Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Comparative Primate: Locomotor Patterns

Lemurs (Prosimians/Strepsirhini)
a. Lemurs are located in Madagascar and the island of Comoro. These islands contain grassy plains, dense forests, and hill terrain that slopes down to swamps and channels. Lemurs live in the dense forests, that are dry and humid. Also central highlands that are grassy, along with woodlands and thicket.
b. The character trait that lemurs possess are that of their hands and feet. Their hands and feet have five divergent digits with nails which is a prime trait that primates possess. On their second toe, they have an elongated nail called the toilet claw, which is used for grooming and scratching. Their hands are used primarily for climbing and picking fruits and leaves for food. But they only have pseudo-opposable thumbs which doesn't allow their thumb movement to be fully independent of their other fingers. Because their thumbs are pseudo-opposable it makes their hands more difficult in manipulating objects. Lemur feet have a wide set big toe which enables them to grasp trees when climbing.
c. Lemurs hands and feet have been influenced by their environment because they need to have large palms for grasping and thumbs for holding on to trees. Their hands and feet are an adaption to their environment by the fact that their fingers are not fully opposable because they don't need to manipulate their foods or objects to help them obtain food. Lemurs get food by picking and pulling them off of trees.
d.
Spider Monkey (New World Monkey/Platyrrhini)
a. Spider Money's live in the Central and South Americas. They live in tropical, evergreen forests. Spider monkeys live in upper canopy tree tops. They almost never come down to the floor level.
b. Spider Monkeys do not possess thumbs. Their hands are long, narrow and almost hook-like. Their fingers are elongated and recurved with reduced thumbs. Their hands allow them to swing from tree tops and they have long limbs to grasp branches.
c. Spider Monkeys reduced thumbs are an adaption to their arboreal environment. They didn't use their thumbs in the high tree tops so they evolved into smaller fingers in order to a.
d.
Baboon (Old World Monkey/Cercopithecidae)
a. Baboons live in either tall trees or on cliff faces. Their habitat varies based upon water source and safe areas to sleep. They live primarily in Africa and also Arabia. Baboons live in the woodlands and savannas.
b. Baboon's hands are human like and are capable of grasping and manipulating objects. They use their thumbs and forefingers to manipulate their foods such as nuts, fruit, and flowers. They also eat meats at times and shellfish.
c. Baboon's hands have been influenced by their habitat by their knuckles and hands are used to prop themselves up when walking on the ground. This is also an adaption because baboons need their opposable fingers to eat and forage.
d.
Gibbon (Lesser ape/Hylobatidae)
a. Gibbons live in rain forests of Southeast Asia and Indonesia. They are also found in the forests of the highlands of China. They are rarely found on the ground floor and when they are they are erect and upright. In trees they swing long ranges.
b. Gibbons have hands much similar to humans with long fingers and a smaller opposable thumb. Their feet are the same with four toes and an opposable big toe. When swinging through the trees they use their four fingers to grab branches but not their thumbs.
c. Gibbons hands and feet have been influenced by the fact that they are always in the trees and that they primarily are foragers. They have adapted for the same reason that Gibbons need to use their hands and feet for maintaining their life style in the tree tops.
d.
Chimpanzee (Great ape/Hominidae)
a. Chimpanzees live in rain forests and wet savannas, also woodlands and bamboo forests. They fluctuate between being on the ground and in the trees. They do most of their eating and sleeping in the safety of the canopy tops of forests. They are found in Africa.
b. Chimpanzees hands and feet are much like that of humans. They have five fingers with an opposable thumb and five toes with and opposable big toe. They used both their hands and feet for grabbing things. Chimpanzees used their thumbs and middle fingers to manipulate objects rather than forefinger.
c. Chimpanzees environment influenced their hands and feet to be needed to keep balance in the tree tops since they do not obtain tails as leverage. This could be why they adapted to have opposable thumbs. I think that their environment of having to stay high up in the trees for safety enabled this adaption to happen.
d.

Summarize your findings, evaluating the level of influence the environment has on the expression of physical and behavioral traits. (15 pts) In doing my research of the five primates I found that not all of them have the opposable thumbs like I have initially thought. It proved to me that habitat has a big impact on how primates evolve and change in order to maintain their life styles in their environment. Although they do all reside in the trees and move similarly through the trees, they do not use their hands and feet in the same ways. While some use them to eat, others need them to hold onto branches, and they need their hands and feet to do both at times. The environment that primates are located in is very influential to the way they use their hands and feet because if they did not live in forests or in trees they probably would loose the opposable thumb usage and just have small thumbs such as the lemur.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Analogy/Homology Blog Post

1.The two species that possess homologus traits I chose are sharks and sunfish, also known as Mola Mola. Both species have fins, a dorsal fin and ventral fins. The fins are the homologous trait that the species share. They also share the fact that they use gills to breath under water. The sunfish, or Mola Mola, has a large dorsal fin and vantral fin. The two fins of the sunfish are its primary use of motion. The sunfish's fins flap from side to side. The sunfish's fins are made up of thin bones. It also has a small tail that acts as a rudder. The sunfish is a large flat fish that lays on the surface of the ocean water. It is roughly six feet tall in diameter, and has a truncated body, because of its body its only way for moving around is its two fins. A Great white shark has a dorsal fin on its back, with a smaller dorsal fin on its lower back. It also has a caudal fin which is located on its tail.It also has pectoral fins on each side. Also a pelvic fin located on its under belly, along with an anal fin. The sharks fins are made up of bone and muscles that allow the shark to have power an strength when moving. The dorsal fins on the shark allow it to move forward, prompted by the caudal fin which moves from left to right that gives the shark speed. The pectoral fins enable the shark to move from left to right. And the pelvic and anal fins give the shark balance. The common ancestor of these two species where aquatic vertebrates, which evolved the aquadic body needed to maintain life in under water living. It enabled them to have fins and gills. 2. The two different species I chose where a shark and a dolphin who posses an analogous trait, which are their body types of stream lines, fins, and flippers. Both species have similar body types and move in similar motions. Although a shark is a fish and a dolphin is a mammal. A dolphin has five fins. The first is a dorsal fin that keeps the dolphin up right and allows them to not roll constantly. It's purpose is to also help maintain their body heat of 97-99 degrees since dolphins are mammals. The dorsal fin releases excess body heat if a dolphin does become over heated. The dolphins have a fluke fin in which they use it to move forward with an up and down motion. A fluke is said to be made up of two fins since it is divided by a median arch. The remaining two fins are called pectorals. These two fins allow the dolphins to stop and turn, and act to help balance the dolphin. These two fins are the only two that contain bones, while the other fins are made up of fibrous connective tissues. A Great white shark has a dorsal fin on its back, with a smaller dorsal fin on its lower back. It also has a caudal fin which is located on its tail.It also has pectoral fins on each side. Also a pelvic fin located on its under belly, along with an anal fin. The sharks fins are made up of bone and muscles that allow the shark to have power an strength when moving. The dorsal fins on the shark allow it to move forward, prompted by the caudal fin which moves from left to right that gives the shark speed. The pectoral fins enable the shark to move from left to right. And the pelvic and anal fins give the shark balance. No the common ancestor of these species did not share an analogous trait, because the common ancestor was a land mammal and the environment caused the change in the species allowing them to adapt to living in water.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Protein synthesis coding

C C T A C A C A C A A G T A C A A C C G A A C G T C A A T C A A G T T C T G A C C T T A A T C G G

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Historical Influences on Darwin

Jessica Cedillo Anthro. 101
1. Jean Baptiste Lamark attempted to explain the evolutionary process. He suggested that there was a correlation between species and their environment. He went on to explain that if the environment of a species changed so would the species, in order to accommodate to its surroundings. The results of the species accommodations would be that the species would either develop or begin to lack certain body parts that the species needs or doesn't need to survive. The body parts that they need would be modified so that they would be increasingly used and the body parts that the species does not need would eventually over time decrease and cease to exist. http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/0_0_0/history_09
2. The point most effected by Jean Baptiste Lamark is that if the environment changes, the traits that are helpful or adaptive to that environment will be different. This point was influenced by Jean because he proposed that species adapt to their environment. In this point, it states that the traits that are helpful will essentially be the most successful in the natural environment.
3. I don't think Darwin would have been able to develop his theory of natural selection without Jean Baptiste Lamarks theory because Jean was able to pave the way for Darwin. He was able to explain how species evolve to meet needs to their surroundings and Darwin used this as a plateau to work off.
4. The Church greatly affected Darwin and his publication of On the Origin of Species by prolonging his publication. Darwin was fearful of how the Church would respond to his book and knew he would receive great criticism and even be looked down upon for his books publication.