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Osteichthyes The Bony Fish.

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1 Osteichthyes The Bony Fish

2 Class Osteichthyes Characterized by having: Bone in their skeleton
An operculum covering the gill openings A swimbladder or lungs True scales Paired fins Homocercal tail (Exception lungfish – diphycercal) Mouth terminal Two chambered heart Sexes separate (Sex reversal in some) Fertilization external for most Excrete ammonia

3 Class Osteichthyes The bony fishes are the most diverse class of fish. ~24,000 species Osteichthyes are divided into two subclasses The lobe-finned fish (Sarcopterygians) The ray-finned fish (Actinopterygians). *Most modern fish are members of the ray-finned, Teleost subdivision.

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6 Sarcopterygians Sarcopterygians are the fish most closely related to modern amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals This subclass includes the lungfish and coelacanth. Coelacanth were thought to have become extinct at about the same time as the dinosaurs, until a live specimen was found in 1938

7 Sarcopterygians Characteristics: Muscular lobe associated with fins
Have lungs for gas exchange Live in areas with seasonal droughts Can breathe air if water stagnates Cannot withstand desiccation Burrow in the mud Have enamel on the teeth

8 Sarcopterygians Can survive drought by remaining in aestivation for 6 months or more Aestivation = dormant state After rain fills the lake or riverbed Lungfish emerge from their burrows to feed & reproduce

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10 Lungfish - Found in Australia & Madagascar

11 Lungfish scales Cosmoid scales

12 Lungfish Circulation

13 Coelacanth                                                             

14 Actinopterygians Ray-finned fish (Fins lack muscular lobes)
Have swimbldders to regulate buoyancy ~23,900 species

15 Chondrosteans (Fresh water fish)
Include stergeons and paddlefish Stergeon eggs make caviar

16 Caviar = Sturgeon eggs

17 Paddlefish

18 Subdivisions of Teleostei
Superorder Ostariophysi Order Cypriniformes (minnows, carps) Order Siluriformes (catfish) Superorder Protacanthopterygii Order Esociformes (pikes) Order Osmeriformes (smelts) Order Salmoniformes (salmon, trout, whitefish) Superorder Paracanthopterygii Order Gadiformes (cod, hakes, pollock) Superorder Acanthopterygii Order Percoidei (perches, snook, basses) Order Pleuronectiformes (flounders, soles) Order Perciformes (mackerel, tuna, swordfish)

19 Actinopterygians The Teleosts
Teleosts are modern day ray-finned fish Use their fins and body wall to push against water for locomotion Some secrete mucus to reduce friction Most teleosts are carnivores swallowing prey whole Herring & paddlefish are filter feeders Teleosts have pyloric ceca (outpockets in the small intestine to increase absorption)

20 Ganoid Fish Scales Found on non-teleost bony fishes
Usually diamond shaped bony scales “Heavy armor”

21 Cycloid Fish scales Found on teleost fishes Light, thin, & flexible

22 Ctenoid Fish Scales Teleost fishes
Have comblike ridges along the exposed edge to reduce friction (drag)

23 Myomeres

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25 Swimming mechanics Thrust- force in animal's direction
Lift- force opposite in right angles to the thrust  Drag- force opposite the direction of movement

26 Swimming mechanics Yaw – side to side movement of head
Pitch – up and down movement of head

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