Bio 181 Lecture Z7

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69 Cards. Created by Brittney Van Woerkom ().
 
Term  
Definition

Mammal

Member of class Mammalia, amniotes that have hair and mammary glands

Mammary glands

An exocrine gland that secretes milk to nourish the young. Characteristic of mammals

Diaphragm

A sheet of muscle that forms the bottom wall of the thoracic cavity in mammals. Cantraction of the diaphragm pulls air into the lungs

Hair

A derived characteristic of mammals; a filamentous biomaterial, that grows from follicles found in the dermis

Milk

balanced diet rich in fats, sugars, proteins, minerals, and vitamins that mammalian mothers use to nourish their young

Differentiated (heterodont) Teeth

variety of sizes and shapes adapted for chewing many kinds of foods (shearing, crushing, and grinding)

Canines

long, sharp tooth (often the longest in mammals) that is used to hold food firmly in the teeth in order to tear it apart. Usually there are 4 (two on top and two on the bottom) They are located next to the incisors

Incisors

the first four teeth(four on top and four on bottom in humans) in heterodont mammals; adapted to shear foods

Molars

Rearmost and most complex teeth; used to grind food (humans have 12- 4 sets of 3)

Pre-molars

also know as bicuspids; transitional teeth between canines and molars; functions by crushing and grinding teeth as well as some shearing (both canine and molar functioning)

parental care

providing a nurturing and constructive environment that promotes growth and development in offspring

synapsid

Member of an amniote clade distinguished by a single hole on each side of the skull. (includes mammals)

Temporal fenestra

a hole behind the eye socket on each side of the skull; in humans, the jaw muscules pass through this hole and anchor on the temple.

Malleus

hammer-shaped small bone or ossicle of the middle ear; it connects to the incus and is attached to the inner surface of the eardrum; transmits sound vibrations from the eardrum to the incus.

Stapes

stirrup-shapped small boned of the middle ear; attached to the incudostapedial joint to the incus laterally and to the fenestra ovalis, the "oval window", medially; transmits the sound vibrations from the incus to the membrane of the inner ear inside the fenestra ovalis.

Incus

The anvil-shaped small bone of the middle ear; connects the malleus and the stapes; transmits sound vibrations from the malleus to the stapes

Monotremes

An egg-laying mammal, such as a platypus or echidna. Like all mammals, monotremes have hair and produce milk, but they lack nipples

Marsupials

mammals with short periods of gestation and prolonged periods of lactation.

Marsupium

(not all marsupials have a marsupium)The maternal pouch of a marsupial that the young complete their embryonic development in

Placenta

A structure in the pregnant uterus for nourishing a viviparous fetus with the mother's blood supply; formed from the uterine lining and embryonic membranes