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Digestive System Digestive System - basic plan  Mouth (toothed jaws, oral valves)  Oral cavity (vomerine, palatine teeth, tongue w/ teeth)  Pharynx (pharyngeal tooth pads, gill arches/rakers)  Esophagus (gullet)  Stomach Digestive System - basic plan  Pylorus (pyloric valve, pyloric caeca)  Small intestine (ducts bring in bile, pancreatic secretions)  Large intestine/cloaca  Anus Variation based on diet, lifestyle Mouth & Oral Cavity Teeth in Jaws  Food generally swallowed whole  Teeth used for capture, not chewing Pharynx - gill rakers Gill rakers  Gill rakers on anterior side of each gill arch - prevent escape of prey  Gill filaments on posterior side of each gill arch Size and shape of rakers depend on types of foods eaten Short, blunt gill rakers  Large prey QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Long, fine gill rakers  Particle or suspension feeder Developmental changes  Gill rakers can change in form as fish develops Paddlefish - suspension feeder  Long, fine gill rakers to strain plankton from water column Zooplankton’s view! Pharyngeal teeth Pharyngeal Teeth  Variety of teeth in the same general region  Derived from gill arches Feeding Pharyngeal teeth  Aid oral teeth in holding “prey”, directing them into esophagus  Modified for crushing, grinding, shearing of foods Pharyngeal Teeth  Present in many herbivores that eat plants, algae, and/or phytoplankton  E.g., Grass carp  Esophagus & stomach  Structure varies with diet  Simple tube to blind-sac, elastic pouch Pylorus Pyloric caeca  Pyloric valve controls release of stomach contents  Ray-finned fishes peculiar among vertebrates  Possess numerous pyloric caeca - digestive/secretory glands Intestines Carnivore intestines  Intestine usually very short in carnivores  Animal foods digested, absorbed easily Herbivore intestines  Intestine usually very long in herbivores, detritivores  Plant foods digested, absorbed slowly Chondrichthyes Shark digestive system Spiral valve in sharks Increases food passage time through intestine - improves absorption Typhlosole in lampreys Flap of tissue extending into lumen of intestine -increases surface area for absorption Disclaimer - this is a picture of an earthworm, not a lamprey Circulatory System  Fish have a singleloop circulatory system Typical pathway Heart to gills to body, back to heart Major vessels run along (ventral to) vertebral column Branches to organs, muscles (segmental) Heart  Fish have a 2chambered heart Lungfish Circulatory System  Lungfish have added features Lungfish Circulatory System