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Lecture 4. - Wednesday, September 3, 2008. 1. Discuss next weekend - Illinois River Trip - Who can make it? 2. Discuss Fish Friday presentations - Sign.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 4. - Wednesday, September 3, 2008. 1. Discuss next weekend - Illinois River Trip - Who can make it? 2. Discuss Fish Friday presentations - Sign."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 4. - Wednesday, September 3, 2008. 1. Discuss next weekend - Illinois River Trip - Who can make it? 2. Discuss Fish Friday presentations - Sign up for Slots 3. Distinguishing Traits of Chondrichthyes 4. Traits that Distinguish Elasmobranchii & Holocephali 5. SHARKS & RAYS a. ecology & life-history b. reproduction c. conservation d. notable shark & ray orders

2 IB Student Picnic Hosted by the School of Integrative Biology Thursday, Sept 4 5-8 PM Illini Grove Pavilion (corner of Lincoln and Pennsylvania Ave) Free Food Free T-shirt Meet Faculty Find out what SIB is all about and meet other IB majors!

3 Illini Grove Pavilion 5-8 pm Food served 5:30 to 7:30 pm Hamburgers, cheeseburgers, veggie burgers Ranch beans, potato salad, watermelon Cookies Pop and water RSVP to Debbie Lanter, 333-3044 or email dlanter@life.uiuc.edu

4 Chondrichthyes synapomorphies 1. Pelvic claspers Derived from the margin of the pelvic fin

5 Mating Sharks Video 1 Mating Sharks Video 2 Cool Shark Videos to Checkout

6 Chondrichthyes synapomorphies Teeth not fused to jaws Replaced serially in whorls

7

8 Chondrichthyes synapomorphies 3. Skull (chondrocranium) lacks sutures

9 Elasmoid Ganoid Placoid Cosmoid 9 bone dentine enamel

10

11 heterocercal abbreviated heterocercal homocercal isocercal 8

12 Bull Shark with heterocercal tail

13 Major living gnathostome lineages

14

15 Subclass Holocephali Ratfishes, rabbitfishes, or chimeras Order Chimaeriformes (58 species)

16 Subclass Holocephali Ratfishes, rabbitfishes, or chimeras

17 Subclass Holocephali lacking gill slits - a single gill covering over 4 gill openings Upper jaw fused to cranium skin is naked in adults Some males have cephalic claspers in addition to pelvic ones Differ from sharks and rays by:

18 Order Chimaeriformes Ecology, Life History Reproduction, oviparous (egg-laying), internal fertilization Benthic, deep sea (80 to 2600 m), around the world Nocturnal Feed mainly on benthic invertebrates

19 mermaid’s purses

20 Lemon Shark Giving Birth http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfQgRCg1bNA

21 Whale Shark

22 whale shark video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQrBw N39LJIhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQrBw N39LJI

23 goblin shark

24 megamouth

25 megamouth video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxhqB mnZv8Qhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxhqB mnZv8Q start at 2:10

26 thresher shark (Alopiidae)

27 thresher shark video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQrrW9 VRMFQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQrrW9 VRMFQ start at 5:30

28 basking sharks

29 great white shark

30 great white shark video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2FIna OCqoohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2FIna OCqoo

31 Order Carcharhiniformes (ground sharks) Family Carcharhinidae (requiem sharks) Largest Order - 8 families, 210 species Tiger shark Hammerhead shark

32 Order Carcharhiniformes (ground sharks) Family Carcharhinidae (requiem sharks) Bull shark Oceanic white tip shark Silky shark

33 Shark attacks on humans 35 to 55 unprovoked attacks each year 6 to 11 fatalities per year 54% of attacks on surfers/windsurfers 38% on swimmers/waders 6% on divers/snorkelers Regions with most shark attacks:

34 Shark attacks on humans 35 to 55 unprovoked attacks each year 6 to 11 fatalities per year 54% of attacks on surfers/windsurfers 38% on swimmers/waders 6% on divers/snorkelers Regions with most shark attacks: South Africa - 63 attacks from 1990 to 2003 Brazil - 57 “ “ “ “ Australia - 51

35 Shark attacks on humans 35 to 55 unprovoked attacks each year 6 to 11 fatalities per year 54% of attacks on surfers/windsurfers 38% on swimmers/waders 6% on divers/snorkelers Regions with most shark attacks: South Africa - 63 attacks from 1990 to 2003 Brazil - 57 “ “ “ “ Australia - 51 Florida - 311

36 dogfish sharks (Squalidae) dogfish shark http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/sharks/SpinyDogfish/spinydogfish.html

37 saw sharks pointed snout used to thrash and incapacitate small fishes

38 electric rays (Torpedinidae)

39 sawfish (Pristidae)

40 More sawfish pictures

41 Skates (Rajidae)

42 Myliobatiformes Sting rays (Dasyatidae)

43 Myliobatiformes Sting rays

44 Myliobatiformes Manta rays (Myliobatidae)

45 Weblinks: great white : http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/sharks/whaleshark/whaleshark.htmlhttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/sharks/whaleshark/whaleshark.html megamouth: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Sharks/Megamouth/mega.htmhttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Sharks/Megamouth/mega.htm thresher: http://www.new-brunswick.net/new-brunswick/sharks/species/thresher.htmlhttp://www.new-brunswick.net/new-brunswick/sharks/species/thresher.html hammerhead: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/SmHammer/SmoothHammerhead.htmlhttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/SmHammer/SmoothHammerhead.html sawfish: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/education/sawfishbrochure.pdfhttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/education/sawfishbrochure.pdf manta ray: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/gallery/Descript/MantaRay/MantaRay.html http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/gallery/Descript/MantaRay/MantaRay.html for ground and requiem sharks (family Carcharinidae), skates (family Rajidae), and sting rays (Dasyatidae) go to the following website and look up some details about one or two species. http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Education/bioprofile.htm There is tons of really cool stuff on sharks at the Florida Museum of Natural History website. We could spend a lot of time on each of the various orders and families in the Elasmobranchii. Instead, I want you to look up something about each of the following groups. Find one or two facts that are of interest to you.

46 Review Questions 1. List the characters that distinguish between Elasmobranchii and Holocephali. Who are the Elasmobranchii and who are the Holocephali? Where do Holocepahli generally live? 2. We covered a lot of sharks and rays in a short amount of time. For each of the following groups, list one or two interesting facts about their biology. You can use your book, any book in the library, or the links I provided on the powerpoint file. 3. Describe the adaptations that Elasmobranchs have for maintaining neutral buoyancy. Explain how they work. 4. One could argue that Elasmobranch life-history reflects selection for high efficiency in their use of resources. What evidence supports this notion? Discuss both the life-history data (clutch sizes, when they mature, lifespan) as well as data on metabolism and feeding rates. 5. Although all Chondrichthyes have internal fertilization, they vary quite a bit in the development of the embryos. Describe this variation (oviparity, retained oviparity, ovoviviparity (and the variations on this theme), placental viviparity, and uterine viviparity). Can you propose a general model for how these reproductive strategies evolved?

47 Review Questions Cont’d. 6. Why can sharks hunt so good at night? Hint: what sensory systems are well-developed in this group. 7. How does the general pattern in Elasmobranch life-history predispose them to being easily overharvested and endangered? What is the general pattern for shark fisheries? How do other fisheries endanger shark populations?


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