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Biology 201Dr. Edwin DeMont
St. Francis Xavier University
Chapter 22Mammals: Specialized Teeth, Hair,
Endothermy and Viviparity
Part 1
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Mammals
Mammals are distributed on all continents except
Antarctica, and they live in all oceans.
Some of the most distinctive features of mammals involve adaptations of the epidermis and the skeletal system.
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Epidermis
Notable features of mammalian skin are:
- Hair (with arrector pili muscle)- Large variety of epidermal glands- Highly stratified epidermis.
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Epidermis: Hair
Hair is a unique mammalian structure. The purpose of hairs includes conservation of body heat, protection (porcupine quills), warning coloration (rump patches on antelopes),
camouflage (baby deer), and sensation (whiskers or vibrissae on carnivores).
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Epidermis: Hair
Hair is greatly reduced in most marine mammals (except sea otters), as it would increase drag. Marine mammals
have thick layers of fat for insulation.
The sea otter has the greatest number of hairs per area of skin, important in insulating this marine mammal. Otters
have 100,000 hairs/cm2; compare to a dog with 9,000
hairs/cm2.
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Epidermis: Glands
Sebaceous glands are associated with hair follicles
and produce oil.
(2) Large apocrine glands, which can produce products with a smell.
(1) Small eccrine glands produce sweat, which
functions in evaporative cooling in a few mammals
Two types of sudoriferous glands :
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Mammary Glands
Mammary glands are derived from apocrine glands, and function to provide nourishment for the young.
In humans, many ducts lead from the glands to a nipple and parts of the duct system are enlarged to store milk.
Cattle have teats that form by the extension of a collar of skin around the opening of
the mammary ducts.
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Milk
Milk contains water, butterfat, lactose, albumin and salts. The composition of
milk varies with the species.
In human milk, albumin is low, as well as fat (roughly 4%), resulting in slow
growth. In guinea pigs, high albumin in the milk leads to a doubling of weight of
the offspring every few days.
The fat content of milk varies, as high as 25% in sea otters, and
50% in whales
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Teeth
One of the hallmarks of mammalian evolution has been the development of
highly specialized dentition.
Species vary in the number of each type of tooth and the degree of specialization.
Most mammals do have highly adaptive teeth that are used in tearing
grass, grasping prey or crushing bones.
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TeethSome mammals (i.e. humans) are omnivorous; feeding on a variety
of plant and animal material. They have anterior teeth with sharp
ripping and piercing surfaces and posterior teeth with flattened
grinding surfaces for rupturing plant cell walls.
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Teeth
Mammals that eat plant material often have flat, grinding posterior
teeth and have chisel shaped incisors for nipping or gnawing
plant material.
Deer (cow skull looks similar)
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Teeth
Mammals that eat plant material often have flat, grinding posterior
teeth and have chisel shaped incisors for nipping or gnawing
plant material.
A rodent (beaver)
In rodents the incisors grow throughout life.
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Teeth
Canines are typically pointed, and are particularly important to carnivores. They
are usually long, conspicuous, and have one point. They are pointed for capturing and
killing prey.
A carnivore, the coyote
Canines are very enlarged in walruses.
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Digestive System
The digestive system of mammals is similar to that of other
vertebrates, but has specializations that reflects their diets. Ruminants (i.e. cows) have a four-chambered stomach to allow fermentation of
cellulose by microorganisms.
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Ruminants
Ruminants (animals that ‘chew their cud’) have the most
unusual modifications of their stomach. These animals eat grasses and other vegetation
that has cellulose-based walls. Cellulose contains a large
amount of energy but animals generally can’t digest it.
Gut microorganisms can produce cellulase – an enzyme
that can digest cellulose.
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Ruminants
Upper portion expands to form a large pouch – the
rumen and a smaller reticulum.
Lower portion contains a small antechamber - the
omasum and the true stomach (abomasum).
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Ruminants
Food first enters the rumen where it encounters the microorganisms where it is partially digested (heat and churning help). Pulpy mass moved into
reticulum.
Moves into the omasum and abomasum where digestive
enzymes encountered and digestion continues.
Reswallowed food goes back to the rumen where it becomes more liquid.
Mouthful regurgitated (cud) and chewed.
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Temperature Regulation
Mammals are widely distributed and some face harsh environmental conditions. Most face temperatures that require them to dissipate heat at some
times and to conserve and generate heat at other times.
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Temperature Regulation
Mammals may produce heat by (1) shivering thermogenesis and (2)
non-shivering thermogenesis. The second process involves the
metabolism of special fat deposits called brown fat.
Heat production is effective in thermoregulation because mammals can conserve heat several different ways: (1) insulated by hair and/or
fat deposits and (2) with the use of heat exchangers.
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Heat conservation
Countercurrent heat exchangers conserve heat in animals adapted
to cold environments.
In the winter lower part of a reindeer’s leg may
be 10oC while body temperature is 40oC.