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SHARKS: THE ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF A PREDATORIAL MACHINE

SHARKS: THE ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF A PREDATORIAL MACHINE. Taxonomy . Kingdom – Animalia Phylum – Chordata Class – Chondrichthyes (sharks, skates, rays, sawfishes) Order – 8 orders ( Lamniformes (mackerel sharks)) Family – 30 families ( Lamnidae )

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SHARKS: THE ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF A PREDATORIAL MACHINE

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  1. SHARKS: THE ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF A PREDATORIAL MACHINE

  2. Taxonomy • Kingdom – Animalia • Phylum – Chordata • Class – Chondrichthyes(sharks, skates, rays, sawfishes) • Order – 8 orders (Lamniformes (mackerel sharks)) • Family – 30 families (Lamnidae) • Genus – 50+ genuses (Charcharodon) • Species – 370-400+ species (carcharias) • List of species

  3. External Anatomy

  4. Internal Anatomy

  5. Feeding • Most are carnivorous but some are filter feeders (whale sharks, basking sharks) • Tiger sharks are referred to as the “garbage guts” of the shark world • Contrary to popular belief, most sharks are picky about what they eat • Great whites choose only animals with blubber

  6. Respiration • Most sharks have to keep moving to move water over their gills • Water enters the gill chambers through the mouth or spiracles and exits through the gill slits. • Blood in the gill filaments absorbs oxygen from the incoming water.

  7. Circulation • 2-chambered heart • Blood flows from heart to gills to body tissues back to heart • Countercurrent heat exchange enables fast-moving sharks to be from 10 to 20 degrees warmer than the water around them

  8. Senses • Hearing – have inner ear, attracted to low frequency sounds, can hear up to 0.6 miles • Vision – excellent, 10x more light sensitive than us, attracted to shiny and thrashing, can see 50 to 100 ft. • Taste – have taste buds, actually spit things out • Smell – excellent, function in only smell not breathing, can detect some chemicals as small as 1 part per billion • Feel – group of sensory cells along outside of body called the lateral line used to detect vibrations in the water • Electroreception – Ampullae of Lorenzinidetect electric fields given off by living creatures

  9. Reproduction • Mating is rarely witnessed, male bites onto dorsal fin and internally fertilizes with clasper while over top of the female • Can be oviparous (horn, swell sharks), ovoviviparous (mako and sand tiger sharks), or viviparous (hammerhead sharks) • Gestation period is very long from 9 months up to 3 ½ years

  10. Shark Attacks • You are more likely to be killed by stepping in a sand hole and having it collapse than you are by a shark • Tips to avoid attacks: • Don’t swim during low light periods • Stay in groups • Be knowledgeable about the area you swim/dive/surf in • If you find one, leave it alone • Avoid looking like prey • Sharks are attracted to: • Blood, splashing and loud noises, shiny colors • International Shark Attack File

  11. Ecology and Human Uses • Pilot fish, remora, and others clean parasites like copepods and flatworms off sharks • Integral part of the food chain: • fishes, crustaceans, mollusks, marine mammals, and other sharks • Sharks, elephant seals, and killer whales have been known to eat sharks • Behavior researched mainly for avoiding attacks • 100 million sharks are killed every year by humans even though several species are endangered and illegal to kill • Humans use sharks for: • Research, recreation like fishing and viewing, and products like medicine, jewelry, tools, and mainly fin soup

  12. Shark Facts • The 1st sharks appeared on Earth 400 million years ago well before the 1st dinosaur roamed the Earth • Avg. life span is 25 years • Sharks never stop growing • Largest shark = whale shark (50 ft. long) • Smallest shark = dwarf lanternshark (5-7 in. long) • Fastest shark = mako shark (30 mph) • Deepest diver = Portuguese shark (9,000 ft. or 1. 5 miles) • Longest migration = a blue shark traveled 3,740 miles • Only freshwater capable shark = bull shark (the Borneo river shark (Glyphis sp. B), the Irrawaddy river shark (Glyphissiamensis), the New Guinea river shark (Glyphis sp. C), the Ganges shark (Glyphisgangeticus), the Speartooth shark (Glyphisglyphis) • Highest note heard is 800 Hertz (or G above High C on the piano), so humans can hear many high sounds that sharks cannot • Lowest note heard is 10 Hertz (or 1.5 octaves below the lowest key on the piano). The lowest note a human can hear is 25 Hertz, so we miss out on some of the very low frequencies that sharks can detect

  13. Man-eaters!!! • Great white shark • Tiger shark • Bull shark • Hammerhead shark • Mako shark • Oceanic whitetip shark • Reef sharks, lemon shark, blue shark, etc…

  14. Vocabulary • Placoid scales (dermal denticles) = small outgrowths that cover the skin of a shark similar in structure to the teeth • Liver = organ for energy storage and buoyancy • Clasper = one of the modified, usually paired organs by which the male clasps the female during copulation • Lateral line = sensitive receptors that detect gentle currents and vibrations • Ampullae of Lorenzini= special sensing organs forming a network of jelly-filled canals that detect electrical fields in the water • Spiracle = provide oxygenated blood directly to the eye and brain through a separate blood vessel • Dorsal fin = fin on top that stabilizes and may provide protection • Pectoral fin = paired fins on the side that control steering and add lift as the shark swims • Caudal fin = locomotive limb at the end of a shark that propels it forward • Viviparous = live birth (get nutrients from mother not an egg) • Oviparous = eggs hatch outside the mother • Ovoviviparous = eggs hatch inside the mother then give live birth • Cloaca = opening shared by the genital organs, the urinary and intestinal tracts • Spiral valve = lower portion of the digestive tract that is internally twisted or coiled to increase the surface area, which increases nutrient absorption • Atrium = a large muscular chamber that serves as a one-way compartment for blood that is about to enter the ventricle • Ventricle = a thick-walled muscular chamber that pumps blood

  15. Great white

  16. Tiger

  17. Bull

  18. Great Hammerhead

  19. Shortfinmako

  20. Blue

  21. Whale

  22. Basking

  23. Lemon

  24. Oceanic whitetip

  25. Nurse

  26. Pacific angel

  27. Australian wobbegong

  28. Gray reef

  29. Blacktip reef

  30. Whitetip reef

  31. Greenland

  32. Spiny dogfish

  33. Sand tiger

  34. Thresher

  35. Leopard

  36. Goblin

  37. Swell shark

  38. Horn shark

  39. Bonnethead

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