Vertebrate Zoology

Author:   Nisha Dahiya
Publisher:   Arcler Education Inc
ISBN:  

9781680945157


Pages:   218
Publication Date:   30 November 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Vertebrate Zoology


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Overview

Vertebrates belong to the phylum Chordata of kingdom Animalia and constitute subphylum vertebrata. Subphylum vertebrata includes organisms that have a spinal column and brain enclosed in cranium (as indicated by their Clade Craniata). In vertebrates, during early development, three different segmental systems are established: the somites, the rhombomeres and the pharyngeal arches. In each segmental system, an iteration of parts along the long axis is established. The formation of the somites emphasizes the segmental organization of trunk. Somites are the unique characteristic of developing vertebrate embryo, which are derived from mesenchymal cells in the presomitic mesoderm. The segmental boundary of somites in vertebrates is determined by Notch signaling. Rhombomeres indicate the segmentation of the hindbrain and the pharyngeal arches designate segmentation of the pharynx. In a study, the whole-genome comparison between humans and the pufferfish, revealed 1400 highly conserved non-coding sequences, most of which were found to be located in and around developmental regulator genes. A medium throughput functional assay using 25 sequence elements around four unrelated developmental regulators (SOX21, PAX6, HLXB9, and SHH) indicated that 23 show significant enhancer activity in one or more tissue. These highly conserved non-coding sequences are likely to form part of the genomic assembly that uniquely defines vertebrate development. Vertebrates possess a circulatory system; the unique features of such a system are specialized cardiac conduction system and cardiac valves, which ensure unidirectional blood flow. Using a transgenic zebra fish line Tg(cmlc2:gCaMP)s878 four distinct stages of cardiac conduction development were identified. Other factors such hemodynamic flow and contraction, regulate the fast conduction network of this specialized conduction system. It was also found that a homeobox transcription factor gene tcf2 regulates the articulo-ventricular conduction. In vertebrates, two major skeletal systems, the endoskeleton and the exoskeleton have been identified where exoskeletons arise from the neural crest and mesoderm. In these organisms, both the systems cannot be differentiated by their differences in embryonic histogenesis but by their relative positions. The brain size in vertebrates increases among mammals and birds. It is postulated by some researchers that temperature is a critical factor in brain enlargement with ectothermic animals thriving in tropical climates having brain sizes larger than those of ectothermic animals living in cold climates. In a similar study, it was estimated that the species from higher latitudes tended to be younger, and colour-polymorphic species were older than monomorphic species. In addition, those organisms, which have persisted for a long time, may be more likely to deal with future modifications of their environment. Terrestrial vertebrates exhibit latitudinal gradient in diversity where the warm and productive biomes such as tropical forests possess greater number of vertebrate species. A model that integrates area and productivity over temperature and geological time can best explain species richness in 32 bioregions globally.

Full Product Details

Author:   Nisha Dahiya
Publisher:   Arcler Education Inc
Imprint:   Arcler Education Inc
ISBN:  

9781680945157


ISBN 10:   1680945157
Pages:   218
Publication Date:   30 November 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Dr Nisha Dahiya is serving as a Research Scientist at the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), New Delhi, India. She completed her PhD in 2014 from University of Camerino, Italy, under the Malaria and Human Development Program, which was supported by World Health Organization, Global Malaria Program. Her main interests are drug discovery for infectious diseases and surveillance and molecular epidemiology of rising drug resistant pathogens. Currently, she is assisting in the coordination of national network for surveillance of anti microbial resistance through out the country.

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