Muscular System of Vertebrates

Muscular System of Vertebrates

Author: Seth M. Kisia

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 136

ISBN-13:

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An account of the different morphologies of vertebrate respiratory organs and structures. It explains the essence of different functional designs and strategies that have adaptively developed for the acquisition of molecular oxygen and elimination of carbon dioxide. The origins of the various respiratory systems are presented and debated from evolutionary, phylogenetic, behavioural and ecological perspectives. The book carefully outlines the interactions between the environment (the physical realm) and evolution and adaptation (the biological domain) that have set the composition and patterning of extant animal life.


Muscles of Vertebrates

Muscles of Vertebrates

Author: Rui Diogo

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2010-07-21

Total Pages: 500

ISBN-13: 143984562X

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The Vertebrata is one of the most speciose groups of animals, comprising more than 58,000 living species. This book provides a detailed account on the comparative anatomy, development, homologies and evolution of the head, neck, pectoral and forelimb muscles of vertebrates. It includes hundreds of illustrations, as well as numerous tables showing the homologies between the muscles of all the major extant vertebrate taxa, including lampreys, elasmobranchs, hagfish, coelacanths, dipnoans, actinistians, teleosts, halecomorphs, ginglymodians, chondrosteans, caecilians, anurans, urodeles, turtles, lepidosaurs, crocodylians, birds, and mammals such as monotremes, rodents, tree-shrews, flying lemurs and primates, including modern humans. It also provides a list of more than a thousand synonyms that have been used by other authors to designate these muscles in the literature. Importantly, it also reviews data obtained in the fields of evolutionary developmental biology, molecular biology and embryology, and explains how this data helps to understand the evolution and homologies of vertebrate muscles. The book will useful to students, teachers, and researchers working in fields such as functional morphology, ecomorphology, evolutionary developmental biology, zoology, molecular biology, evolution, and phylogeny. As the book includes crucial information about the anatomy, development, homologies, evolution and muscular abnormalities of our own species, Homo sapiens, it will also be helpful to physicians and medical students.


Heads, Jaws, and Muscles

Heads, Jaws, and Muscles

Author: Janine M. Ziermann

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2019-01-23

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 3319935607

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The vertebrate head is the most complex part of the animal body and its diversity in nature reflects a variety of life styles, feeding modes, and ecological adaptations. This book will take you on a journey to discover the origin and diversification of the head, which evolved from a seemingly headless chordate ancestor. Despite their structural diversity, heads develop in a highly conserved fashion in embryos. Major sensory organs like the eyes, ears, nose, and brain develop in close association with surrounding tissues such as bones, cartilages, muscles, nerves, and blood vessels. Ultimately, this integrated unit of tissues gives rise to the complex functionality of the musculoskeletal system as a result of sensory and neural feedback, most notably in the use of the vertebrate jaws, a major vertebrate innovation only lacking in hagfishes and lampreys. The cranium subsequently further diversified during the major transition from fishes living in an aquatic environment to tetrapods living mostly on land. In this book, experts will join forces to integrate, for the first time, state-of-the-art knowledge on the anatomy, development, function, diversity, and evolution of the head and jaws and their muscles within all major groups of extant vertebrates. Considerations about and comparisons with fossil taxa, including emblematic groups such as the dinosaurs, are also provided in this landmark book, which will be a leading reference for many years to come.


Evolution and Development of Fishes

Evolution and Development of Fishes

Author: Zerina Johanson

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2019-01-10

Total Pages: 283

ISBN-13: 1107179440

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World-class palaeontologists and biologists summarise the state-of-the-art on fish evolution and development.


Muscle Development in Drosophilia

Muscle Development in Drosophilia

Author: Helen Sink

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2006-02-02

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13: 9780387300535

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The different aspects of muscle development are considered from cellular, molecular and genetic viewpoints, and the text is supported by black/white and color illustrations. The book will appeal to those studying muscle development and muscle biology in any organism.


Muscles of Chordates

Muscles of Chordates

Author: Rui Diogo

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2018-04-17

Total Pages: 933

ISBN-13: 135133493X

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Chordates comprise lampreys, hagfishes, jawed fishes, and tetrapods, plus a variety of more unfamiliar and crucially important non-vertebrate animal lineages, such as lancelets and sea squirts. This will be the first book to synthesize, summarize, and provide high-quality illustrations to show what is known of the configuration, development, homology, and evolution of the muscles of all major extant chordate groups. Muscles as different as those used to open the siphons of sea squirts and for human facial communication will be compared, and their evolutionary links will be explained. Another unique feature of the book is that it covers, illustrates, and provides detailed evolutionary tables for each and every muscle of the head, neck and of all paired and median appendages of extant vertebrates. Key Selling Features: Has more than 200 high-quality anatomical illustrations, including evolutionary trees that summarize the origin and evolution of all major muscle groups of chordates Includes data on the muscles of the head and neck and on the pectoral, pelvic, anal, dorsal, and caudal appendages of all extant vertebrate taxa Examines experimental observations from evolutionary developmental biology studies of chordate muscle development, allowing to evolutionarily link the muscles of vertebrates with those of other chordates Discusses broader developmental and evolutionary issues and their implications for macroevolution, such as the links between phylogeny and ontogeny, homology and serial homology, normal and abnormal development, the evolution, variations, and birth defects of humans, and medicine.


The Cranial Muscles and Cranial and First Spinal Nerves in Amia Calva

The Cranial Muscles and Cranial and First Spinal Nerves in Amia Calva

Author: Edward Phelps Allis

Publisher: Theclassics.Us

Published: 2013-09

Total Pages: 100

ISBN-13: 9781230210742

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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 edition. Excerpt: ... innervating them, must be, in general, true for the terminal buds and the nerves that innervate them. The nerve hillocks, or sense organs of the lateral line, are said by Beard (No. 10, p. 209) and Wilson (No. 131, p. 244) to arise separately and independently along lines of sensory epithelium that either differentiate in one or more directions from certain central points, or grow directly from such points by cell division. From the deeper layers of this sensory epithelium the nerve supplying the organs of the line arises. Terminal buds and the nerves innervating them should therefore arise in this same way. The only nerves in Amia from which I have been able to trace branches definitely to terminal buds are the ophthalmicus superficialis trigemini and the maxillaris inferior trigemini. The former of these two nerves in 14 mm. specimens derives the larger part, if not all, of its fibres from the median part of the trigemino-facial ganglion, that is, from that part of the ganglion that is formed on, or in connection with, the fasciculus communis root. From this same part of the ganglion a large bundle of fibres is sent to the truncus maxillaris trigemini; from it arises also the ramus palatinus facialis, which is distributed in Amia to a region covered with terminal buds, and which in Rana innervates such buds (No. 121, pp. 121 and 123); and from it also a bundle of fibres is possibly sent to the truncus hyoideo-mandibularis facialis, as is said to be the case in Rana and Amblystoma, in which animals it gives origin, according to Strong, to the ramus mandibularis internus facialis, which nerve in Rana innervates terminal buds (No. 121, pp. 130, 132, and 195). I was unable to definitely trace this bundle of fibres in Amia into the truncus...