enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Reptile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reptile

    Lower food requirements and adaptive metabolisms allow reptiles to dominate the animal life in regions where net calorie availability is too low to sustain large-bodied mammals and birds. It is generally assumed that reptiles are unable to produce the sustained high energy output necessary for long distance chases or flying. [81]

  3. Archosaur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archosaur

    Non-crocodilian reptiles have 3-chambered hearts, which are less efficient because they let the two flows mix and thus send some de-oxygenated blood out to the body instead of to the lungs. Modern crocodilians' hearts are 4-chambered, but are smaller relative to body size and run at lower pressure than those of modern birds and mammals.

  4. Bird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird

    Birds are often important to island ecology. Birds have frequently reached islands that mammals have not; on those islands, birds may fulfil ecological roles typically played by larger animals. For example, in New Zealand nine species of moa were important browsers, as are the kererū and kōkako today. [269]

  5. Vertebrate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertebrate

    The vertebrates include mammals, birds, amphibians, and various classes of fish and reptiles. The fish include the jawless Agnatha, and the jawed Gnathostomata. The jawed fish include both the cartilaginous fish and the bony fish. Bony fish include the lobe-finned fish, which gave rise to the tetrapods, the animals with four

  6. Tetrapod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrapod

    While reptiles and amphibians can be quite similar externally, the French zoologist Pierre André Latreille recognized the large physiological differences at the beginning of the 19th century and split the herptiles into two classes, giving the four familiar classes of tetrapods: amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.

  7. Portal:Mammals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Mammals

    Mammals are characterised by the presence of milk-producing mammary glands for feeding their young, a broad neocortex region of the brain, fur or hair, and three middle ear bones. These characteristics distinguish them from reptiles and birds, from which their ancestors diverged in the Carboniferous Period over 300

  8. Mammal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammal

    Like birds, mammals can forage or hunt in weather and climates too cold for ectothermic ("cold-blooded") reptiles and insects. Endothermy requires plenty of food energy, so mammals eat more food per unit of body weight than most reptiles. [139] Small insectivorous mammals eat prodigious amounts for their size.

  9. List of reptiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reptiles

    Reptiles are tetrapod animals in the class Reptilia, comprising today's turtles, crocodilians, snakes, amphisbaenians, lizards, tuatara, and their extinct relatives. The study of these traditional reptile orders , historically combined with that of modern amphibians , is called herpetology .