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Marine Fishes Part 1: Jawless & Cartilaginous Fishes Vertebrates • What defines a vertebrate? – Backbone or spine – Spinal cord Jawless Fishes • Most primitive • Feed by suction – round, muscular mouth – Rows of teeth • Elongated, cylindrical body (like snake) • No paired fins or scales Lampreys Hagfishes • aka: slime eels • No eyes • Feed on dead or dying fishes • Can bore into prey and eat from the inside out • Pours slime out of mucus sacs – Can fill a 2 gallon bucket instantly! Hagfish • Deep sea environment (1000 ft) • Been around 300 million years • No eyes—virtually blind • Highly acute sense of smell and touch • Smooth body helps it move around inside dead animal • Eat prey from the inside out • Slime – used as defense mechanism – Protein explodes when in water Hagfish Sliming Video - YouTube Lampreys • Primarily freshwater • Breed in rivers and lakes, move to sea as adults • Attach to fishes and suck blood Cartilaginous Fishes • Sharks, rays, skates, and ratfishes • Skeleton of cartilage – Lighter, more flexy than bone • Paired lateral fins for swimming Tiger Shark Cartilaginous Fishes • Movable jaws and teeth • Mouth is ventral – Underneath the head Cartilaginous Fish • Placoid Scales – Rough, sandpaper like – Pointed tip that points backward • produces a covering that offers low resistance and turbidity • copied in the body suits of Olympic swimmers. The Perfect Predator https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ssnjcz QVLcY The Perfect Predator: Body Shape • Torpedo shape – Body tapers at each end • Well developed, powerful caudal fin • Arching the body laterally into a shallow curve – Tremendous speed, low energy useage Mako Shark The Perfect Predator: Coloration • Dark on dorsal (top) side • Light on ventral (bottom) side • Why? • White blends with light, dark blends with bottom The Great White Shark The Perfect Predator: Teeth • Up to hundreds of teeth in jaw at one time • Embedded in flesh – Not attached to jaw • Multiple rows • Serrated • Replaced when lost – for entire life! The Perfect Predator: Eyes • Extremely sensitive – Able to magnify amount of light • Rolls eyes backwards when attacking – Exposes tough, fibrous coat The Perfect Predator: Nostrils • ONLY used for smell • Skin flaps – Inflowing/outflowing current – Water passes over lamellae • Lamellae – Covered with millions of sensory cells – Single drop of blood in an Olympic size pool • Smell is directional – Can tell where it’s coming from The Perfect Predator: Ampullae of Lorenzini • Thousands of small capsules filled with jelly • Picks up vibrations in water of prey • Detects electrical fields of moving animals • Detects magnetic field of earth – Used in migration • More detail Other Sharks: Whale Shark • Largest shark (and fish) in ocean – 65ft, 10+ tons • Filter feeders – – – – Fish eggs Plankton Krill Small fish and squid • Process over 6000 gallons of water/hr Other Sharks: Hammerhead • • • • • Sensory mechanisms all along flattened scull Head acts as airplane wing Can detect a billionth of a volt Excellent 3-D eyesight Excellent navigation Importance of sharks • Meat – Nutritional, boneless, mild-flavoring • Eyes – Corneas used as substitutions for human corneas • Skin – Used in research and engineering of ships, aircraft, pipelines and swimming suits Importance of sharks • Liver – Contain high amounts of vitamin A (helps us see) – Squaline • Skin rejuvenator • Cartilage – Cancer research • Ecosystem – Apex predators – Control disease – Quick article As Sharks Vanish, Chaotic New Order Emerges • What are some impacts that have resulted in the overfishing in sharks on the east coast of the US? • In your own words, what is an “apex predator?” • What is an example of a “trophic cascade?” • What is shark “finning?” What are some problems with it? “This is how we do it in Oklahoma, boy.” Sharks are in great decline • Overfishing • K-selected species – Low fecundity • Do not produce many young – Reproduce every two years – Slow growth – Late age of maturation • Great White: 9 years; Sandbar: 25 years • Cartilage: – It cures cancer! NO IT DOESN’T! No evidence! – $100 million-a-year industry Sharks are in great decline • Bycatch – Occurs in several fisheries: tuna longline, shrimp trawl, and swordfish – Millions of sharks a year • Finning – Removing the fins and discarding the carcass – This makes me sick to my stomach… Shark Finning https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mO7hv OtYnck Shark Fin Soup Don’t be a “shark” hugger…Or you may end up like this guy How to Hug a Shark https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtQAfR rD8oc = WARNING: Don’t try this at home Rays Characteristics • Adapted to living on bottom of ocean • Flattened bodies • Gill slits (5 pairs) on underside of body • Feed on clams, crabs, small fishes Stingrays • Lie camouflaged in sand • Finds food by smell, touch and electrical senses • Up to 6 ft across • Spine found at base of tale laced with poison – Use in defense only http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/ stingray A closer look at the tail • This is a bull ray – Same type of ray that killed Steve Irwin Manta Rays • Largest of all rays • Up to 22 feet across (average size is 12 ft) Electric Ray • Organs on side of head that produce electricity • Shocks up to 200 volts – Used to stun prey • Used by Romans to cure treat headaches and other ailments • Confrontational if harassed. – Swim directly up to diver Skates vs. Rays • • • • • • • Rays live bearing (viviporous) Skates are egg bearing (oviporous) Rays have longer, skinnier tale with spine Skates have fleshier tale, no spine Rays have plate like teeth Skates have small teeth Which is which?