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1 Class Mammalia BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson
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1 Class Mammalia BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: 1 Class Mammalia BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.

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Class Mammalia

BIO 2215

Oklahoma City Community College

Dennis Anderson

Page 2: 1 Class Mammalia BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.

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Class Mammalia

• Hair• Mammary glands• Sweat glands• Diphyodont teeth

– Two sets

• Heterodont teeth– Different shapes and

functions

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Class Mammalia

• Movable eyelids• Two occipital

condyles• Three ear bones• Muscular diaphragm• Placenta

– Except two groups

• Endothermic• Four chambered

heart

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Fig. 48.28

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Synapsids

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Pelycosaurs

• Synapsid reptiles from Pennsylvanian and Permian – 300-245 MYA

• Body close to ground• Legs away from body• Canine like teeth

Dimetron

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Therapsids

• Body raised off the ground

• Limbs more under the body

• Teeth differentiated into 3 types

• Secondary palate developing

• Phalangeal formula develops 2-3-3-3-3

Lystosaurus

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Cynodonts

• Lumbar ribs reduced or absent

• Well developed secondary palate

• Lower jaw reduced to one bone

Cynognathus

Thrinaxodon

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Transitional FossilCynognathus

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Transitional FossilThrinaxodon

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Early Mammals

• Triassic– 220 MYA

• Small• Hair• Mammary glands• Skin glands• Molar teeth

Megazostrodon

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Repenomamus robustusAte Dinosaurs

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MammalsCynodonts

Therapsids

Pelycosaurs

Canine like teeth

Limbs under body

Reduced ribs, 1 jaw bone

Molars, hair, glands

Synapsid reptiles

Cladogram of Synapsids

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Basic Mammal

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Lion

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Rhinoceros

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Gorilla

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Chimpanzee

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Chimp and Human

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Bat

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Same bones, different stance

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Incissors

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Canine

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Premolars

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Molars

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Evolution of Blood Circulation

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Primitive Chordate

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FishTwo Chambered Heart

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Fish Circulation

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Fig. 31.11Amphibian Heart

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Amphibian Circulation

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Fig. 31.12

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Mammal Circulation

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Bats

• Only flying mammal• Seed dispersal• Pollination• Control insects

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Echolocation

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Smallest Mammal

• Kitti’s hog-nosed Bat• Bumble size• 1.5 grams

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Whales

• Blue whale• 100 feet long, 120 tons

– 9 story building

• Loudest animal– 188 dB• Sound travels 100’s of miles

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Blue Whale

• Baleen whale• Eats krill

– Tiny crustaceans– 400 pounds/day

• Heart weighs 1000 pounds– Size of a Volkswagen

• Endangered species

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Grey Whale

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Migrates 12,500 miles

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Grey Whale

• 50 feet long• 35 tons• Baleen whale

– Sift mud

• Endangered species

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Killer Whale

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Breaching

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Killer Whale

• 12,000 pounds• Eat fish, squid, seals

and whales– 200 pounds/day

• Swim 30 mph

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Page 53: 1 Class Mammalia BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.

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Monotremes

• Lay eggs• Incubate 12 days• Lick milk from

mothers fur• Transitional species

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Marsupials

• Pouched mammals• Birth to tiny embryo• Embryo attaches to

mother’s nipple to complete development

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Placental Mammals

• Placenta nourishes embryo

• Long gestation period– 22 months for

elephant

• Most successful group of mammals

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Placental Mammals

• Competitive advantage over monotremes and marsupials– Better nutrition from

placenta– Less vulnerable to

predators• More advanced at birth

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Marsupials and Monotremes in Australia

• Triassic Period– Mammals evolved– Pangea

• Jurassic Period– Monotremes and

marsupials migrated to southern pangea

• Cretaceous Period– Pangea breaks up

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Evolution of Placenta from Amniotic Egg

Reptile • Chorion

– Oxygen from air

• Amnion– Provides private pond

• Yolk Sac– Food for embryo

• Allantois– Store urinary waste

• Mammal• Chorion

– Form placenta to get oxygen & food from mothers blood

• Amnion– Provides private pond

• Yolk sac– Temporarily make RBCs

• Allantois– Form umbilical cord

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Mammal Classification

• 14 major orders• Over 4,000 species• About half are rodents

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Order Monotremata

• Lays eggs• Young lick milk from

mothers fur

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Order Marsupiallia

• Pouch

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Order Insectivora

• Sharp-snout• Small• Burrow underground• Eat insects

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Order Chiroptera

• Flying mammals• Elongated fingers• Echolocation

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Order Xenarthra

• Toothless or peg like teeth

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Order Carnivora

• Large canine teeth• Teeth adapted to

shear flesh

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Order Rodentia

• Chisel-like incisor teeth

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Order Lagomorpha

• Four upper incisors• Hind legs adapted for

jumping

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Order Cetacea

• Front limbs modified into flippers

• No hind limbs• Marine

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Order Pinnipedia

• Limbs modified for swimming

• Marine carnivores

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Order Proboscidea

• Tusks• Largest living land

mammal

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Order Artiodactyla

• Two or four toes

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Order Perissodactyla

• One or three toes

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Order Primates

• Opposable thumb• Binocular vision• Fingernails usually• Mammary glands

reduced to one thoracic pair

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The End