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Predator-Prey Interactions

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Predators consume prey for energy. Predators that acquire prey and prey that avoid predation both increase their chances of survival and reproduction (i.e., fitness). Routine predator-prey interactions elicit mutual adaptations that improve predator offenses, such as claws, teeth, and speed, as well as prey defenses, including crypsis, aposematism, and mimicry. Thus, predator-prey interactions resemble an evolutionary arms race.
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Life on Earth is carbon-based, as all macromolecules that make up living organisms contain carbon atoms. All organic compounds have a carbon backbone. Each carbon atom is tetravalent and can bond with four other atoms, making it an extraordinarily flexible component of biological molecules. Because carbon’s valence electrons are stable, it rarely becomes an ion. As the carbon chain increases in length, structural modifications such as ring structures, double bonds, and branching side...
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The human skull is composed of several bones that come together to protect the brain and support the structures of the face. The junctions where these bones meet are called sutures.
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A fixed action pattern (FAP) is a specific, hard-wired sequence of behaviors that occurs in response to an external stimulus, called a sign stimulus. The behavior is “fixed” because it is essentially unchangeable—proceeding similarly across individuals of a species every time it occurs.
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Overview of the Axial Skeleton01:09

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The skeleton is subdivided into two major divisions—the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton. The axial skeleton forms the vertical, central axis of the body. It includes all of the bones of the head, neck, chest, and back. It protects the brain, spinal cord, heart, and lungs. It also serves as the attachment site for muscles that move the head, neck, and back and for muscles that act across the shoulder and hip joints to move their corresponding limbs.
The axial skeleton of the...
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Natural selection is an evolutionary process in which individuals with survival-promoting traits reproduce at higher rates. These favorable traits become more common within a population or species. Naturally selected traits initially arise via random genetic mutations. In order for selection to occur, there must be variation within a population, the trait controlling the variation must be heritable, and there must be an evolutionary advantage for variation in the trait.
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Updated: Jun 13, 2025

A Protocol for Bioinspired Design: A Ground Sampler Based on Sea Urchin Jaws
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Commentary: What's so interesting about sabertooths?

Adam Hartstone-Rose1, Tahlia I Pollock2, Lars Werdelin3

  • 1Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.

Anatomical Record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007)
|June 12, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This Special Issue explores sabertooth anatomy, including diverse taxa and the function of their iconic saber teeth. Insights are offered into these fascinating extinct predators and related species.

Area of Science:

  • Paleontology
  • Comparative Anatomy
  • Evolutionary Biology

Background:

  • Sabertooth creatures captivate both the public and scientific community.
Keywords:
MachairodontinaeSmilodoncaninehypertrophicsabertooth

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  • Defining "sabertooth" and understanding the diversity of long-toothed animals is crucial.
  • Fossil analyses often include taxa not traditionally classified as sabertooths.