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- Lizard Evolution Virtual Lab - HHMI
Ecomorphs mentioned in the video: Grass-bush anole—long tail Trunk-ground anole—long legs Twig anole—short legs Trunk-crown (canopy) anole—large toepads
- How Many Lamellae Are on this Toepad? - Anole Annals
One of the age old questions in anole morphology is at what point do you stop counting lamellae on the toepad? Without giving any more information on various techniques or methods, I thought it would be interesting to ask the AA community their personal opinions
- Geometric Morphometrics Reveal Shape Differences in the Toes of Urban . . .
We also compared toepad area, lamellae count, and lamellae height between urban and forest lizards (C and D) We plotted these relationships as scatter plots with embedded histograms for each axis
- Developmental Constraints of Toe Length on Scale Count
We expect that the length will control for scale count in nonadhesive toepads, but in anoles adhesive toepads this will not be found This will continue to set forth that adhesive toe pads follow their own developmental constraints when compared to nonadhesive toepad lizards
- Geometric Morphometric Assessment of Toe Shape in Forest and Urban . . .
We used geometric morphometrics to evaluate how urbanization and hurricanes may have affected toepad size and shape in lizards of the Puerto Rican species, A cristatellus Specifically, we assessed variation in toe and toepad associated with hurricanes, beyond changes in area and total length
- To visualize differences in lizard toe proportions, we plotted the . . .
We also compared toepad area, lamellae count, and lamellae height between urban and forest lizards (C and D) We plotted these relationships as scatter plots with embedded histograms for each
- Worksheet Lab Exercise Anole Evolution - Studocu
When measuring toepad count, click once on each toepad See “Tutorials” tab for more detail Watch each video during the tutorial and wh en the Module suggests to watch If the sound isn ’t working, press the black subtitles (clos ed caption – CC) box at the bottom of the video
- Lizard Evolution Virtual Lab | HHMIs BioInteractive
Find the appropriate position on the graph for each species’ toepad lamellae counts and relative hindlimb length measurements Then, drag each species name to that location
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