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Marine Vertebrates: Fishes (part 2). Fishes  Phylum Chordata  Subphylum Vertebrata  3 Classes:  Class Agnatha (jawless fishes)  Class Chondrichthyes.

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Presentation on theme: "Marine Vertebrates: Fishes (part 2). Fishes  Phylum Chordata  Subphylum Vertebrata  3 Classes:  Class Agnatha (jawless fishes)  Class Chondrichthyes."— Presentation transcript:

1 Marine Vertebrates: Fishes (part 2)

2 Fishes  Phylum Chordata  Subphylum Vertebrata  3 Classes:  Class Agnatha (jawless fishes)  Class Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes)  Class Osteichthyes (bony fishes)

3 Fishes - Anatomy  Cartilaginous fishes:  Ventral mouth  Heterocercal tail (caudal fin)  Placoid scales “dermal denticles”

4  Bony fishes:  Terminal mouth  Homocercal tail  Cycloid or ctenoid scales cycloid ctenoid Fishes - Anatomy

5  Cartilaginous fish skeleton: Fishes - Anatomy http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/shark/english/images/porbeagle%20skeleton%20for%20web.jpg

6  Bony fish skeleton: Fishes - Anatomy http://www.infovisual.info/02/img_en/034%20skeleton%20of%20a%20fish.jpg

7 Fishes - Buoyancy  Bony fish – swim bladder (gas)  Cartilaginous fish –  Swim, get lift from stiff fins  Large, oil-filled liver  Cartilage half as dense as bone

8 Fishes - Locomotion http://www.buschgardens.org/infobooks/BonyFish/images/muscle.gif  Muscle up to 75% of body weight  Muscle bands – myomeres (flake when cooked)  Red muscle – sustained swimming  White muscle – burst swimming http://www.earthlife.net/fish/muscles.html

9 Fishes - Locomotion http://www.buschgardens.org/infobooks/BonyFish/images/caudalfi.GIF Homocercal caudal fins by shape: Slowest → Fast → ← Fastest ← Slow http://www.dfw.state.or.us/mrp/salmon/FishID/Heterocercal.jpg Heterocercal caudal fins: http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/willow/flying-fish-info0.gif

10 Fishes - Locomotion Swimming modes:

11 Fishes - Locomotion Built for speed – Pacific sailfish has high speed bursts 70+ mph

12 Fishes - Respiration Cartilaginous fish Bony fish (more efficient)  5-7 pairs of gills  Gill slit openings  4 pairs of gills  Operculum gill cover

13 Fishes - Respiration http://elasmodiver.com/images/Cortez-round-stingray-04.jpghttp://blogs.southflorida.com/citylink_dansweeney/Southern_sting_ray.jpg  Spiracles important for rays when buried

14 Fishes - Respiration Gills maximize oxygen diffusion:  High surface area  Counter-current flow (oxygen concentration of water always higher than blood)

15 Fishes - Respiration “Warm-blooded” fish:  Epipelagic sharks, tunas, billfishes  Counter-current flow retains muscle heat  Body surface stays water temperature  Body core has elevated temperature

16 Fishes - Feeding Large mouth, tear chunks or swallow fish whole Small mouth, small prey Small mouth, small prey Hard beak, graze algae and coral Large mouth, filter feeder (plankton)

17  Largest species:  Whale sharks (up to 60 ft)  Basking sharks (up to 50 ft)  Filter feeders (eat plankton) Whale (Rhincodon typus)Basking (Cetorhinus maximus) Fishes - Feeding

18 Fishes - Digestion

19 Fishes - Osmoregulation Equal solutes by adding urea Lower solutes, water loss

20 Fishes – Sensory Organs  Vision  Taste buds  Smell – olfactory sacs, nostrils  Sound – inner ear, otoliths (bones) http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/pubs/andrus2002/otolith-md.gif http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/otolith/english/images/cod6oto.jpg

21 Fishes – Sensory Organs  Vibrations – lateral line (for hearing, too)

22 Fishes – Sensory Organs  Electroreception – ampullae of Lorenzini (cartilaginous fishes only) small holes http://www.seaworld.org/infobooks/Sharks&Rays/images/ampullae.gif

23 Fishes – Schooling  Use senses to coordinate (vision, sound, lateral line)  Protection from predation  Safety in numbers  Visual confusion  Feeding  Mating  Swimming efficiency http://image14.webshots.com/14/5/22/94/170152294GjijRv_fs.jpg http://image03.webshots.com/3/4/24/9/6942409XjGFEFguyY_ph.jpg

24 Fishes – Reproduction  Fertilization  External – bony fishes  Internal – cartilaginous http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/files/2008/10/286_lifeed_behind1.jpg http://www.gloversreef.org/grc/spawning.jpghttp://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/education/questions/claspers.jpg http://www.charkbait.com/article/Scan5sm.jpg

25 Fishes – Reproduction  Development  Oviparous (most bony fishes, some cartilaginous):  External eggs, yolk http://www.ufz.de/data/bioindicator-fish-eggs2455.jpg

26 Fishes – Reproduction  Development  Ovoviviparous:  Internal eggs, yolk, live-birth  Viviparous:  Internal eggs, nutrition from mother, live-birth http://www.west.asu.edu/achristie/hsw4kids/animals/sharks/birtha.jpg

27 Fishes – Reproduction  Asexual – parthenogenesis (“virgin births”)  Very rare  Female sharks in captivity  Female offspring (genetic clones) http://www.sciencedaily.com/images/2008/10/081010173054-large.jpghttp://marinebio.org/upload/_05/Sphyrna_tiburo1.jpg Bonnethead – 2001Black-tip – 2008

28 Fishes – Reproduction  Strategies  Many small eggs (tarpon – 100 million eggs each spawn)  Fewer large eggs (more work) http://www.soc.soton.ac.uk/GDD/hydro/atmu/ecology/chapter5/sgtmjr.jpg

29  Planktonic fish larvae http://www.coralreeffish.com/larvae.htm Fishes – Development

30  Coastal fish use estuaries as nurseries Fishes – Development

31 Cartilaginous vs. Bony Fishes CartilaginousBony Scalesplacoidcycloid, ctenoid Mouthventralterminal Tail lobesunequal (heterocercal)equal (homocercal) Gills5-7 pairs, slits4 pairs, covers Position in waterfins, lower density (cartilage and oily liver) swim bladder Osmoregulationurea (equal solutes), rectal gland less solutes, gill excretion Sensoryampullae of Lorenzini, lateral line lateral line Reproduction (fertilization, development, strategy) internal, variety, fewer offspring external, mostly ovipary more offspring


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