Evidence for endothermic ancestors of crocodiles at the stem of archosaur evolution

Update Item Information
Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Carrier, David R.
Other Author Seymour, Roger S.; Bennett-Stamper, Christina L.; Johnston, Sonya D.; Grigg, Gordon C.
Title Evidence for endothermic ancestors of crocodiles at the stem of archosaur evolution
Date 2004
Description Physiological, anatomical, and developmental features of the crocodilian heart support the paleontological evidence that the ancestors of living crocodilians were active and endothermic, but the lineage reverted to ectothermy when it invaded the aquatic, ambush predator niche. In endotherms, there is a functional nexus between high metabolic rates, high blood flow rates, and complete separation of high systemic blood pressure from low pulmonary blood pressure in a four-chambered heart. Ectotherms generally lack all of these characteristics, but crocodilians retain a four-chambered heart.
Type Text
Publisher University of Chicago Press - Journals
Volume 77
First Page 1051
Last Page 1067
Subject Endothermy; ectothermy; Archosaur evolution; Archosaurs; Crocodilian heart
Subject LCSH Crocodiles; Crocodiles -- Evolution
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Seymour, R. S., Bennett-Stamper, C. L., Johnston, S. D., Carrier, D. R., & Grigg, G. C. (2004). Evidence for endothermic ancestors of crocodiles at the stem of archosaur evolution. Physiologival and Biochemical Zoology, 77, 1051-67.
Rights Management (c) University of Chicago Press http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 7,159,682 bytes
Identifier ir-main,8815
ARK ark:/87278/s6p84w33
Setname ir_uspace
ID 703653
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6p84w33
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