anapsid
(noun)
amniote whose skull does not have openings near the temples; includes extinct organisms
Examples of anapsid in the following topics:
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Evolution of Amniotes
- Sauropsids include reptiles and birds and can be further divided into anapsids and diapsids.
- Anapsids have no temporal fenestrae, synapsids have one, and diapsids have two.
- Anapsids include extinct organisms and may, based on anatomy, include turtles (Testudines), which have an anapsid-like skull with one opening.
- The image illustrates the differences in the skulls and temporal fenestrae of anapsids, synapsids, and diapsids.
- Anapsids have no openings, synapsids have one opening, and diapsids have two openings.
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Evolution of Reptiles
- Soon after the first amniotes appeared, they diverged into three groups (synapsids, anapsids, and diapsids) during the Permian period.
- These groups remained inconspicuous until the Triassic period when the archosaurs became the dominant terrestrial group due to the extinction of large-bodied anapsids and synapsids during the Permian-Triassic extinction.