Squamates use the circulatory system to regulate body and head temperatures during both heating and cooling. The flexibility of this system, which possibly exceeds that of endotherms, offers a number of physiological mechanisms to gain or retain heat (e.g., increase peripheral blood flow and heart rate, cooling the head to prolong basking time for the body) as well as to shed heat (modulate peripheral blood flow, expose sites of thermal exchange). Squamates also have the ability to establish and maintain the same head-to-body temperature differential that birds, crocodilians, and mammals demonstrate, but without a discrete rete or other vascular physiological device. Squamates offer important anatomical and phylogenetic evidence for the inf...
Convoluted nasal passages are an enigmatic hallmark of Ankylosauria. Previous research suggested tha...
Background: Information on the arterial vascularization of the broad-snouted caimans’ brain (Caiman ...
This paper is aimed at constraining the phylogenetic frame of the acquisition of endothermy by Archo...
Squamates use the circulatory system to regulate body and head temperatures during both heating and ...
<div><p>Squamates use the circulatory system to regulate body and head temperatures during both heat...
Extant crocodilians are a highly apomorphic archosaur clade that is endothermic, yet often achieve l...
The general anatomy of avian cephalic blood vessels is well known and there are published details of...
The unidirectional airflow patterns in the lungs of birds have long been considered a unique and spe...
Novel phenotypes are often linked to major ecological transitions during evolution. Here, we describ...
Thermally-induced changes in heart rate and blood flow in reptiles are believed to be of selective a...
Three-dimensional digital models of 16 different sauropods were used to examine the scaling relation...
In reptiles, rates of heat transfer between the animal and its environment are controlled by the reg...
Convoluted nasal passages are an enigmatic hallmark of Ankylosauria. Previous research suggested tha...
Background: Information on the arterial vascularization of the broad-snouted caimans’ brain (Caiman ...
This paper is aimed at constraining the phylogenetic frame of the acquisition of endothermy by Archo...
Squamates use the circulatory system to regulate body and head temperatures during both heating and ...
<div><p>Squamates use the circulatory system to regulate body and head temperatures during both heat...
Extant crocodilians are a highly apomorphic archosaur clade that is endothermic, yet often achieve l...
The general anatomy of avian cephalic blood vessels is well known and there are published details of...
The unidirectional airflow patterns in the lungs of birds have long been considered a unique and spe...
Novel phenotypes are often linked to major ecological transitions during evolution. Here, we describ...
Thermally-induced changes in heart rate and blood flow in reptiles are believed to be of selective a...
Three-dimensional digital models of 16 different sauropods were used to examine the scaling relation...
In reptiles, rates of heat transfer between the animal and its environment are controlled by the reg...
Convoluted nasal passages are an enigmatic hallmark of Ankylosauria. Previous research suggested tha...
Background: Information on the arterial vascularization of the broad-snouted caimans’ brain (Caiman ...
This paper is aimed at constraining the phylogenetic frame of the acquisition of endothermy by Archo...