1 / 39

FISH

FISH. Isabella M, Taylor W, Rachel W. Characteristics. Cartilaginous Fish ( Chondrichthyes ) notochord is present in young, but is replaced by cartilage in adults red blood cells are produced in the spleen, rather than bone marrow paired appendages tooth-like scales, called denticles.

tacey
Download Presentation

FISH

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. FISH Isabella M, Taylor W, Rachel W

  2. Characteristics Cartilaginous Fish (Chondrichthyes) • notochord is present in young, but is replaced by cartilage in adults • red blood cells are produced in the spleen, rather than bone marrow • paired appendages • tooth-like scales, called denticles

  3. Characteristics Jawless Fish (Agnatha) • seven pairs of gill pouches • no scales, only skin • lack paired appendages • have a notochord

  4. Characteristics Bony Fish (Osteichthyes) • endochondral bone replaces cartilage • calcified bones • circulatory system in the bones creates osteoblasts, which continually replace and strengthen the bones • sclerotic ring supports the eyeball

  5. Evolution of Ostracoderms The first fish were the Ostracoderms which appeared during the Cambrian period to the end of the Devonian period (530 million years ago – 350 million years ago) Jawless fish found in fresh water Mostly covered with bony armor or scales The Ostracoderms are placed in the class Agnatha along with the living jawless fishes, the lampreys and hagfishes, which are believed to be descended from the Ostracoderms.

  6. Ostracoderms

  7. Evolution of Acanthodians Appeared in the late Silurian period and became extinct before the end of the Permian period (410 million years ago – 250 million years ago) First fishes with jaws and they were generally small shark like fishes varying from toothless filter-feeders to toothed predators It is commonly believed that the Acanthodians and the modern bony fishes are related and that either the acanthodians gave rise to the modern bony fishes

  8. Acanthodians

  9. Evolution of Placoderms Appeared at the beginning of the Devonian period and became extinct at the end of the Devonian period or the beginning of the Mississippian period (395 million years ago – 345 million years ago) Typically small, flattened bottom-dwellers.

  10. Placoderms

  11. Evolution of Chondrichthyes Appeared in the middle of the Devonian period Generally believed to be descended from the bony-skeleton Placoderms. The cartilaginous skeletons are considered to be a later development.

  12. Chondrichthyes

  13. Evolution of Osteichthyes Appeared in the late Silurian period or early Devonian period (395 million years ago) Modern bony fish The early forms were freshwater fishes The Osteichthyes may have arisen from the acanthodians

  14. Osteichthyes

  15. Evolution of Choanichthyes Appeared in the late Silurian period or early Devonian period (390 million years ago) Characterized by internal nostrils, fleshy fins called lobe fins, and cosmoid scales The choanate fishes include a group known as the Crossopterygii, which has one living representative, the coelacanth Latimeria. During the Devonian Period some crossopterygian fishes of the order (or suborder) Rhipidistia crawled out of the water to become the first amphibians.

  16. Choanichthyes

  17. Classification • Group Agnatha includes Lamprey and Hagfish (jawless) • Subphylum Hyperotreti: skull consists of cartilaginous bars; jawless; no paired appendages; mouth with 4 pairs of tentacles; olfactory sacs open to mouth cavity; 5 - 15 pairs of pharyngeal slits (ex. Hagfish) • Class Cephalasipomorphi: has sucking mouth with teeth and rasping tongue; seven pairs of pharyngeal slits; blind olfactory sacs. (ex. Lampreys)

  18. Hagfish Lamprey

  19. Classification • Class Chondrichthyes: Tail fin with large upper lobe (heterocercal tail); Cartilaginous skeleton; lack opercula and a swim bladder or lungs (ex. Sharks and Stingrays) • Class Osteichthyes: Most with bony skeleton; operculum covers single gill opening; pneumatic sacs function as lungs or swim bladders. (ex. Bony fishes)

  20. Locomotion Fishes move through the water using their fins and body wall to push against the incompressible surrounding water. Muscles in fish extend posteriorly and anteriorly in a zigzag fashion, so the contraction of each muscle bundle affects a relatively large portion of the body wall.

  21. Nutrition and Digestive System The earliest fishes were probably filter feeders and scavengers Modern fishes are predators and spend much of their lives searching for food. Their prey varies within their stages of life As a larva, fish may feed on plankton; as an adult, it may switch to larger prey, such as annelids or smaller fish.

  22. Nutrition and Digestion cont. To capture prey, fishes often use the suction methods, capturing prey while swimming (called gill rakers), or by parasitic methods. Some fish simply feed on plants. From there the fish digestive tract is similar to that of other vertebrates. An enlargement, called the stomach, stores the meals. The small intestine is the primary site for enzyme secretion and food digestion. Sharks and other elasmobranchs have a spiral valve in their intestine. Bony fishes have outpockets of the intestine, called pyloric ceca.

  23. Circulation and Gas Exchange All vertebrates have a closed circulatory system in which a heart pumps blood, red blood cells containing hemoglobin thorough a series of arteries, capillaries, and veins.

  24. In fish, the deoxygenated or oxygen deprived blood, is carried by the veins to the sinus venosus. Sinus venosus is an important constituent of the circulatory system of lower vertebrates. The deoxygenated blood collected by the veins accumulates in the sinus venosus, before entering the heart. Blood first enters the atrium of the heart, which is a large chamber. Then it enters the ventricle, from where it is pumped into the tube, bulbusarteriosus. Through bulbusarteriosus, the blood reaches the aorta and then the gills. The gills are the respiratory organ of a fish and they execute the activities performed by human lungs. They facilitate the exchange of gases, i.e. absorption of oxygen from water and elimination of carbon dioxide. Then the oxygenated blood is transported throughout the body with the help of blood vessels. Blood facilitates the transport of oxygen and nutrients. It also collects carbon dioxide which is again transported to the heart and then to the gills, to be removed from the body. http://www.buzzle.com/articles/circulatory-system-of-a-fish.html

  25. Circulation and Gas Exchange cont. Fishes live in an environment that contains less than 2.5% of the oxygen present in air. To maintain adequate levels of oxygen in the bloodstream, fishes must pass large quantities of water across gill surfaces and extract the smaller amount of oxygen present in the water. Gas exchange across gill surfaces is very efficient. Gill Visceral arches support gills Gill filaments extend from each gill arch and include vascular folds of epithelium called pharyngeal lamelle.

  26. Gas exchange cont. Gas exchange occurs as blood and water moves in opposite directions on either side of the lamellar epithelium. This countercurrent exchange mechanism provides very efficient gas exchange by maintaining and concentration gradient between the blood and the water over the entire length of the capillary bed. Most bony fishes have gas chambers called pneumatic sacs.

  27. Nervous and Sensory Functions The eyes of fishes are similar to other vertebrates. They are lidless, and the lenses are round Receptors for equilibrium, balance, and hearing are in the inner ears of fishes and their functions are similar to those of other vertebrates. Running along each side and branching over the head of most fishes is a lateral-line system. The lateral-line system consists of sensory pits in the epidermis of the skin that connect to canals that run jest below the epidermis.

  28. Nervous and Sensory Functions cont. Electroreception is the detection of electrical fields that the fish or another organism in the environment generates.

  29. Excretion and Osmoregulation As well as with all vertebrates, the excretory structures in the kidneys are called nephrons. Nephrons filter bloodborne nitrogenous wastes, ions, water, and small organic compounds across a network of capillaries called glomerulus. The filtrate then passes into a tubule system, where essential

  30. Reproduction and Development Fishes produce large amounts of eggs which increases the chances of surviving offspring. Some fishes show mating behavior that helps ensure fertilization or nesting behavior that protects eggs from predation, sedimentation, and fouling. Mating may occur in large schools, one individual releases eggs or sperm that often releases spawning pheromones that induce many other adults to spawn.

  31. Reproduction and Development cont. Most fishes are oviparous, meaning eggs develop outside the female from stored yolk. Some elasmobranches are ovoviviparous, and their embryos develop in a modified oviduct of the female. In guppies, eggs are retained in the ovary, and fertilization and early development occur there. Embryos are then released into a cavity within the ovary and development continues, with nourishment coming partly from yolk and party from ovary secretions.

  32. Vocabulary • Cloaca: The common cavity into which the intestinal, genital, and urinary tracts open in vertebrates • Electroreception: The ability to detect weak electrical fields in the environment. • Gill Arches: Bony or cartilaginous gill support of some vertebrate. (also called visceral arches) • Gill filament: A thing walled, fleshy extension of a gill arch that contains vessels carrying blood to and from gas exchange surfaces. • Lateral – line system: A line of sensory receptors along the side of some fishes used to detect water movement. • Operculum: The cover of a gill chamber of a bony fish. • Swim Bladders: A gas filled sac, usually along the dorsal body wall of bony fishes. It is an outgrowth of the digestive tract and regulates the buoyancy of a fish.

More Related