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Reading Assignment: • Chapter 2--form & movement end Living Fishes: • Numerous--23,250 valid spp. (Eschmeyer) est. 25,000 valid spp. • 200 new species described/yr • possibly 30,000 or more end Named & Valid Species of fishes 30000 21,700 25000 24,600 25,000 18,818 2000 20000 15000 1988 1996 1976 10000 5000 0 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Moyle & Cech end Examples of new species: New species of shark (500 m; near Galapagos Is.) end New species of wrasse (Labridae) (near Galapagos Is.) end New species of sea bass (Serranidae) (near Galapagos Is.) end New species of pipefish—orange hairy ghost pipefish end Fish or Fishes? • Fish -- singular • Fish -- plural • Fishes -- plural (groups of fishes) end Diversity of Form: brook trout end sea horse end flounder end deepsea anglerfish end sand tiger shark end barred moray eel end Diversity of Habitats: • • • • • • • intermittent streams desert springs oceanic trenches saline bays caves open oceans sub-zero water • • • • • hot springs swift streams continental shelves estuaries underground aquifers end Freshwater vs. Saltwater • 58 % of fishes are marine • 41 % freshwater • Earth’s waters: – 97% saltwater; 70% of surface of Earth – 0.0093 % freshwater; 1% of Earth surface end Diversity of Life Styles: • nekton (self mobile) • Plankton (drifters) • bottom dwellers (benthic) • Pelagic (open water) • surface oriented (epipelagic) • • • • • • carnivorous omnivorous herbivorous filter feeders parasites diadromous end Why do we recognize fish? • Constraints & Characteristics of water – density (800 x denser than air) – support (lighter skeleton, diminished limbs) – viscosity (streamlined shapes) • Evolutionary convergence • Absence of divergence end Thoughts on the Evolution of Fishes • What are general characteristics of fishes and vertebrates? (consider their protist and invertebrate ancestors) • size • mobility • bilateral symmetry end Evolutionary race among predators and prey: size energetic efficiency locomotion guidance end Advantages of size: • Survivability: predator avoidance prey availability environmental selection and avoidance end Requirements for size: • support (skeletal system) • mechanisms of locomotion • systems end Simplest form of locomotion in verts. Notochord--flexible, incompress. Direction of locomotion sinusoidal movement end Vertebral column: vertebrae discs Flexible incompressible end Dorsal fin--spines Dorsal fin--rays Caudal fin Caudal peduncle Pectoral fins Pelvic fins Anal fin end Thought experiment: Engineer a new species: • Given a certain biomass to work with, how many individuals would you make? Why? – Considerations related to size • extremes • survivability versus cost of losing an individual • What characteristics would you choose? Why? end Evolutionary History: Phylum Chordata Subphylum Myxini Superclass Class Vertebrata Gnathostomata Myxini Cephalaspidomorphi Chondrichthyes Osteichthyes end