- published: 20 Aug 2010
- views: 323
0:23
Me Amniote and Seek's multi cod tri-tage preview 50th video!
It will be out soon. ;D
Like and subscribe for more please! :)
Song: The bird day - Gonna ...
published: 18 Oct 2012
Me Amniote and Seek's multi cod tri-tage preview 50th video!
It will be out soon. ;D
Like and subscribe for more please! :)
Song: The bird day - Gonna beg you
100 views!
- published: 18 Oct 2012
- views: 144
4:02
The Amniote Bungalow
A video of mostly Iggy and mojo the chinese water dragons, with a few other reptiles i've ...
published: 27 Jul 2012
The Amniote Bungalow
A video of mostly Iggy and mojo the chinese water dragons, with a few other reptiles i've owned. Terra the leapord tortoise, and Ego the Egyptian Uromastyx, oh yeah and a couple clips of my praying mantis, manny.
- published: 27 Jul 2012
- views: 79
12:10
Chordates - CrashCourse Biology #24
Hank introduces us to ourselves by taking us on a journey through the fascinatingly divers...
published: 09 Jul 2012
Chordates - CrashCourse Biology #24
Hank introduces us to ourselves by taking us on a journey through the fascinatingly diverse phyla known as chordata. And the next time someone asks you who you are, you can give them the facts: you're a mammalian amniotic tetrapodal sarcopterygian osteichthyen gnathostomal vertebrate cranial chordate.
Table of Contents:
1) Chordate Synapomorphies 1:04
2) Cephalachordata 1:20
3) Urochordata 3:16
4) Vertebrata 3:49
a) Myxini 4:30
b) Petromyzontida 4:51
c) Chondrichthyes 5:32
d) Osteichthyes 6:05
5) Biolography 7:29
6) Amphibia 9:02
7) Reptilia 9:47
8) Mammalia 10:57
References for this episode can be found in the Google document here: http://dft.ba/-31eh
This video contains the following sounds from Freesound.org:
"Moog_woodenBlocks.aiff" by Feenixx
biology, crashcourse, crash course, phyla, animal, ancestry, chordates, chordata, evolution, mammal, synapomorphy, lancelet, cephalochordata, spinal chord, notochord, vertebrate, nerve chord, pharyngeal slit, urochordata, backbone, vertebrata, brain, myxini, hagfish, craniate, skull, agnathan, shark, gnathostome, cartilage, bone, skeleton, endoskeleton, osteichthyes, fish, coelacanth, biolography, hendrick goosen, fisherman, tetrapod, fins, limbs, frog, amphibian, amniote, amniotic egg, reptilia, ectotherm, endotherm, heart, bird
- published: 09 Jul 2012
- views: 71188
Youtube results:
12:34
Vertebrates.mp4
An overview of vertebrate evolution.
Table of Contents:
00:32 - Objectives
00:48 - Verte...
published: 05 Feb 2013
Vertebrates.mp4
An overview of vertebrate evolution.
Table of Contents:
00:32 - Objectives
00:48 - Vertebrates
01:09 - Chordate Characteristics
02:55 - Lancelets and Tunicates
03:09 - Craniate Characteristics
04:11 - Hagfish
04:24 - Vertebrate Characteristics
04:58 - Lamprey
05:19 - Gnathostome Characteristics
06:16 - Chondricthyans
06:41 - Ray and Lobe-Finned Fishes
07:43 - Tetrapod Characteristics
08:34 - Amphibians
09:19 - Amniote Characteristics
09:56 - Reptiles and Birds
10:28 - Mammal Characteristics
11:06 - Primate Characteristics
11:29 - Human Characteristics
- published: 05 Feb 2013
- views: 60
2:31
Crocodile Head
Crocodile Head Scales Are Not Developmental Units But Emerge from Physical Cracking
Scien...
published: 13 Dec 2012
Crocodile Head
Crocodile Head Scales Are Not Developmental Units But Emerge from Physical Cracking
Science November 29 2012 DOI: 10.1126/science.1226265
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/early/2012/11/28/science.1226265.abstract
Abstract
Various lineages of amniotes display keratinized skin appendages (feathers, hairs, and scales) that differentiate in the embryo from genetically controlled developmental units whose spatial organization is patterned by reaction-diffusion mechanisms (RDM). We show that contrary to skin appendages in other amniotes (as well as body scales in crocodiles), face and jaws scales of crocodiles are random polygonal domains of highly keratinized skin, rather than genetically controlled elements, and emerge from a physical self-organizing stochastic process distinct from RDM: cracking of the developing skin in a stress field. We suggest that the rapid growth of the crocodile embryonic facial and jaw skeleton, combined with the development of a very keratinized skin, generates the mechanical stress that causes cracking.
Supplementary Materials
Figures and Tables
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/suppl/2012/11/29/science.1226265.DC1/Milinkovitch.SM.pdf
Video: Movie S1 Demonstration of in-house developed tools for marking and analyzing various features directly on animals 3D models.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/suppl/2012/11/29/science.1226265.DC1/1226265s1.mov
- published: 13 Dec 2012
- views: 18
0:19
Snake's eating.mp4
Snake in the process to eat insects. Snakes are elongate, legless, carnivorous reptiles of...
published: 23 Feb 2013
Snake's eating.mp4
Snake in the process to eat insects. Snakes are elongate, legless, carnivorous reptiles of the suborder Serpentes that can be distinguished from legless lizards by their lack of eyelids and external ears. Like all squamates, snakes are ectothermic, amniote vertebrates covered in overlapping scales. Many species of snakes have skulls with many more joints than their lizard ancestors, enabling them to swallow prey much larger than their heads with their highly mobile jaws. To accommodate their narrow bodies, snakes' paired organs (such as kidneys) appear one in front of the other instead of side by side, and most have only one functional lung. Some species retain a pelvic girdle with a pair of vestigial claws on either side of the cloaca.
- published: 23 Feb 2013
- views: 4