1 / 32

Respiration

Explore the various respiratory adaptations in fishes, including gills, lungs, swim bladders, and other specialized organs. Learn about the respiration process in jawless fishes, chondrichthyes, osteichthyes, and more.

billyj
Download Presentation

Respiration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Respiration

  2. Jawless Fishes • Gills - pore-like openings • 7 pairs of gill pouches in lamprey • 5-15 pairs of gill pouches in hagfish, but varying numbers of openings (as few as one/side)

  3. Hagfish gills • Gill pouches connect directly to pharynx • Two gills in each pouch • May or may not open directly to outside (depending on species) • May play role in digestion/nutrient absorption

  4. Lampreys • Problems with respiration during feeding - no water via pharynx • Developed separate canal to carry respiratory water - from pore on head to gill pouches

  5. Lamprey gills • Two gills per pouch • Each pouch has separate exit pore to outside

  6. Gills in Chondricthyes and Osteichthyes • Gill filaments attached to posterior sides of bony or cartilaginous gill arches • Gill rakers located on anterior sides of arches

  7. Class Chondrichthyes • Gills (pairs of them) located in separate chambers leading from pharynx • Chambers separated by septa (tissues) gills are septate • Each has separate gill slit to outside

  8. Skates and rays • Skates and rays have ventral gill slits

  9. Skates and rays • Spiracle behind each eye - better developed in skates and rays than in sharks • Likely a modified gill slit • Used to take in respiratory water in benthic skates and rays

  10. Osteichthyes gills • Respiration via 4 pairs of gills • No individual openings to outside • Gills on each side covered by single, flap-like operculum

  11. Branchiostegal rays • Associated with operculum • Allow for expanding volume of mouth, pharynx chambers while keeping opercula closed • Accordian-like action

  12. Osteichthyes gills • Each gill is actually a pair of rows of filaments each attached to the same gill arch • Gills not separated by septa - aseptate

  13. Aseptate gills

  14. Gill Structure

  15. Gill fine structure • Filaments are not simple finger-like tissues • Each filament comprised of stacked plates or lamellae • Greatly increases surface area for interaction with water flowing across gills (water flows between lamellae)

  16. Dual Respiratory Systems • Some fish have dual respiratory systems • Gills and lungs

  17. Gills and lungs • Gills are main respiratory organs • Lungs serve as back-up system when gills no longer capable of providing gas exchange

  18. Lungs

  19. Lungs • Pouches branch off esophagus • Breathe air at surface or when they remain out of water

  20. Paired lungs in lungfish

  21. Lungfish lung - left

  22. Lungfish lung • Lungs are mostly simple sacs with network of arteries, veins • Only the most intricate have beginnings of internal compartmentalization

  23. Lungs • Paired lungs necessary because of alternating wet and dry periods • Become main respiratory organ when gills become useless

  24. Lungs in many fish • Lungs are present in many of the more primitive fishes • Lungfish, bichir, gars, bowfin relatives, sturgeons • All have varying connections with esophagus

  25. Swim Bladder • Swim bladder probably arose from paired lungs of primitive fish • Lungs were present before swim bladder

  26. Other respiratory organs • Mudskippers and European eels can derive significant amounts (10-90%) of oxygen via cutaneous respiration

  27. Other respiratory organs • Walking catfishes (Clariidae) use suprabranchial arborescent organs to respire during their “walks” • Bush-like extensions from gills that do not collapse when out of water

  28. Other respiratory organs • Mudskippers have folded and highly vascularized interior walls of opercula/gill chambers, diverticula in mouth and pharyngeal cavities (snakeheads also have the latter)

  29. Other respiratory organs • Armored catfishes (Loricariidae) use thin-walled stomach for respiration • Loaches (Cobitidae) use middle/posterior portions of digestive tract

More Related