Difference between revisions of "Scale (zoology)" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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[[Image:AB_Keeled_Scales.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Keeled scales of a colubrid snake]]
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[[Image:AB_Keeled_Scales.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Keeled scales of buff-striped keelback ''Amphiesma stolata'', a colubrid [[snake]]]]
 
In [[zoology]], '''scale''' ([[Greek language|Greek]] ''lepid'', [[Latin language|Latin]] ''squama'') generally refers to a small, platelike outgrowth of the skin of an animal that affords protection. These dermal or epidermal structures form the integument of [[reptile]]s, most [[fish]], and some [[mammal]]s, and similar structures are found on insects, such as [[butterfly|butterflies]] and [[moth]]s.  
 
In [[zoology]], '''scale''' ([[Greek language|Greek]] ''lepid'', [[Latin language|Latin]] ''squama'') generally refers to a small, platelike outgrowth of the skin of an animal that affords protection. These dermal or epidermal structures form the integument of [[reptile]]s, most [[fish]], and some [[mammal]]s, and similar structures are found on insects, such as [[butterfly|butterflies]] and [[moth]]s.  
  
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==Fish scales==
 
==Fish scales==
[[Image:Fish_scales.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Scales of [[Rohu]] - [[Labeo rohita]]]]
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[[Image:Fish_scales.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Scales of [[Rohu]] - [[Labeo rohita]]]]
  
Most [[fish]] has scales, which can be bony or non-bony. Extant agnathans (hagfish and lampreys) are scaleless, while [[shark]]s and their relatives in [[Chondrichthyes]] have dentinal placoid scales termed denticles, and [[bony fish]] (class or superclass [[Osteichthyes]]) have bony scales (Lagler et al. 1962). The bony fish are the largest class of vertebrates in existence today, with over 26,000 species, and they comprise over 95% of all fish species.  
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Most [[fish]] has scales, which can be bony or non-bony. Extant agnathans (hagfish and lampreys) are scaleless, while [[shark]]s and their relatives in [[Chondrichthyes]] have dentinal placoid scales termed denticles, and [[bony fish]] (class or superclass [[Osteichthyes]]) have bony scales (Lagler et al. 1962). The bony fish are the largest class of vertebrates in existence today, with over 26,000 species, and they comprise over 95% of all fish species. These scales are formed in the skin membrane and are dermal ossifications rather than epidermal.
  
 
Like the lampreys in Agnatha, the freshwater catfishes and some sticklebacks are scaleless among the bony fish (Lagler et al. 1962). Some other bony fish are nearly scaleless, such as the paddlefish (''Polyodon'') and the freshwater swordbill (''Psephurus'').  
 
Like the lampreys in Agnatha, the freshwater catfishes and some sticklebacks are scaleless among the bony fish (Lagler et al. 1962). Some other bony fish are nearly scaleless, such as the paddlefish (''Polyodon'') and the freshwater swordbill (''Psephurus'').  
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====Placoid scales====
 
====Placoid scales====
Placoid scales or denticles are small outgrowths that cover the skin of many [[cartilaginous fish]]. The cartilaginous fishes or Chondrichthyes are a major class of jawed fish that includes the sharks, rays, and skates, and whose skeleton is characterized by rubbery cartilage, which is very light and flexible, rather than bone, as in the bony fishes (class Osteichthyes]]. The placoid scales are similar in structure to [[tooth|teeth]], and teeth may have evolved from denticle-like structures in primitive fish. The placoid scales in sharks are formed of dentine with dermal papillae located in the core. These scales develop from the dermal layer of the skin, which is in contrast to the epidermal development seen in the elasmoid scales of tetrapods. The shape of denticle varies from species to species and can be used in identification. Shark skin is covered in denticles, and can therefore be as rough as sandpaper.  
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Placoid scales or denticles are small outgrowths that cover the skin of many [[cartilaginous fish]]. The cartilaginous fishes or Chondrichthyes are a major class of jawed fish that includes the sharks, rays, and skates, and whose skeleton is characterized by rubbery cartilage, which is very light and flexible, rather than bone, as in the bony fishes (class Osteichthyes]]. The placoid scales are similar in structure to [[tooth|teeth]], and teeth may have evolved from denticle-like structures in primitive fish. The placoid scales in sharks are formed of dentine with dermal papillae located in the core. These scales develop from the dermal layer of the skin, which is in contrast to the epidermal development seen in the elasmoid scales of tetrapods. The shape of denticle varies from species to species and can be used in identification. Shark skin is covered in denticles, and can therefore be as rough as sandpaper.
 
 
  
 
====Non-placoid scales====
 
====Non-placoid scales====
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* ''Cosmoid scales''. Cosmoid scales have a harder, thinner outer layer than placoid scales and have a slighly different crystallographic makeup from the enamel of placoid scales ((Lagler et al. 1962)). The inner layer of the scale is made of [[lamellar]] bone. On top of this lies a layer of spongy or [[Blood vessel|vascular]] bone (a perforate bony substance termed isopedine) and then a layer of hard, non-cellular,[[dentine]]-like material called [[cosmine]]. The upper surface is hard, non-cellular [[keratin]]. True cosmoid scales can only be found on the extinct [[Crossopterygian]]s. The [[coelacanth]] has modified cosmoid scales that lack [[cosmine]] and are thinner than true cosmoid scales.
 
* ''Cosmoid scales''. Cosmoid scales have a harder, thinner outer layer than placoid scales and have a slighly different crystallographic makeup from the enamel of placoid scales ((Lagler et al. 1962)). The inner layer of the scale is made of [[lamellar]] bone. On top of this lies a layer of spongy or [[Blood vessel|vascular]] bone (a perforate bony substance termed isopedine) and then a layer of hard, non-cellular,[[dentine]]-like material called [[cosmine]]. The upper surface is hard, non-cellular [[keratin]]. True cosmoid scales can only be found on the extinct [[Crossopterygian]]s. The [[coelacanth]] has modified cosmoid scales that lack [[cosmine]] and are thinner than true cosmoid scales.
 
* ''Ganoid scales''. Ganoid scales are similar to cosmoid scales, but a layer of [[ganoin]], a hard inorganic salt substance, lies over the cosmine-like layer and under the enamel. The innermost lamellar bony layer is isopdine (Lagler et al. 1962). They are diamond-shaped, shiny, and hard. Ganoid scales can be found on [[gar]]s (family [[Lepisosteidae]]), where they cover the entire body, as well as on [[bichir]]s and reedfishes (family [[Polypteridae]]). They are also present in rhombic shape on the tail of sturgeons and paddlefishes.
 
* ''Ganoid scales''. Ganoid scales are similar to cosmoid scales, but a layer of [[ganoin]], a hard inorganic salt substance, lies over the cosmine-like layer and under the enamel. The innermost lamellar bony layer is isopdine (Lagler et al. 1962). They are diamond-shaped, shiny, and hard. Ganoid scales can be found on [[gar]]s (family [[Lepisosteidae]]), where they cover the entire body, as well as on [[bichir]]s and reedfishes (family [[Polypteridae]]). They are also present in rhombic shape on the tail of sturgeons and paddlefishes.
*''Leptoid scales''. Leptoid scales are found on the higher [[bony fishe]]s and come in two forms, ctenoid and cycloid scales.
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*''Leptoid scales''. Leptoid scales or bony-ridge scales are typically thin and translucent and lack the dense enameloid and dentinal layers of the other three kinds of scales (Lagler et al. 1962). The outer surface is marked by bnoy ridges that alternate with valley-like depressions, while the inter part is composed of layers of criss-crossing fibrous [[connective tissue]] (Lagler et al. 1962). They are found on the higher [[bony fish]]es ([[Osteichthyes]]) and come in two forms, ctenoid and cycloid scales.
**''Cycloid scales''. Cycloid scales have a smooth outer edge, and are most common on more primitive fish with soft fin rays, such as [[salmon]] and [[carp]].  
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**''Cycloid scales''. Cycloid scales have a smooth outer edge and are most common on more primitive fish with soft fin rays, such as [[salmon]] and [[carp]].  
 
**''Ctenoid scales''. Ctenoid scales have a toothed outer edge, and are usually found on more derived fishes with spiny fin rays, such as [[Bass (fish)|bass]] and [[crappie]].  
 
**''Ctenoid scales''. Ctenoid scales have a toothed outer edge, and are usually found on more derived fishes with spiny fin rays, such as [[Bass (fish)|bass]] and [[crappie]].  
  
As they grow, cycloid and ctenoid scales add concentric layers. The scales of bony fishes are laid so as to overlap in a head-to-tail direction, a little like roof tiles, allowing a smoother flow of water over the body and therefore reducing [[Drag (physics)|drag]].
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As they grow, cycloid and ctenoid scales add concentric layers. The scales of bony fishes are laid so as to overlap in a head-to-tail direction, a little like roof tiles, allowing a smoother flow of water over the body and therefore reducing drag.
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Fish scales are useful to [[ichthyology|ichthyologists]] for classification of fish, determining the life history of a fish, and for understanding the relatedness of lineages, particularly since even [[fossil]] scales can be examined (Lagler et al. 1962). EFor example, in the Atlantic salmon (''Salmo salar'') scales can reveal how old a fish was when it went to sea, when it first spawned, and how many times it spawned (Lagler et al. 1962). Examination of scales can also help in identifying what fish have been consumed by predators in a study of their food habits.
  
 
==Reptilian scales==
 
==Reptilian scales==
[[Reptile]] scale types include: cycloid, granular (which appear bumpy), and keeled (which have a center ridge).
 
  
[[Image:Ahaetulla_head.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Elaborately shaped scales on the head of a '''Vine snake''', ''[[Ahaetulla nasuta]]''.]]
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Reptiles are typified by horny scales or scutes that tend to develop embryologically as an outgrowth of epidermal tissues and sometimes include dermal ossifications. A ''scute'' or ''scutum'' is a horny, [[chitin]]ous, or bony external plate or scale, as on the shell of a [[turtle]] or the skin of [[crocodile]]s. The term scute is sometimes used as an alternative to the term scale in describing snakes or fish like sturgeons.  Unlike the scales of bony fish, they are derived from [[Epidermis (skin)|epidermis]].
'''[[Scale (zoology)|Scale]]s''' are important for '''[[snake]]s''' - they are deemed to be [[reptile]]s by the presence of scales, amongst other things.<ref name = "Boulenger_1"> Boulenger, George A. 1890 The Fauna of British India. page 1</ref> Snakes are entirely covered with scales or [[scutes]] of various shapes and sizes. Scales protect the body of the snake, aid it in locomotion, allow moisture to be retained within and give simple or complex colouration patterns which help in camouflage and anti-predator display.  
 
  
Scales have been modified over time to serve other functions such as 'eyelash' fringes, and protective covers for the eyes<ref name="INSnakes"> [http://herpcenter.ipfw.edu/outreach/INherps/INsnakes.htm The Snakes of Indiana] at [http://herpcenter.ipfw.edu/ The Centre for Reptile and Amphibian Conservation and Management, Indiana]. Accessed 14 August 2006.</ref> with the most distinctive modification being the ''rattle'' of the North American rattlesnakes.  
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[[Reptile]] scale types include cycloid, granular (which appear bumpy), and keeled (which have a center ridge).
  
Snakes periodically moult their scaly skins and acquire new ones. This permits replacement of old worn out skin, disposal of parasites and is thought to allow the snake to grow. The arrangement of scales is used to identify snake species. <!-- It permits creation of simple keys which would identify the snake and help distinguish venomous from non-venomous snakes. comment - Remove this since it suggests that there are special scales that separate venomous from non-venomous when in fact the idea is that this is a result of species identification which is already mentioned. Similarly with genera... are there special genus specific scales ? Even if so, this is already covered . —>
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===Snake scales===
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[[Image:Ahaetulla_head.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Elaborately shaped scales on the head of a '''Vine snake''', ''[[Ahaetulla nasuta]]''.]]
 +
Snakes are entirely covered with scales or [[scutes]] of various shapes and sizes. Scales protect the body of the snake, aid it in locomotion, allow moisture to be retained within, and give simple or complex coloration patterns, which help in camouflage and anti-predator display.  
  
Snakes have been part and parcel of culture and religion. Vivid scale patterns have been thought to have influenced early art. The use of snake-skin in manufacture of purses, apparel and other articles led to large-scale killing of snakes, giving rise to advocacy for use of artificial snake-skin. Snake scales are also to be found as motifs in fiction, video games and films.
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Snakes periodically [[molt]] their scaly skins and acquire new ones. This permits replacement of old worn out skin, disposal of parasites and is thought to allow the snake to grow. The arrangement of scales is used in identification of snake species.  
  
===Functions of snake scales===
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Snakes have been part and parcel of culture and religion. Vivid scale patterns have been thought to have influenced early art. The use of snake-skin in manufacture of purses, apparel and other articles led to large-scale killing of snakes, giving rise to advocacy for use of artificial snake-skin. Snake scales also are to be found as motifs in fiction, video games and films.
The [[dorsal_scales|dorsal (or back) scales]] of a snake protect it from damage due to friction as it moves.<ref name="Encyclopaedia vol 5">[http://science.jrank.org/pages/6207/Snakes.html|Snakes - Evolution, Snakes And Humans - Appearance and behavior] of [http://science.jrank.org/|Science Encyclopaedia volume 5].</ref> The ventral (or belly) scales, which are large and oblong, protect the soft underside of the snake and also grip surfaces allowing the snake to move. The large scales (called 'shields') on the snake's head play a similar role.<ref name="RSSlimy"/>
 
  
Snake skin and scales help retain moisture in the animal's body.<ref name="Kentucky2"> [http://www.kentuckysnakes.org/publication.cfm Kentucky Snake Publication (pdf). University of Kentucky]</ref>
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A snake's scaled integument is formed by the differentiation of the snake's underlying skin or [[epidermis]]. Snake scales are made of [[keratin]], the same material of which hair and fingernails are made. A snake is born with a fixed number of scales. The scales do not increase in number as the snake matures nor are do they reduce in number over time.
  
Snakes pick up vibrations from both the air and the ground, and can differentiate the two, using a complex system of internal resonances (perhaps involving the scales) [http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/abstract/54/2/349].
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Each snake scale has an outer surface  and an inner surface. The skin from the inner surface hinges back and forms a free area which overlaps the base of the next scale that emerges below this scale (Greene 1997). Snakes have smaller scales around the mouth and sides of the body which allow expansion so that a snake can consume prey of much larger width than itself.  
  
===Morphology of snake scales===
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Snake scales are of different shapes and sizes.  Snake scales may be granular, have a smooth surface, or have a longitudinal ridge or keel on it. Often, snake scales have pits, tubercles, and other fine structures which may be visible to the naked eye or under a microscope. Snake scales may be modified to form fringes, as in the case of the Eyelash Bush Viper, ''[[Atheris ceratophora]]'', or rattles as in the case of the [[rattlesnake]]s of [[North America]] (Greene 1997). Certain primitive snakes such as [[boa]]s, [[python]]s, and certain advanced snakes such as [[viper]]s have small scales arranged irregularly on the head. Other more advanced snakes have special large symmetrical scales on the head called ''shields'' or ''plates'' (Greene 1997). Another example of differentiation of snake [[scale]]s is a transparent scale called the ''brille'' or ''spectacle'', which covers the eye of the snake.  
[[Image:AB Keeled Scales.jpg|thumb|225px|left|Keeled scales of Buff-striped keelback ''Amphiesma stolata'', a Colubrid.]]
 
Snake scales are formed by the differentiation of the snake's underlying skin or [[epidermis]].[http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstract/110429759/ABSTRACT?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0] Each scale has an outer surface  and an inner surface. The skin from the inner surface hinges back and forms a free area which overlaps the base of the next scale which emerges below this scale.<ref name = "Greene_pg22"> Greene, Harry W. Snakes - The Evolution of Mystery in Nature, page 22</ref>
 
  
A snake is born with a fixed number of scales. The scales do not increase in number as the snake matures nor are do they reduce in number over time. The scales however grow larger in size and may change shape with each [[moult]].<ref name="RSSlimy">[http://www.szgdocent.org/resource/rr/c-slimy.htm Are snakes slimy?] at [http://www.szgdocent.org/ Singapore Zoological Garden's Docent]. Accessed 14 August 2006.</ref>
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==Arthropod scales==
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[[Image:Microphoto-butterflywing.jpg|thumb|Scales on the wing of [[butterfly|butterflies]] give the colors]]
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[[Butterfly]] and [[moth]] species of the order [[Lepidoptera]] ([[Greek language|Greek]] "scale-winged") have membranous wings covered in delicate, powdery scales. Each scale consists of a series of tiny stacked platelets of organic material.
  
Snakes have smaller scales around the mouth and sides of the body which allow expansion so that a snake can consume prey of much larger width than itself.  
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The coloration of butterfly wings is created by these minute scales. These scales are pigmented with melanins that give them blacks and browns, but blues, greens, reds, and iridescence are usually created not by pigments but the microstructure of the scales. This structural coloration is the result of coherent scattering of light by the [[photonic crystal]] nature of the scales (Mason 1927; Vukusic et al. 2000; Prum et al. 2006).  Because the thickness of the platelets is on the same order as the [[wavelength]] of [[visible light]], the plates lead to structural coloration and [[iridescence]] through the physical phenomenon described as [[thin-film optics]].
  
Snake scales are made of [[keratin]], the same material that hair and fingernails are made of.<ref name="RSSlimy"/>  They are cool and dry to touch.<ref name="SDNHM-HerpFAQ">[http://www.sdnhm.org/research/herpetology/herpfaq.html Herpetology FAQ] at [http://www.sdnhm.org/ San Diego Museum of Natural History]. Accessed 14 August 2006.</ref>
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==References==
 
 
====Surface and shape====
 
Snake scales are of different shapes and sizes.  Snake scales may be granular, have a smooth surface or have a longitudinal ridge or keel on it. Often, snake scales have pits, tubercles and other fine structures which may be visible to the naked eye or under a microscope. Snake scales may be modified to form fringes, as in the case of the Eyelash Bush Viper, ''[[Atheris ceratophora]]'', or rattles as in the case of the [[rattlesnake]]s of [[North America]].<ref name="Greene_pg23"> Greene, Harry W. Snakes - The Evolution of Mystery in Nature, page 23</ref>
 
  
Certain primitive snakes such as [[boa]]s, [[python]]s and certain advanced snakes such as [[viper]]s have small scales arranged irregularly on the head. Other more advanced snakes have special large symmetrical scales on the head called ''shields'' or ''plates''.<ref name="Greene_pg22"/>
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* Greene, H. W. 1997. ''Snakes: The Evolution of Mystery in Nature''. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520200144.
  
Snake scales occur in variety of shapes. They may be :
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* Kardong, K. V. 1998. ''Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution'', 2nd edition. McGraw-Hill. ISBN  007115356X
[[Image:Leptotyphlops humilis - head.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Cycloid scales on ''Leptotyphlops humilis''.]]
 
* cycloid as in Family ''[[Typhlopidae]]''.<ref name="Boulenger_234"> Boulenger, George A. The Fauna of British India... page 234</ref>
 
* long and pointed with pointed tips, as in the case of the Green Vine Snake ''[[Ahaetulla nasuta]]''.<ref name="Smith3_6"> Smith, Malcolm A. Fauna of British India...Vol III - Serpentes, page 6</ref>
 
* broad and leaf-like, as in the case of green pit vipers ''[[Trimeresurus]]'' spp.<ref name="Smith3_6"/>
 
* as broad as they are long, for example, as in Rat snake ''[[Ptyas mucosus]]''.<ref name="Smith3_6"/>
 
* [[Keeled scales|keeled]] weakly or strongly as in the case of the Buff-striped keelback ''[[Amphiesma stolatum]]''.<ref name="Smith3_6"/>
 
* with bidentate tips as in some spp of ''[[Natrix]]''.<ref name="Smith3_6"/>
 
* spinelike, juxtaposed as in the Short Seasnake ''[[Lapemis curtus]]''.<ref name="Greene_pg22"/>
 
* large, non-overlapping knobs as in the case of the Javan Mudsnake ''[[Xenodermis javanicus]]''.<ref name="Greene_pg22"/>
 
  
Another example of differentiation of snake [[scale]]s is a transparent scale called the ''brille'' or ''spectacle'' which covers the eye of the snake. The brille is often referred to as a fused eyelid. It is shed as part of the old skin during [[moult]]ing.<ref name="INSnakes"/>
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* Lagler, K. F., J. E. Bardach, and R. R. Miller. 1962. ''Ichthyology''. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  
====Rattles====
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* Mason C. W. 1927. Structural colors in insects. II. Iridescent colors. ''J. Phys. Chem.'' 31: 321-354.
[[Image:Crotale diamantin 40.JPG|thumb|200px|right|Modified tail scales form a rattle on a '''Western Diamondback Rattlesnake''' ''Crotalus atrox''.]]
 
The most distinctive modification of the snake scale is the ''rattle'' of [[Rattlesnakes]], such as those of the genera ''[[Crotalus]]'' and ''[[Sistrurus]]''. The rattlesnake tail is made up of a series of loosely linked, interlocking chambers that when shaken, vibrate against one another to create the warning signal of a rattlesnake. Only the bottom button is firmly attached to the tip of the tail.<ref name = "RepSnakeFacts">[http://www.colszoo.org/animalareas/reptiles/snakfact.html Reptiles - Snake facts. Columbus Zoo & Aquarium.]</ref>
 
  
==Arthropod scales==
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* Prum, R. O., T. Quinn, and R. H. Torres. 2006. [http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/209/4/748 Anatomically diverse butterfly scales all produce structural colours by coherent scattering]. ''Journal of Experimental Biology'' 209: 748-765. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
[[Butterfly]] and [[moth]] species of the order [[Lepidoptera]] ([[Greek language|Greek]] "scale-winged") have membranous wings covered in delicate, powdery scales. Each scale consists of a series of tiny stacked platelets of organic material. Because the thickness of the platelets is on the same order as the [[wavelength]] of [[visible light]] the plates lead to structural coloration and [[iridescence]] through the physical phenomenon described as [[thin-film optics]].
 
  
==Bibliography==
+
* Vukusic, P., J. R. Sambles, and H. Ghiradella. 2000. Optical classification of microstructure in butterfly wing-scales. ''Photonics Science News'' 6: 61-66.
<div class="references-small">
 
* {{cite book | last =Kardong | first =Kenneth V. | authorlink =Kenneth Kardong | title =Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution | edition = second edition | publisher =[[McGraw-Hill]] | date =1998 | location =USA | pages =747 pp. | url =http://www.amazon.com/Vertebrates-Comparative-Anatomy-Function-Evolution/dp/0072909560 | doi = | id = 
 
  | isbn =0-07-115356-X/0-697-28654-1 }}
 
</div>
 
  
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
  
{{credit|Scale_(zoology)|148705279|Snake_scales|148687844|Dermal_denticle|144301035}}
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{{credit|Scale_(zoology)|148705279|Snake_scales|148687844|Dermal_denticle|144301035|Scute|136433315|Butterfly|150800118}}
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]

Revision as of 19:50, 12 August 2007


Keeled scales of buff-striped keelback Amphiesma stolata, a colubrid snake

In zoology, scale (Greek lepid, Latin squama) generally refers to a small, platelike outgrowth of the skin of an animal that affords protection. These dermal or epidermal structures form the integument of reptiles, most fish, and some mammals, and similar structures are found on insects, such as butterflies and moths.

While modern amphibians generally lack scaled integuments of any kind, other vertebrate classes generally have bony or horny scales of some sort. Most extant fish species are characterized by an external covering of bony scales, which are dermal ossifications (hardening of soft tissue into bonelike material). Reptiles are typified by scaled integuments with horny scales or scutes. These tend to develop embryologically as an outgrowth of epidermal tissues and sometimes include dermal ossifications. Horny scales are found on the feet and sometimes legs of birds and these resemble closely modern crocodilian scales. Among mammals, the mouse and rat, for example, have scales on the tail and the armadillo has large horny scales as the primary integument.

In lepidopteran species, scales are plates on the surface of the insect wing, and provide coloration.

Scales are generally classified as part of an organism's integumentary system. Scales are quite common and have evolved multiple times with varying structure and function. There are various types of scales according to shape and to class of animal.

Fish scales

Scales of Rohu - Labeo rohita

Most fish has scales, which can be bony or non-bony. Extant agnathans (hagfish and lampreys) are scaleless, while sharks and their relatives in Chondrichthyes have dentinal placoid scales termed denticles, and bony fish (class or superclass Osteichthyes) have bony scales (Lagler et al. 1962). The bony fish are the largest class of vertebrates in existence today, with over 26,000 species, and they comprise over 95% of all fish species. These scales are formed in the skin membrane and are dermal ossifications rather than epidermal.

Like the lampreys in Agnatha, the freshwater catfishes and some sticklebacks are scaleless among the bony fish (Lagler et al. 1962). Some other bony fish are nearly scaleless, such as the paddlefish (Polyodon) and the freshwater swordbill (Psephurus).

Scales may be classified on the basis of shape or structure.

Classification of fish scales by shape

Among types of scales classified on the basis of shape are (Lagler et al. 1962):

  • Platelike. Platelike (placoid) scales, such as found among the sharks, have each plate with a small cusp;
  • Diamond-shaped. Diamond-shaped (rhombic) scales charaterize the integument of the gars of North America and the reedfishes of the Nile, as well as the tail of sturgeons of North America and the American paddlefish (Polyodon);
  • Cycloid. Cycloid scales are thin, disk-like, and more or less circular, but not toothed, and are found on most soft-rayed bony fish;
  • Ctenoid. Ctenoid scales have the posterior surface or margin toothed or comblike, as almost universally characteristic of spiny-rayed bony fish.

Classification of fish scales by structure

Among scales classified on the basis of structure, there are two basic types: placoid and non-placoid. In turn, non-placoid can be classified as cosmoid, ganoid, and leptoid or bony-ridge.

Placoid scales

Placoid scales or denticles are small outgrowths that cover the skin of many cartilaginous fish. The cartilaginous fishes or Chondrichthyes are a major class of jawed fish that includes the sharks, rays, and skates, and whose skeleton is characterized by rubbery cartilage, which is very light and flexible, rather than bone, as in the bony fishes (class Osteichthyes]]. The placoid scales are similar in structure to teeth, and teeth may have evolved from denticle-like structures in primitive fish. The placoid scales in sharks are formed of dentine with dermal papillae located in the core. These scales develop from the dermal layer of the skin, which is in contrast to the epidermal development seen in the elasmoid scales of tetrapods. The shape of denticle varies from species to species and can be used in identification. Shark skin is covered in denticles, and can therefore be as rough as sandpaper.

Non-placoid scales

  • Cosmoid scales. Cosmoid scales have a harder, thinner outer layer than placoid scales and have a slighly different crystallographic makeup from the enamel of placoid scales ((Lagler et al. 1962)). The inner layer of the scale is made of lamellar bone. On top of this lies a layer of spongy or vascular bone (a perforate bony substance termed isopedine) and then a layer of hard, non-cellular,dentine-like material called cosmine. The upper surface is hard, non-cellular keratin. True cosmoid scales can only be found on the extinct Crossopterygians. The coelacanth has modified cosmoid scales that lack cosmine and are thinner than true cosmoid scales.
  • Ganoid scales. Ganoid scales are similar to cosmoid scales, but a layer of ganoin, a hard inorganic salt substance, lies over the cosmine-like layer and under the enamel. The innermost lamellar bony layer is isopdine (Lagler et al. 1962). They are diamond-shaped, shiny, and hard. Ganoid scales can be found on gars (family Lepisosteidae), where they cover the entire body, as well as on bichirs and reedfishes (family Polypteridae). They are also present in rhombic shape on the tail of sturgeons and paddlefishes.
  • Leptoid scales. Leptoid scales or bony-ridge scales are typically thin and translucent and lack the dense enameloid and dentinal layers of the other three kinds of scales (Lagler et al. 1962). The outer surface is marked by bnoy ridges that alternate with valley-like depressions, while the inter part is composed of layers of criss-crossing fibrous connective tissue (Lagler et al. 1962). They are found on the higher bony fishes (Osteichthyes) and come in two forms, ctenoid and cycloid scales.
    • Cycloid scales. Cycloid scales have a smooth outer edge and are most common on more primitive fish with soft fin rays, such as salmon and carp.
    • Ctenoid scales. Ctenoid scales have a toothed outer edge, and are usually found on more derived fishes with spiny fin rays, such as bass and crappie.

As they grow, cycloid and ctenoid scales add concentric layers. The scales of bony fishes are laid so as to overlap in a head-to-tail direction, a little like roof tiles, allowing a smoother flow of water over the body and therefore reducing drag.

Fish scales are useful to ichthyologists for classification of fish, determining the life history of a fish, and for understanding the relatedness of lineages, particularly since even fossil scales can be examined (Lagler et al. 1962). EFor example, in the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) scales can reveal how old a fish was when it went to sea, when it first spawned, and how many times it spawned (Lagler et al. 1962). Examination of scales can also help in identifying what fish have been consumed by predators in a study of their food habits.

Reptilian scales

Reptiles are typified by horny scales or scutes that tend to develop embryologically as an outgrowth of epidermal tissues and sometimes include dermal ossifications. A scute or scutum is a horny, chitinous, or bony external plate or scale, as on the shell of a turtle or the skin of crocodiles. The term scute is sometimes used as an alternative to the term scale in describing snakes or fish like sturgeons. Unlike the scales of bony fish, they are derived from epidermis.

Reptile scale types include cycloid, granular (which appear bumpy), and keeled (which have a center ridge).

Snake scales

Elaborately shaped scales on the head of a Vine snake, Ahaetulla nasuta.

Snakes are entirely covered with scales or scutes of various shapes and sizes. Scales protect the body of the snake, aid it in locomotion, allow moisture to be retained within, and give simple or complex coloration patterns, which help in camouflage and anti-predator display.

Snakes periodically molt their scaly skins and acquire new ones. This permits replacement of old worn out skin, disposal of parasites and is thought to allow the snake to grow. The arrangement of scales is used in identification of snake species.

Snakes have been part and parcel of culture and religion. Vivid scale patterns have been thought to have influenced early art. The use of snake-skin in manufacture of purses, apparel and other articles led to large-scale killing of snakes, giving rise to advocacy for use of artificial snake-skin. Snake scales also are to be found as motifs in fiction, video games and films.

A snake's scaled integument is formed by the differentiation of the snake's underlying skin or epidermis. Snake scales are made of keratin, the same material of which hair and fingernails are made. A snake is born with a fixed number of scales. The scales do not increase in number as the snake matures nor are do they reduce in number over time.

Each snake scale has an outer surface and an inner surface. The skin from the inner surface hinges back and forms a free area which overlaps the base of the next scale that emerges below this scale (Greene 1997). Snakes have smaller scales around the mouth and sides of the body which allow expansion so that a snake can consume prey of much larger width than itself.

Snake scales are of different shapes and sizes. Snake scales may be granular, have a smooth surface, or have a longitudinal ridge or keel on it. Often, snake scales have pits, tubercles, and other fine structures which may be visible to the naked eye or under a microscope. Snake scales may be modified to form fringes, as in the case of the Eyelash Bush Viper, Atheris ceratophora, or rattles as in the case of the rattlesnakes of North America (Greene 1997). Certain primitive snakes such as boas, pythons, and certain advanced snakes such as vipers have small scales arranged irregularly on the head. Other more advanced snakes have special large symmetrical scales on the head called shields or plates (Greene 1997). Another example of differentiation of snake scales is a transparent scale called the brille or spectacle, which covers the eye of the snake.

Arthropod scales

Scales on the wing of butterflies give the colors

Butterfly and moth species of the order Lepidoptera (Greek "scale-winged") have membranous wings covered in delicate, powdery scales. Each scale consists of a series of tiny stacked platelets of organic material.

The coloration of butterfly wings is created by these minute scales. These scales are pigmented with melanins that give them blacks and browns, but blues, greens, reds, and iridescence are usually created not by pigments but the microstructure of the scales. This structural coloration is the result of coherent scattering of light by the photonic crystal nature of the scales (Mason 1927; Vukusic et al. 2000; Prum et al. 2006). Because the thickness of the platelets is on the same order as the wavelength of visible light, the plates lead to structural coloration and iridescence through the physical phenomenon described as thin-film optics.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Greene, H. W. 1997. Snakes: The Evolution of Mystery in Nature. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520200144.
  • Kardong, K. V. 1998. Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution, 2nd edition. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 007115356X
  • Lagler, K. F., J. E. Bardach, and R. R. Miller. 1962. Ichthyology. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  • Mason C. W. 1927. Structural colors in insects. II. Iridescent colors. J. Phys. Chem. 31: 321-354.
  • Vukusic, P., J. R. Sambles, and H. Ghiradella. 2000. Optical classification of microstructure in butterfly wing-scales. Photonics Science News 6: 61-66.


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