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      The Vertebrate Integument Volume 1 [electronic resource] : Origin and Evolution / by Theagarten Lingham-Soliar.

      By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XIII, 268 p. 169 illus., 54 illus. in color. online resourceContent type:
      • text
      Media type:
      • computer
      Carrier type:
      • online resource
      ISBN:
      • 9783642537486
      Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
      • 596 23
      LOC classification:
      • QL605-739.8
      Online resources:
      Contents:
      Introduction -- The First Vertebrates, Jawless Fishes, the Agnathans -- The Earliest Jawed Vertebrates, the Gnathostomes -- Evolution of Modern Fishes: Critical Biological Innovations -- Tetrapods and the Invasion of Land -- Crucial Vertebrate Innovations -- The Dinosaur Integument -- Mammal-like Reptiles -- Reptiles Return to the Sea.
      In: Springer eBooksSummary: The vertebrate integument arose about 450 million years ago as an ‘armour’ of dermal bony plates in small, jawless fish-like creatures, informally known as the ostracoderms. This book reviews the major changes that have occurred in the vertebrate integument from its beginnings to the present day. Critical questions concerning the origin, structure and functional biology of the bony integument are discussed and intrinsically linked to major steps in vertebrate evolution and phylogeny—the origin of jaws and the origin of teeth. The discussions include the origins of mineralization of major vertebrate skeletal components such as the dermatocranium, branchial arches and vertebral column. The advances that led to the origin of modern fishes and their phylogenetic development are reviewed and include the evolution of fins and replacement of the bony plates with several types of dermal scales. The evolution of reptiles saw a major transformation of the integument, with the epidermis becoming the protective outermost layer, from which the scales arose, while the dermis lay below it.  The biological significance of the newly-evolved β-keratin in reptilian scales, among the toughest natural materials known, is discussed in the context of its major contribution to the great success of reptiles and to the evolution of feathers and avian flight. The dermis in many vertebrates is strengthened by layers of oppositely oriented cross-fibres, now firmly entrenched as a design principle of biomechanics. Throughout the book conventional ideas are discussed and a number of new hypotheses are presented in light of the latest developments. The long evolutionary history of vertebrates indicates that the significance of the Darwinian concept of “survival of the fittest” may be overstated, including in our own mammalian origins, and that chance often plays a major role in evolutionary patterns. Extensive illustrations are included to support the verbal descriptions. Professor Theagarten Lingham-Soliar is in the Department of Life Sciences at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
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      e-Books e-Books SARVAJNA LIBRARY, UHS, BAGALKOT Link to resource Available Click on the URL to access eBook

      Introduction -- The First Vertebrates, Jawless Fishes, the Agnathans -- The Earliest Jawed Vertebrates, the Gnathostomes -- Evolution of Modern Fishes: Critical Biological Innovations -- Tetrapods and the Invasion of Land -- Crucial Vertebrate Innovations -- The Dinosaur Integument -- Mammal-like Reptiles -- Reptiles Return to the Sea.

      The vertebrate integument arose about 450 million years ago as an ‘armour’ of dermal bony plates in small, jawless fish-like creatures, informally known as the ostracoderms. This book reviews the major changes that have occurred in the vertebrate integument from its beginnings to the present day. Critical questions concerning the origin, structure and functional biology of the bony integument are discussed and intrinsically linked to major steps in vertebrate evolution and phylogeny—the origin of jaws and the origin of teeth. The discussions include the origins of mineralization of major vertebrate skeletal components such as the dermatocranium, branchial arches and vertebral column. The advances that led to the origin of modern fishes and their phylogenetic development are reviewed and include the evolution of fins and replacement of the bony plates with several types of dermal scales. The evolution of reptiles saw a major transformation of the integument, with the epidermis becoming the protective outermost layer, from which the scales arose, while the dermis lay below it.  The biological significance of the newly-evolved β-keratin in reptilian scales, among the toughest natural materials known, is discussed in the context of its major contribution to the great success of reptiles and to the evolution of feathers and avian flight. The dermis in many vertebrates is strengthened by layers of oppositely oriented cross-fibres, now firmly entrenched as a design principle of biomechanics. Throughout the book conventional ideas are discussed and a number of new hypotheses are presented in light of the latest developments. The long evolutionary history of vertebrates indicates that the significance of the Darwinian concept of “survival of the fittest” may be overstated, including in our own mammalian origins, and that chance often plays a major role in evolutionary patterns. Extensive illustrations are included to support the verbal descriptions. Professor Theagarten Lingham-Soliar is in the Department of Life Sciences at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

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