tetrapod$82600$ - определение. Что такое tetrapod$82600$
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Что (кто) такое tetrapod$82600$ - определение

VERTEBRATES WITHOUT LEGS OR FINS
Apodous; Limbless vertebrates; Legless vertebrate; Legless tetrapod; Limbless tetrapod
  • aistopods]].

Tetrapod (structure)         
  • Tetrapods in Latvia
TYPE OF STRUCTURE IN COASTAL ENGINEERING
A Tetrapod is a form of wave-dissipating concrete block used to prevent erosion caused by weather and longshore drift, primarily to enforce coastal structures such as seawalls and breakwaters. Tetrapods are made of concrete, and use a tetrahedral shape to dissipate the force of incoming waves by allowing water to flow around rather than against them, and to reduce displacement by interlocking.
tetrapod         
  • ''[[Acanthostega]]'', ≈365 Ma
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  • Devonian fishes, including an early shark ''[[Cladoselache]]'', ''[[Eusthenopteron]]'' and other [[lobe-finned fish]]es, and the [[placoderm]] ''[[Bothriolepis]]'' (Joseph Smit, 1905).
  • ''[[Diadectes]]'', 290–272 Ma
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  • ''[[Edops]]'', 323–299 Ma
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  • ''[[Eusthenopteron]]'', ≈385 Ma
  • Fossil of ''[[Tiktaalik]]''
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  • ''[[Ichthyostega]]'', 374–359 Ma
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  • Cross-section of a labyrinthodont tooth
  • Carl Linnaeus's 1735 classification of animals, with tetrapods occupying the first three classes
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  • apomorphy]]-based definition used by many paleontologists, tetrapods originate at the orange star ("First vertebrates with tetrapod limb")
<br>* When restricted to the [[crown group]], tetrapods originate at the blue arrow ("Last common ancestor of recent tetrapods")
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  • ''[[Tiktaalik]]'', ≈375 Ma
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SUPERCLASS OF THE FIRST FOUR-LIMBED VERTEBRATES AND THEIR DESCENDANTS
Tetrapods; Tetrapoda; Tetrapodēs; Amphibia sensu lato; Tetrapod animals
¦ noun
1. Zoology an animal of a group (superclass Tetrapoda) which includes all vertebrates apart from fishes.
2. an object with four feet, legs, or supports.
Origin
C19: from mod. L. tetrapodus, from Gk tetrapous, tetrapod- 'four-footed'.
Tetrapod Spools         
Tetrapod Spools Records
Tetrapod Spools was an Encinitas, California, USA based independent record label founded in Oak Park, Illinois in 1969 by Louie Easley Hanley and Mark Tucker. The label originally released music on reel-to-reel and cassette, later producing limited edition vinyl records.

Википедия

Limbless vertebrate

Many vertebrates have evolved limbless, limb-reduced, or apodous forms. Reptiles have on a number of occasions evolved into limbless forms – snakes, amphisbaenia, and legless lizards (limb loss in lizards has evolved independently several times, examples include the families Pygopodidae and Dibamidae and species of Isopachys, Anguis, and Ophisaurus). The same is true of amphibians – caecilians, Sirenidae (a clade of salamanders that are limbless except for atrophied front limbs), Amphiumidae (a clade of salamander with extremely atrophied limbs that appear non-functional) and at least three extinct groups (Aïstopoda, Lysorophia, and Adelospondyli). Larval amphibians, tadpoles, are also often limbless.

Legless forms of reptiles and amphibians probably evolved so as to be able to move underground or in water more easily. Some analyses suggest that elongation and undulatory locomotion (slithering) evolved first, before limb loss. The debate about the origin of limblessness led to a temporary hypothesis about a marine origin for snakes, which is no longer favored since the discovery of snake fossils with hindlimbs.

In the case of limb loss during evolution, vestigial structures testify to this change (remains of the pelvis, rudimentary femur or spurs in boas, pythons and Typhlops). The evolutionary process of transforming quadrupedal lizards into legless forms results in three main characteristics: the regression of the limbs is carried out gradually, via the reduction in their size and the reduction in the number of phalanges or fingers; the multiplication of the vertebrae (up to 600 in some snakes) induces a lengthening and a gain in flexibility of the trunk; and the vertebral axis is homogenized from the neck to the cloaca, evoking an interminable ribcage.

There are also a number of fish with elongated bodies that have no or reduced appendage-like fins, for example eels and swamp eels. While hagfish and lamprey also do not have appendage-like fins, they may not have lost them, but simply retained the form that vertebrates had before they evolved limbs.

There are no known limbless species of mammal or bird, although partial limb-loss and reduction has occurred in several groups, including whales and dolphins, sirenians, kiwis, and the extinct moa and elephant birds. The moa in particular are notable for having completely lost their wings, without even vestigial wings remaining outside their bodies.

Despite its name, the finless porpoise has two fins, and several species of legless lizards have tiny useless legs, such as pygopodids which retain rudimentary flaps. Contrarily, the worm lizard Bipes as its scientific name suggests has two stubby forelimbs which actually assist in digging similar to a mole. All other amphisbaenians have reduced or absent forelimb girdles.