Reptile
Characteristics, Examples, & Facts
common king snake
Nile crocodiles (Crocodylus niloticus)
reptile, any member of the class Reptilia, the group of air-breathing vertebrates that have internal fertilization, amniotic development, and epidermal scales covering part or all of their body. The major groups of living reptiles—the turtles (order Testudines), tuatara (order Rhynchocephalia [Sphenodontida]), lizards and snakes (order Squamata), and crocodiles (order Crocodylia, or Crocodilia)—account for over 8,700 species. Birds (class Aves) share a common ancestor with crocodiles in subclass Archosauria and are technically one lineage of reptiles, but they are treated separately (see bird).
black girdle-tailed lizard (Cordylus nigra)
tuatara
The extinct reptiles included an even more diverse group of animals that ranged from the marine plesiosaurs, pliosaurs, and ichthyosaurs to the giant plant-eating and meat-eating dinosaurs of terrestrial environments. Taxonomically, Reptilia and Synapsida (a group of mammal-like reptiles and their extinct relatives) were sister groups that diverged from a common ancestor during the Middle Pennsylvanian Epoch (approximately 312 million to 307 million years ago). For millions of years representatives of these two groups were superficially similar. However, slowly lifestyles diverged, and from the synapsid line came hairy mammals that possessed an endothermic (warm-blooded) physiology and mammary glands for feeding their young. All birds and some groups of extinct reptiles, such as selected groups of dinosaurs, also evolved an endothermic physiology. However, the majority of modern reptiles possess an ectothermic (cold-blooded) physiology. Today only the leatherback sea turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) has a near-endothermic physiology. So far no reptile, living or extinct, has developed specialized skin glands for feeding its young.
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