Heroes and Villains Fight Club Wiki
Edit Page
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 77: Line 77:
 
The ancestral skin type of synapsids has been subject to discussion. Among the early synapsids, only two species of small varanopids have been found to possess scutes;<sup>[13]</sup>fossilized rows of osteoderms indicate horny armour on the neck and back, and skin impressions indicate some possessed rectangular scutes on their undersides and tails.<sup>[14][15]</sup> The pelycosaur scutes probably were nonoverlapping dermal structures with a horny overlay, like those found in modern crocodiles and turtles. These differed in structure from the scales of lizards and snakes, which are an epidermal feature (like mammalian hair or avian feathers).<sup>[16]</sup>
 
The ancestral skin type of synapsids has been subject to discussion. Among the early synapsids, only two species of small varanopids have been found to possess scutes;<sup>[13]</sup>fossilized rows of osteoderms indicate horny armour on the neck and back, and skin impressions indicate some possessed rectangular scutes on their undersides and tails.<sup>[14][15]</sup> The pelycosaur scutes probably were nonoverlapping dermal structures with a horny overlay, like those found in modern crocodiles and turtles. These differed in structure from the scales of lizards and snakes, which are an epidermal feature (like mammalian hair or avian feathers).<sup>[16]</sup>
   
It is currently unknown exactly when mammalian characteristics such as body hair and mammary glands first appeared, as the fossils only rarely provide direct evidence for soft tissues. An exceptionally well-preserved skull of ''Estemmenosuchus'', a therapsid from the Upper Permian, preserves smooth skin with what appear to be glandular depressions.<sup>[17]</sup> The oldest known fossil showing unambiguous imprints of hair is the Callovian (late middle Jurassic) ''Castorocauda'', a non-mammalian mammaliaform.<sup>[18]</sup> More primitive members of the Cynodontia are also hypothesized to have had fur or a fur-like covering based on their inferred warm-blooded metabolism.<sup>[19]</sup> While more direct evidence of fur in early cynodonts has been proposed in the form of small pits on the snout possibly associated with whiskers, such pits are also found in some reptiles that lack whiskers.<sup>[19]</sup> There is evidence that some other non-mammalian cynodonts more basal than ''Castorocauda'', such as ''Morganucodon'', had Harderian glands, which are associated with the grooming and maintenance of fur. The apparent absence of these glands in non-mammaliaformes may suggest that fur did not originate until that point in synapsid evolution.<sup>[19]</sup> It is possible that fur and associated features of true warm-bloodedness did not appear until some synapsids became extremely small and nocturnal, necessitating a higher Ball Sack
+
It is currently unknown exactly when mammalian characteristics such as body hair and mammary glands first appeared, as the fossils only rarely provide direct evidence for soft tissues. An exceptionally well-preserved skull of ''Estemmenosuchus'', a therapsid from the Upper Permian, preserves smooth skin with what appear to be glandular depressions.<sup>[17]</sup> The oldest known fossil showing unambiguous imprints of hair is the Callovian (late middle Jurassic) ''Castorocauda'', a non-mammalian mammaliaform.<sup>[18]</sup> More primitive members of the Cynodontia are also hypothesized to have had fur or a fur-like covering based on their inferred warm-blooded metabolism.<sup>[19]</sup> While more direct evidence of fur in early cynodonts has been proposed in the form of small pits on the snout possibly associated with whiskers, such pits are also found in some reptiles that lack whiskers.<sup>[19]</sup> There is evidence that some other non-mammalian cynodonts more basal than ''Castorocauda'', such as ''Morganucodon'', had Harderian glands, which are associated with the grooming and maintenance of fur. The apparent absence of these glands in non-mammaliaformes may suggest that fur did not originate until that point in synapsid evolution.<sup>[19]</sup> It is possible that fur and associated features of true warm-bloodedness did not appear until some synapsids became extremely small and nocturnal, necessitating a higher metabolism.<sup>[19]</sup>
   
 
=== Metabolism[edit] ===
 
=== Metabolism[edit] ===
Please note that all contributions to the Heroes and Villains Fight Club Wiki are considered to be released under the CC-BY-SA
Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)