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Marine Reptiles.

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Presentation on theme: "Marine Reptiles."— Presentation transcript:

1 Marine Reptiles

2 Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
Phylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata 3 Classes: Class Reptilia Class Aves (birds) Class Mammalia

3 Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
Evolved from fish-like vertebrates Moved from the water to the land Developed 2 pairs of limbs for walking – tetrapods Developed lungs to breathe Challenge of land - need to avoid drying out

4 Lungfish – A Missing Link
Class Osteichthyes Subclass Sarcopterygii (lobe-finned) Breathe air through swim bladder Pectoral and pelvic fins → “legs”

5 What About Amphibians? Lungfish – now only freshwater
Amphibians – some tolerate brackish water, none strictly marine Extinct amphibians - ancestors to the reptiles Extinct reptiles – ancestors to the birds

6 Marine Reptiles Better adapted to life on land than amphibians
Skin covered with scales, prevents water loss Eggs – leathery shell, lay on land

7 Marine Reptiles Some reinvaded the oceans, but still breathe air:
Turtles (Order Chelonia) Snakes (Order Squamata) Iguanas (Order Squamata) Crocodiles (Order Crocodilia) NOAA

8 Marine Reptiles Ectotherms (“cold-blooded”), so mostly in warmer waters, seasonal in temperate waters Cold stunning – Turtles too far north when water temperature suddenly drops (<50°F) Get lethargic, immobile, float to surface, wash up on beach Fatal if not warmed

9 Marine Reptiles Cold stunning – Local sea turtles rehabilitated by Riverhead Foundation

10 Marine Reptiles Riverhead Foundation release of 4 green turtles Aug. 20, 2011 at Hampton Bays

11 Sea Turtles 2 families, 7 (or 8) species
and ...species2.gif

12 Sea Turtles Anatomy: Dorsal shell = carapace Ventral shell = plastron
Head does not retract

13 Sea Turtles Adaptation to salt water – glands near eyes that excrete salt (“tears”)

14 Sea Turtles Green (and Black) Global tropical and temperate
Eat seagrass, algae NOAA

15 Sea Turtles Kemp’s Ridley Smallest species (2 ft, 100 lbs)
Only Gulf of Mexico and W. Atlantic Nest only coast of Mexico, Texas Eat mostly crabs

16 Sea Turtles Olive Ridley Slightly bigger than Kemp’s Ridley
Most abundant species worldwide Indo-Pacific, S. Atlantic Mass gatherings to lay eggs (“arribada”) Omnivorous NOAA NOAA

17 Sea Turtles Hawksbill Global, most tropical species Hawk-like beak
Eat mostly sponges NOAA

18 Sea Turtles Loggerhead Global tropical and temperate
Most abundant species U.S. Eat benthic invertebrates NOAA

19 Sea Turtles Flatback Australia, coastal only Omnivorous

20 Sea Turtles Leatherback Largest species (7 ft, 1200 lbs)
Global, widest distribution Dive deep (up to 4000 ft) “Warm-blooded” (counter-current circulation, fat) Eat jellyfishes

21 Sea Turtles Migrations Up to 3000 miles from nesting areas
Green Turtle Released 9/30/08 ©Newsday, 2006

22 Sea Turtles Internal fertilization at sea
Females return to beach where they were born Lay eggs on beach (oviparous) at night, cover eggs with sand using rear flippers Several trips in one season, then not again for years

23 Sea Turtles Incubation about 60 days
Hatch at night, find water by moonlight If hatch day – easy to find water, but more predators Few survive to reproduce

24 Sea Turtles

25 Sea Turtles Human impacts: Food (meat & eggs), shell, leather
Entangled, trapped in fishing nets Disrupt nests, confusion from lights All sea turtles threatened or endangered status NOAA

26 Sea Snakes Tropical Indian and Pacific Oceans 17 genera, 60+ species
Most 3-4 ft long, flattened body, paddle tail, swim by undulation Ovoviviparous (eggs w/ yolk, live-born)

27 Sea Snakes Among most venomous snakes Carnivorous (bottom fish, eggs)
One long lung, dive for up to 2 hours Salt excreting gland under tongue, also drink freshwater

28 Marine Iguanas Galapagos Islands (Pacific) only
Only 1 species of iguanas in the sea 3-5 ft long, 1-4 lbs Glands in nose, sneeze out salt

29 Marine Iguanas Time on land – warm up Time in water – dive up to 15 m,
1 hour, feed on seaweed

30 Marine Crocodiles 2 marine species:
American crocodile (S. Florida, Caribbean, Mexico to S. America) Saltwater crocodile (SE Asia, N. Australia) American crocodile Saltwater crocodile

31 Marine Crocodiles Usually coastal in mangrove swamps and estuaries, can venture out to sea Most aggressive marine animal Carnivore, ambush predator SW Croc - largest marine reptile (up to 20 ft, 3000 lbs)


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