Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
FISHES Agnatha Chondrichthyes Osteichthyes General Characteristics       Ectothermic Vertebrates Have scales Swim with fins Almost all exclusively aquatic Filter oxygen from water over gills Classes of Fish – Jawless Fish  Chondrichthyes – Cartilagenous Fish  Osteichthyes – Bony Fish  Agnatha Question #1:  What is the name for a person who studies fishes? Fish Anatomy Fins      Caudal – propels fish forward Dorsal – stabilizer Anal – stabilizer Pectoral – hold fish steady, maneuvering Pelvic – hold fish steady, maneuvering Scale Types – Look like tiny teeth, feel like sandpaper, on cartilagenous fish  Placoid Sharks – Rays – Scale Types  Cycloid – smooth surface, on bony fish – –  Carp Salmon Ctenoid – teeth along ridge (rough to touch), on bony fish – – – Bass Bluegill Perch Question #2:   What is the purpose of a fish’s scales? Shield against injury, help to move through the water Maintaining Buoyancy  Swim bladder – – –  Uses air Most bony fishes Can be used as a “lung” Liver – – – Stores oil Sharks Most sharks must constantly swim to avoid sinking Locomotion  Use fins and body wall to push against water  Forked tails reduce drag in the water  Muscles in a zig-zag shape – Each contraction moves large parts of the body wall Gills     Obtain oxygen Give off carbon dioxide Most have an operculum Oxygen dropped into circulatory system pumped by 2-chambered heart Gas Exchange Pump ventilation  Ram ventilation  Exchange of gases occurs in capillary network in gill lamellae; water and blood flow in opposite directions over lamellae = Countercurrent Exchange  Counter-current exchange system Circulation The heart of a fish is simple when compared to our heart. They have a two cambered heart that follows a heart-gillsbody-heart path. Excretion and Osmoregulation  Freshwater fishes never drink – Lots of nephrons – Ions are reabsorbed –  Marine fishes Drink constantly – Less blood is filtered – Water is reabsorbed – Senses  Hearing – sound conducted through skull  Lateral line system – senses movement of other organisms around them  Electroreception – sense electrical impulses generated by muscle twitches Reproduction  Oviparous (most fish) –  Ovoviviparous (some cartilaginous fishes) – –  Release eggs, young develop outside mom Eggs remain inside mom Eggs at a later stage of development before they are released Viviparous (a few sharks) – Young born alive Internal Anatomy Color and Pattern  Counter shading  Mimic  Camouflage  Bioluminescence There are also many patterns. Many open water fish like this tuna show countershading. Mimicry Camouflage Many mid-depth fish are often red while lots of the deep water fish are black and may have luminescent organs. Class Agnatha Cartilagenous  Simplest and oldest vertebrates  Jawless  No scales  Scavengers or parasites  Lamprey, hagfish  Class Chondrichthyes  Hinged jaw  Paired fins  Scales  Muscles attached to skin, not skeleton  Cartilagenous skeleton Sharks  Jaws not attached to brain case Can protrude during attack – 20 tons per square inch for an 8’ shark –  Size feet) varies (few inches to over 40 Skates and Rays  Wing-like pectorals  Most live on sea beds  Some have poison spines on backs or tails (stingrays) Class Osteichthyes  Largest group of fishes  Skeleton made of bone and cartilage  Hinged jaws  Paired fins  Hard, protective scales  Covered gills (operculum) Major Groups of Osteichthyes  Subclass Sarcopterygii – –  Lobe-finned fishes (Coelocanth) Lungfishes Subclass Actinopterygii – – Ray-finned fishes  Bass  Tuna  Guppies