We have no meanings for "other vertebrates" in our records yet.
1 What relation does man, in his general structure, bear to other vertebrates ?
2 It afflicts the human race, and all other vertebrates are subject to it.
3 All the other vertebrates belong to the second division, the Craniota ("skull-animals").
4 Their red blood-cells have no nucleus, whereas this is retained in all other vertebrates .
5 They have the same shape as in many other vertebrates and most of the invertebrates.
6 All these facts tell in favour of the common descent of man and all other vertebrates .
7 Most genes are either abutted or overlapped and many features keep consistent with the other vertebrates .
8 Necessarily, humans and other vertebrates have developed special chemosensory organs such as taste and olfactory organs.
9 The articulation proceeds in substantially the same way in the other vertebrates , the craniota, starting from the coelom-pouches.
10 The gene order and composition of C. recurviceps mitochondrial genome was similar to that of most other vertebrates .
11 Birds are characterized by a low proportion of repetitive DNA in their genome when compared to other vertebrates .
12 Yet the characteristic connection and arrangement of all the organs is just the same as in the other vertebrates .
13 Considering all the different threats we face, it's not surprising that humans and other vertebrates have a complex immune system.
14 The embryology of it is most instructive in connection with the stem-history of the body-cavity in man and the other vertebrates .
15 It is true that it has no separate head, no developed brain or skull, the characteristic feature of the other vertebrates .
16 Although this has been observed in other vertebrates , we are the first to show that the pattern is present in cartilaginous fishes.
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This collocation consists of: Other vertebrates through the time
Other vertebrates across language varieties