Diversity of Life Part Two Flashcards

1
Q

What are Acanthodians?

A

A poorly understood group of extinct jawed fishes that are distinguished by the bony spines projecting in front of their fins.

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2
Q

What time period are Acanthodians attributed to?

A

Among the earliest of the jawed fish, fragmentary remains have been recovered as early as the Upper Ordovician to the Lower Permian.

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3
Q

What are Placoderms?

A

Organisms that bore heavy bony armour on their head and neck, and most of the body was either naked of (less commonly) covered in small scales. Highly successful and diverse taxon, but lasted only 50 million years (went extinct in the late Devonian).

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4
Q

What are Chondrichthyans?

A

The cartilaginous fish (shark rays and skates) that have skeletons of cartilage instead of bone. Includes shark-like forms, freshwater forms, and flattened ray-like forms.

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5
Q

When did Chondrichthyans appear?

A

In the late Silurian, and were diverse in the Palaeozoic.

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6
Q

What were the Bony Fishes?

A

The most numerous, varied, and successful group of aquatic vertebrates. They gave rise to the tetrapods. There were two main groups, the actinopterygians (ray fin) and sarcopterygians (lobe-fin).

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7
Q

What were the Ray-Fin Fish?

A

Actinopterygians; they lacked a muscular base to their paired fins. The fins were made of thin structures supported by thin bony rays. They are the dominate fish in the modern world.

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8
Q

What were the Lobe-Fin Fish?

A

Sarcopterygians; they have sturdy, fleshy, lobe-fins. They also have a pair of openings on the roof of the mouth that lead to the nostrils. They can rise to the surface and breath in air due to functional lungs.

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9
Q

What are Conodonts?

A

Extinct chordates resembling eels, there are tiny fossils known as conodont elements. They are very useful in biostratigraphy, but until recently people were not sure what they belonged to. 1995 South African fossils showed they were chordates. Their exact placement within the chordates is still debated; the elements were thought to have acted similar to teeth.

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10
Q

What did Tetrapods evolve from?

A

Lobe-finned fish.

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11
Q

What were the first Tetrapods and what did they give rise to?

A

The first tetrapods were amphibians, and they gave rise to all of the other groups.

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12
Q

What did Amphibians evolve from?

A

The Rhipidistians.

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13
Q

What were the Rhipidistians?

A

And extinct group of love-finned fish with skulls and limb structures similar to the first amphibians.

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14
Q

What are the earliest Amphibian fossils?

A

From the Devonian of Greenland (including Icthyostega), early ones were freshwater fish eaters and had a mixture of fish and advanced amphibian characters. Had 8 fingers and toes.

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15
Q

How many families of Amphians were there in the Carboniferous?

A

40 families; their diversity of forms and sizes make them difficult to classify. They all returned to water to lay their eggs.

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16
Q

What do modern Amphibians belong to?

A

The Lissamphibia; first appear in the fossil record in the early Triassic.

17
Q

What does the Lissamphibia include?

A

Anuria (frogs), Urodela (Salamanders), and Caecilians (limbless amphibians).

18
Q

What did the group of amphibians known as reptilomorphs include?

A

The anthracosaurs. (Amniotes)

19
Q

What evolved the ability to lay eggs on land in the Carboniferous?

A

The Anthracosaurs. (Amniotes)

20
Q

What did the evolution of the amniote egg allow?

A

Reptiles and their descendants to colonize a wide range of habitats not accessible to amphibians.

21
Q

What did the amniote egg include?

A

A yolk that feeds the embryo as well as space for waste and air.

22
Q

When did the earliest amniotes appear?

A

In the Carboniferous.

23
Q

What were the first amniotes?

A

Small in size, probably cold blooded - the Hylonous from Nova Scotia.

24
Q

What were the three main clades of amniotes that evolved in the Carboniferous divided by?

A

The number and position of holes in their skulls.

25
Q

What were the three main clades of amniotes that evolved in the Carboniferous?

A

Anapside (0), Synapside (1), Diapside (2).

26
Q

What were the Anapsids?

A

Clade of amniotes that had no opening on the side of their skull. It includes modern turtles (first group to evolve); it was never a diverse group. The greatest diversity was in the Permian. The shell evolved in the Triassic.

27
Q

What were the Synapsids?

A

Amniote clade; had one opening in the side of the skull. Main radiations were of the pelycosaurs in the early Permian, the therapsids in the later Permian, and the mammals in the Palaeocene.

28
Q

What were the Pelycosaurs?

A

The first group of synapsids to radiate. Included both herbivores and carnivores. Many evolved to large sizes - a paraphyletic group (A paraphyletic group is a group of organisms that includes an ancestor but not all of its descendants).

29
Q

What were the Therapsids?

A

Amniote clade; diversified later in the Permian from earlier pelycosaurs. Shorter and more squat that the pelycosaurs. Probably at least partially warm blooded.