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29.3A: Characteristics and Evolution of Amphibians

  • Page ID
    13920
    • Boundless
    • Boundless
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    Amphibians evolved from fish 400 million years ago and are characterized by four limbs, moist skin, and sensitive inner ear structures.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVES

    Describe the evolutionary characteristics that distinguish the amphibian

    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    Key Points

    • Most amphibians are characterized by four well-developed limbs, but some species of salamanders and all caecilians are functionally limbless.
    • Amphibians have a moist, permeable skin that is achieved via mucus glands that keep the skin lubricated in order to perform cutaneous respiration.
    • All extant adult amphibians are carnivorous; some terrestrial amphibians have a sticky tongue that is used to capture prey.
    • Additional characteristics of amphibians include pedicellate teeth, papilla amphibiorum, papilla basilaris, and auricular operculum.
    • The tetrapod-like fish, Tiktaalik roseae, preceded Acanthostega and lived in a shallow water environment about 375 million years ago.
    • All extant adult amphibians are carnivorous, and some terrestrial amphibians have a sticky tongue that is used to capture prey.

    Key Terms

    • cutaneous respiration: exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide with the environment that takes place through the permeable skin
    • pedicellate teeth: teeth in which the root and crown are calcified, separated by a zone of noncalcified tissue
    • auricular operculum: an extra bone in the ear that transmits sounds to the inner ear

    Characteristics of Amphibians

    As tetrapods, most amphibians are characterized by four well-developed limbs. Some species of salamanders and all caecilians are functionally limbless; their limbs are vestigial. An important characteristic of extant amphibians is a moist, permeable skin that is achieved via mucus glands that keep the skin moist; thus, exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide with the environment can take place through it (cutaneous respiration). Additional characteristics of amphibians include pedicellate teeth (teeth in which the root and crown are calcified, separated by a zone of noncalcified tissue) and a papilla amphibiorum and papilla basilaris (structures of the inner ear that are sensitive to frequencies below and above 10,00 hertz, respectively). Amphibians also have an auricular operculum, which is an extra bone in the ear that transmits sounds to the inner ear. All extant adult amphibians are carnivorous. Some terrestrial amphibians have a sticky tongue that is used to capture prey.

    Evolution of Amphibians

    The fossil record provides evidence of the first tetrapods: now-extinct amphibian species dating to nearly 400 million years ago. Evolution of tetrapods from fishes represented a significant change in body plan from one suited to organisms that respired and swam in water, to organisms that breathed air and moved onto land. These changes occurred over a span of 50 million years during the Devonian period. One of the earliest known tetrapods is from the genus Acanthostega. Acanthostega was aquatic; fossils show that it had gills similar to fishes. However, it also had four limbs, with the skeletal structure of limbs found in present-day tetrapods, including amphibians. Therefore, it is thought that Acanthostega lived in shallow waters and was an intermediate form between lobe-finned fishes and early, fully terrestrial tetrapods. What preceded Acanthostega?

    In 2006, researchers published news of their discovery of a fossil of a “tetrapod-like fish,” Tiktaalik roseae, which seems to be an intermediate form between fishes having fins and tetrapods having limbs. Tiktaalik probably lived in a shallow water environment about 375 million years ago.

    image
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Tiktaalik roseae: The recent fossil discovery of Tiktaalik roseae suggests evidence for an animal intermediate to finned fish and legged tetrapods.

    The early tetrapods that moved onto land had access to new nutrient sources and relatively few predators. This led to the widespread distribution of tetrapods during the early Carboniferous period: sometimes called the “Age of the Amphibians.”

    Modern


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