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Amphibian & Reptile Notes Chapter 30 & 31. Amphibians  Examples: Frogs, toads, salamanders  Habitat: Land & Fresh water.

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Presentation on theme: "Amphibian & Reptile Notes Chapter 30 & 31. Amphibians  Examples: Frogs, toads, salamanders  Habitat: Land & Fresh water."— Presentation transcript:

1 Amphibian & Reptile Notes Chapter 30 & 31

2 Amphibians  Examples: Frogs, toads, salamanders  Habitat: Land & Fresh water

3 Amphibians  Characteristics  The first land vertebrates  Most have legs  Most have lungs for gas exchange  Gas exchange also across the skin (diffusion)  Double-loop circulatory system  Most frogs & toads go through external fertilization  Must reproduce in water/moist environments  Most salamanders go through internal fertilization

4 Section 33-3 Double-Loop Circulatory SystemSingle-Loop Circulatory System FISHESMOST REPTILESCROCODILIANS, BIRDS, AND MAMMALS

5 Reptiles  Examples: Turtle, lizard, snake, crocodile, dinosaur  Habitat: Aquatic and terrestrial environments

6 Reptiles  Characteristics  Dry skin covered with tough scales  to prevent water loss  First organisms to have an amniotic egg  Excrete waste as uric acid  “Cold blooded”  ectothermic, environment controls body temperature  Group includes dinosaurs

7 Reptiles  Characteristics  Most have legs (exception: snakes)  Heart with partially divided ventricle  Four living orders of reptiles: Squamata (lizard & snake), Testudines (turtles), Crocodylia (crocodiles & alligators), and Rhynchocephalia (tuataras “ancient lizards)


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