Dermal derivatives
- Related Topics:
- epithelium
- scale
- cuticle
- theca
- skin
Dermal scales are found almost exclusively in fishes and some reptiles. They are bony plates that fit closely together or overlap and form the dermal skeleton. Highly developed dermal scales are seen in turtles, where the bony plates form a rigid dermal skeleton that is attached to the true skeleton. In other reptiles, dermal scales are small and localized on parts of the body, as in crocodilians, certain lizards, and a few snakes.
Birds lack dermal scales, and only a single living mammal—the armadillo—displays them. Associated with the evolutionary tendency toward elaboration of epidermal extensions in birds and mammals, there has been a corresponding reduction in dermal derivatives. The membrane bones of the skull, the mandible (lower jaw), and the clavicles (collarbones) are the remaining vestiges of dermal plates in these groups.
Variations among vertebrates
The vertebrates belong to the phylum Chordata and are closely related to a small, fishlike, almost transparent invertebrate called amphioxus. Amphioxus represents chordate integument at its simplest: an epidermis, consisting of one layer of columnar or cuboidal epithelial cells and scattered mucous cells, covered by a thin cuticle, and a thin dermis of soft connective tissue. Beginning with the simplest vertebrates, the cyclostomes (lampreys and hagfishes), the integument becomes complex and pigmented; in successive evolutionary stages a wide array of derivatives appears among the various classes of vertebrates.
Cyclostomes
In the lamprey the surface of the skin is smooth, with no scales. The epidermis consists of several cell layers that actively secrete a thin cuticle. Gland cells that produce slime are mixed with the epidermal cells, as in most aquatic vertebrates. The dermis is a thin layer of connective tissue fibres interwoven with blood vessels, nerves, muscle fibres, and chromatophores.