Herpetology Cheat Sheet
The core ideas of Herpetology distilled into a single, scannable reference — perfect for review or quick lookup.
Quick Reference
Ectothermy
The physiological strategy in which an organism relies primarily on external environmental heat sources to regulate its body temperature, rather than generating heat metabolically. Most reptiles and amphibians are ectotherms, and their activity levels, digestion, and reproduction are closely tied to ambient temperature.
Metamorphosis
A biological process in which an animal undergoes a dramatic transformation in body structure, physiology, and behavior as it transitions from a larval stage to an adult form. In amphibians, this typically involves a shift from aquatic, gill-breathing larvae to terrestrial or semi-terrestrial, lung-breathing adults.
Venom Delivery Systems
Specialized anatomical structures that allow certain reptiles and amphibians to inject or deliver toxic secretions into prey or predators. These systems have evolved independently in multiple lineages and include hollow or grooved fangs in snakes, venomous spurs in some lizards, and toxic skin secretions in amphibians.
Chytrid Fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis)
A pathogenic fungus that infects the keratinized skin of amphibians, disrupting their ability to regulate water and electrolyte balance through the skin. It has caused catastrophic population declines and extinctions of amphibian species worldwide since the late 20th century.
Crypsis and Aposematism
Two contrasting anti-predator strategies: crypsis involves camouflage and concealment to avoid detection by predators, while aposematism involves conspicuous warning coloration that advertises toxicity or unpalatability to would-be predators.
Squamate Diversity
Squamata is the largest order of reptiles, comprising lizards, snakes, and amphisbaenians (worm-lizards). With over 11,000 described species, squamates exhibit enormous diversity in size, habitat, diet, locomotion, and reproductive mode, including both oviparity and viviparity.
Amphibian Biphasic Life Cycle
The characteristic life history pattern of most amphibians, involving an aquatic larval phase and a terrestrial or semi-terrestrial adult phase. This dual existence in water and on land is reflected in the name 'amphibian,' from the Greek 'amphibios' meaning 'living a double life.'
Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination (TSD)
A form of environmental sex determination in which the sex of developing embryos is determined by the incubation temperature of the eggs rather than by sex chromosomes. TSD occurs in many turtles, all crocodilians, and some lizards.
Phylogeography
The study of the geographical distribution of genetic lineages within and among closely related species, used to understand the historical processes that shaped current biodiversity patterns. Herpetologists use phylogeographic methods to trace how amphibian and reptile populations diverged across landscapes over evolutionary time.
Autotomy
The voluntary self-amputation of a body part, most commonly the tail, as a defense mechanism against predators. The shed body part often continues to wriggle, distracting the predator while the animal escapes. The tail is subsequently regenerated, though the replacement is typically cartilaginous rather than bony.
Key Terms at a Glance
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