaurs
Dinosaurs are the
ancestors of modern birds
Exit the Dinosaurs
Mass Extinction 65 mya: the end of
the Cretaceous Period
Caused by a dramatic series of natural
disasters
Volcanic eruptions, dropping in sea
level, huge asteroid or comet
smashing into the now Yucatan
Peninsula in Mexico, etc.
Opened up niches on land and in the
sea, providing opportunities for other
kinds of organisms to evolve
Body Temperature Control
Reptiles are ectotherms
They rely on behavior to help control body
temperature
To warm up, they bask in the sun
To cool down, they move to the shade
Reptile Feeding & Respiration
Reptiles range from herbivores to
carnivores
The lungs of reptiles are spongy,
providing more gas exchange area than
those of amphibians
Most reptiles have 2 efficient lungs to
exchange gas with the environment
Reptile Circulation
Reptiles have an efficient double-loop
circulatory system
Their heart contains two atria and either
one or two ventricles
Reptile Circulation
Reptile Excretion
Urine is produced in the kidneys of
reptiles
By eliminating wastes that contain little
water, a reptile can conserve water
Reptile Response
The basic pattern of a reptile’s brain is
similar to that of an amphibian
In addition to a pair of nostrils, most
reptiles have a pair of sensory organs in
the roof of the mouth that can detect
chemicals
Reptiles have simple ears and can pick up
on ground vibrations and body heat
Reptile Reproduction
All reptiles reproduce by internal
fertilization
Most reptiles are oviparous (lay eggs
that develop outside the mother’s body)
Reptilian eggs are amniotic
They contain a shell and membranes that
create a protected environment in which
the embryo can develop without drying out
Structure of an Amniotic Egg
Groups of Reptiles
4 orders
Squamata (snakes and lizards)
Lizards live on the ground, burrows, trees or
water
Snakes - have no limbs; kill prey by
constriction or venom and swallowing whole
Chelonia (turtles)
Protected by a 2-part shell
(dorsal-carapace & ventral-plastron)
Some are aquatic,
others are terrestrial
No teeth but powerful jaws
w/ beak-like structure
Most are herbivores
Groups of Reptiles
4 orders (continued)
Crocodilia (crocodiles and alligators)
Crocodiles have long slender snouts
Alligators have short broad shouts
Fresh and salt water
4 chambered heart
Rhynchocephalia (tuatara)
Only survivor of primitive group of
reptiles
Diversity of Reptiles
Lizards
Includes the largest
lizard, the Komodo Dragon
Snakes
Includes rattlesnakes,
copperheads,
water moccasins,
& coral snakes
Diversity of Reptiles
Carapace(Dorsal)
Turtles and tortoises
Plastron(Ventral)
The only with hinged
shells
Crocodilians
The only Reptiles with
4 chambered hearts
Diversity of Reptiles
Snakes feed in a variety of ways:
Constrictors kill prey by suffocation
Venomous snakes kill prey by poisoning
Most snakes simply
grab prey and
swallow it whole
Diversity of Reptiles
Reptiles have special sense organs:
“Pit” of rattlesnakes
allows them to detect
heat of warm-blooded
prey
Jacobson’s organ in
roof of snakes mouth
allows them to detect
odors brought in by
forked tongue
Ecology of Reptiles
Many are in danger because of loss of
habitat
Humans also hunt them for food, to sell as
pets, for their skins, etc.
Some are now protected
31.2: Birds
Pgs. 806-814
Pictures of Birds
Characteristics of Birds
Class Aves
Feathers, wings and thin
hollow bones which allow
for flight
Keel shaped sternum
4 chambered heart
Respiratory systems consist of: lungs,
anterior and posterior air sacs
Endotherms (warm blooded)
Able to regulate their internal body temperature
Characteristics of Birds
Internal fertilization (sexual)
Amniotic eggs w/ hard shell
Incubate their eggs (keep at a consistent
temperature)
Adaptations of birds
Feathered legs and feet of ptarmigans
Modified wings and feet of penguins
Large eyes, acute sense of hearing and sharp
claws of owls
Long beaks of hummingbirds
What is a Bird?
Class Aves
Feathers, modified
scales that provide
insulation & flight
Wings, power
provided by muscles
attached to sternum
(breastbone)
What is a Bird?
Other adaptations for flight
include hollow bones, high
metabolism maintained by
4 chambered heart & air
sacs
Endotherm, maintains a
nearly constant body
temperature that does not
depend on environment
Form, Function, and Flight
Body Temperature Control
Birds are endotherms (animals that can
generate their own body heat)
They have a high rate of metabolism
compared to ectotherms (metabolism
produces heat)
A bird’s feathers insulate its body enough
to conserve most of its metabolic energy
Bird Feeding
The more food a bird eats, the more
heat energy its metabolism can
generate
For this reason, the phrase “eats like a
bird” is quite misleading – birds are
voracious eaters
A bird’s beak, or bill, is adapted to the type
of food they eat
Bird Digestion
Bird Respiration
When a bird inhales, most air first enters
large posterior air sacs in the body cavity
and bones
The inhaled air then flows through the lungs
in a series of small tubes
A complex system of air sacs and breathing tubes
ensures that air flows into the air sacs and out
through the lungs in a single direction
This constant, one way flow of oxygen-rich air
helps birds maintain their high metabolic rate and
generates enough energy for flight
Bird Circulation
Circulation
4 chambered hearts and two separate
circulatory loops
Structure of Bird’s Heart
Domestic pigeon
Right
atrium
Heart
Right
ventricle
Left
atrium
Left
ventricle
Complete
division
Bird Excretion
Excretion
Similar to those of reptiles – white, pasty
uric acid droppings
Bird Response
Response
Well developed sense organs
Well developed eyes that can see color
Excellent hearing
Reproduction in Birds
Bird eggs are amniotic eggs
They have hard outer shells
Most birds incubate their eggs until they
hatch
Diversity of Birds
A bird’s lifestyle is determined by its
type of beak and feet.
Diversity of Birds
Diversity of Birds