Saturday, 4 May 2013
Friday, 3 May 2013
Birds
Birds
Birds evolved from
reptiles during the Mesazoic Era about 150 million years ago. Today, more than
9,000 species inhabit virtually every terrestrial habitat on the planet. Birds
have a number of characteristics that sets them apart from other vertebrates
such as feathers, bills and a furcula.
Birds, best known
for their ability to fly, are unmatched in their command of the skies.
Albatrosses glide over the vast open sea, hummingbirds hover motionless in
mid-air, and birds of prey capture prey with pinpoint accuracy. But not all
birds are aerobatic experts. Some species such as ostriches, kiwis and
penguins, lost their ability to fly long ago in favor of lifestyles suited more
for land or water.
Mammals
Mammals
Mammals are
vertebrates that evolved from therapsid reptiles during the Jurassic Period
about 200 million years ago. The first mammals, known as morganucodontids, were
nocturnal insect eaters that resembled modern-day shrews. For the better part
of 130 million years, mammals remained small and lived in a world dominated by
the dinosaurs. But around 65 million years ago, a drastic shift in climate
caused the extinction of more than two-thirds of the animal species on the
planet, including the dinosaurs. Mammals survived this bout of climate change
and in its wake, diversified and colonized the many newly-available habitats.
Today, mammals are remarkably varied, with some 5,400 species occupying every
continent on the globe.
Mammals display a
remarkable array of adaptations that enable them to inhabit a wide range of
habitats. Mammals range in size from the minute bumblebee bat which measures a
mere three centimeters in length, to the magnificent blue whale, which can
measure 33 meters head-to-tail. Some of the better-known mammal groups include
carnivores, rodents, elephants, marsupials, rabbits, bats, primates, seals,
anteaters, cetaceans, odd-toed ungulates and even-toed ungulates.
Reptiles
Reptiles
Reptiles are
cold-blooded vertebrates that diverged from ancestral amphibians about 340
million years ago during the Carboniferous Period. Early reptiles included
organisms such as Hylonomus, Petrolacosaurus, Archaeothyris and Paleothyris.
The oldest evidence of reptiles is a set of footprints found in Nova Scotia . Two
characteristics distinguish early reptiles from amphibians: scales and the
ability to lay hard-shelled amniotic eggs.
Reptiles include
turtles, squamates, crocodiles and tuataras. There are about 8,000 species of
reptiles alive today. Of the four reptile groups, the squamates
(amphisbaenians, lizards and snakes) are the most diverse with nearly 7,600
species.
Amphibians
Amphibians
Amphibians were the
first vertebrates to make the move from life in water to life on land. Despite
their early colonization of terrestrial habitats, most lineages of amphibians
have never fully severed their ties with aquatic habitats. The first amphibians
evolved from lobe-finned fishes approximately 370 million years ago during the
Devonian Period.
Amphibians include
newts and salamanders, frogs and toads, and caecilians. There are between 5000
and 6000 species of known amphibians alive today. Amphibian species are in
decline around the world due to a variety of threats including of invasive
species, habitat destruction, disease, climate change and toxins.
Fish
Fishes
Fishes were among
the first vertebrates to evolve. The earliest known fishes were the
ostracoderms, a now-extinct group of jawless fishes that appeared in the
Cambrian Period, about 510 million years ago. Other early fish include the
conodonts and the agnanthans (the hagfish and the lamprey). Fishes later
evolved jaws and diversified into a number of lineages including cartilaginous
fishes, ray-finned fishes and lobe-finned fishes.
The ray-finned
fishes are the most diverse of all vertebrate groups, with some 24,000 species.
There are about 810 species of cartilaginous fishes and 8 species of
lobe-finned fishes.
Invertebrates
Invertebrates
The first animals to
evolve were invertebrates. Fossil evidence of invertebrates dates back to the
late Precambrian, 600 million years ago. Invertebrates evolved from
single-celled microorganisms. Since then, invertebrates have diversified into
countless forms. An estimated 97 percent of all species are alive today are
invertebrates.
Invertebrates are
united more by what they lack (a backbone) than by shared characteristics.
Invertebrates include animal groups such as sponges, cnidarians, flatworms,
molluscs, arthropods, insects, segmented worms, and echinoderms as well as many
other lesser-known groups of animals.
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Thursday, 2 May 2013
Friday, 26 April 2013
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