Title: Phylum Chordata
1Phylum Chordata
- The chordates are a group of particular interest
to us as we belong to it, being members of the
subphylum Vertebrata. - The chordates include all of the vertebrates
(fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals and birds),
but also two non-vertebrate subphyla the
Urochordata and the Cephalohordata.
2Phylum Chordata
- The chordates were in the 19th century considered
to have been derived from protostome ancestors
(the annelid, mollusc, arthropod group). - However, a better understanding of embryology
shows that chordates are deuterostomes and the
invertebrates they are most closely related to
are Echinodermata and the Hemichordata.
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5Characteristics of the Chordata
- Chordates are
- bilaterally symmetrical
- triploblastic
- have a well developed coelom
- have a complete digestive system
6Five distinctive characteristics of the chordates
- Five distinctive characteristics separate the
chordates from all other phyla - Notochord
- Single, dorsal, tubular nerve cord
- Pharyngeal pouches or slits
- Endostyle
- Postanal tail
- Not all of these characteristics are apparent in
adult organisms and may appear only in the
embryonic or larval stages.
7Notochord
- Notochord the notochord is a flexible, rodlike
structure. It extends the length of the body and
is an anchor point for muscles. - The notochord bends without shortening so it
permits the animal to undulate.
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9Notochord
- In nonvertetbrates and the jawless vertebrates
the notochord is present throughout life. - However, in the jawed vertebrates it is replaced
by the vertebral column the remnants of the
notochord being found in the intervertebral
disks.
10Single, dorsal, tubular nerve cord
- In most invertebrates the nerve cord, if present,
is ventral to the gut. - In chordates, in contrast, the nerve cord is
dorsal to the gut and notochord. The nerve cord
passes through the neural arches of the
vertebrae, which protect it. - The nerve cord is enlarged in vertebrates into a
brain, which is surrounded by a bony or
cartilaginous cranium.
11Pharyngeal pouches and slits
- Pharyngeal slits occur in aquatic chordates and
lead from the pharyngeal cavity to the outside. - The pharyngeal slits are used as a filter feeding
device in protochordates (i.e., Urochordata
(Tunicates)) and Cephalochordata (lancelets e.g.
Amphioxus). - Water containing food is drawn in through the
mouth by cilia and exits via the pharyngeal slits
where the particles are trapped in mucus.
12Amphioxus
13Pharyngeal pouches and slits
- In vertebrates the pharyngeal arches have been
modified into gills by the addition of a rich
blood supply and thin gas permeable walls. - The contraction of muscles in the pharynx drive
water through the gills.
14Pharyngeal pouches and slits
- In amniotes an opening may not form and rather
than slits only grooves called pharyngeal pouches
develop. - In tetrapods these pouches give rise during
development to a variety of structures including
the middle ear cavity, eustachian tube, and
tonsils.
15Endostyle or thyroid gland
- The endostyle is found in protochordates and in
lamprey larvae. It is located on the floor of
the pharynx and secretes mucus, which is used to
trap particles. - The endostyle works with the pharyngeal slits in
filter feeding.
16Endostyle or thyroid gland
- Some cells in the endostyle secrete iodinated
proteins and are homologous with
iodinated-hormone secreting thyroid gland, which
is found in adult lampreys and vertebrates.
17Postanal tail
- The postanal tail, some musculataure and the
notochord enable larval tunicates and amphioxus
to swim. - The postanal tail evolved to allow organisms to
swim and its efficiency has been enhanced by the
addition of fins. The postanal tail is present
only in vestigial form in humans (the coccyx)
although tails as a whole are widespread amoing
vertebrates.
18Amphioxus
19Classification of the Chordata
- There are three subphyla in the Chordata
- Subphylum Urochordata tunicates
- Subphylum Cephalochordata lancelets
- Subphylum Vertebrata fish, amphibians, reptiles,
birds, mammals, etc.
20Subphylum Urochordata
- The Urochordata (tunicates named for the tough
tunic that surrounds the adult) look like most
unpromising candidates to be chordates and
relatives of the vertebrates. - The largest group, the ascidians or sea squirts
(Class Ascidiacea) as adults are marine, sessile,
filter feeding organisms that live either
solitarily or in colonies.
21Ciona intestinalis (a solitary sea squirt)
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23Synoicum pulmonaria a colonial sea squirt
24Ascidians
- Adult ascidians lack a notochord and there is
only a single ganglion in place of the dorsal
nerve cord. - Of the five characteristics of chordates adults
possess only two pharyngeal gill slits and an
endostyle, both of which they use in filter
feeding.
25Ascidians
- The adult sea squirt draws water in through an
incurrent siphon and pushes it back out an
excurrent one. - Food particles are filtered out in the pharyngeal
slits with mucus from the endostyle used to trap
particles.
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27Larval Ascidian
- Even though the adult ascidian hardly resembles a
chordate its larva does. - Larval ascidians are very small and tadpole-like
and possess all five chordate characteristics
previously outlined.
28Young larval ascidian
29Larval Ascidian
- The larval ascidians role is to disperse and to
achieve this it is free swimming. However, it
has only a short larval life (minutes to a couple
of days) and does not feed during this time. - Instead it searches for a place to settle and
then attaches and metamorphoses into an adult.
30Ascidian metamorphosis
- During metamorphosis the notochord disappears,
the nerve cord is reduced to a single nerve
ganglion and a couple of nerves.
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32Other Urochordate classes
- Besides the ascidians there are two other classes
of the Urochordata the Larvacea and Thaliacea. - Both are small, transparent planktonic forms.
Thaliaceans are cylindrical or spindle shaped
whereas larvaceans are tadpolelike and resemble
an ascidian larva.
33Garstangs hypothesis of chordate larval evolution
- In the 1920s it was proposed that the
vertebrates were derived from an ancestral
ascidian that retained its characteristics into
adulthood (the process by which juvenile
characteristics are retained into adulthood is
referred to as paedomorphosis).
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35Garstangs hypothesis of chordate larval evolution
- Garstangs hypothesis is supported by
embryological evidence, but more recently
molecular analyses have suggested that sessile
ascidians are a derived form and that the free
living larvaceans are more likely to be the
closest relatives.
36Subphylum Cephalochordata
- The cephalochordates are the lancelets, which are
small (3-7 cm long) laterally compressed fishlike
animals that inhabit sandy sediments of coastal
waters. They lack a distinct head and have no
cranium. - They are commonly referred to as Amphioxus as
this was the original genus name. There are 29
species, five of which occur in North American
coastal waters.
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38Amphioxus
- Amphioxus is a filter feeder.
- Water enters the mouth and then passes through
the pharyngeal slits, where food is trapped in
mucus. Cilia then move the food to the gut.
39Amphioxus
40Amphioxus
- Amphioxus is interesting because it displays the
basic chordate characteristics in a simple and
obvious form because of its transparency. - Amphioxus is considered to be the closest living
relative of the vertebrates because it shares
several characteristics with vertebrates that
Urochordates do not possess.
41Amphioxus characteristics shared with vertebrates
- Characteristics amphioxus shares with vertebrates
include - Segmented myomeres (muscle blocks)
- Dorsal and ventral aortas
- Branchial (gill) arches (blood vessels running
over the gills).
42Amphioxus characteristics not shared with
vertebrates
- Amphioxus however lacks several characteristics
that biologists think the ancestor of vertebrates
possessed. These include - Tripartite brain (with forebrain, midbrain and
hindbrain) protected by a cranium - Chambered heart
- Muscular gut and pharynx
- List continues on next slide
43Amphioxus characteristics not shared with
vertebrates
- Various special sensory organs (eyes, chemical
and pressure receptors) - Neural crest (ectodermal cells that are found on
the embryonic neural tube and are engaged in the
formation of the cranium, tooth dentine, some
endocrine glands and Schwann cells, provide
myelin insulation to nerve cells).
44Subphylum Vertebrata
- The vertebrates are a large and diverse group
including the fishes and tetrapods. - Vertebrates possess the basic chordate
characteristics, but also a number of novel
homologous structures. - An alternative name for the group Craniata is
actually a better descriptor for the entire group
because all members possess a cranium, but some
jawless fishes lack vertebrae.
45Important developments of the Vertebrates
- Musculoskeletal system. Vertebrates possess an
endoskeleton, which is much more economical in
materials than the exoskeleton of invertebrates. - It forms a jointed scaffolding for the attachment
of muscles. Initially the endoskeleton probably
was cartilaginous (it still is in jawless fishes
and sharks) and later became bony in many groups.
46Important developments of the Vertebrates
- Bone is stronger than cartilage, which makes it a
better material to use for muscle attachment in
places where mechanical stress may be high. - Bone may have evolved initially as a means of
storing minerals and was later adapted for use in
the skeleton.
47Important developments of the Vertebrates
- Various aspects of vertebrate physiology have
been upgraded also to meet increased metabolic
demands. - For example the pharynx, which was used for
filter feeding in primitive chordates has had
muscles added that make it a powerful water
pumping organ. - With the conversion of the pharyngeal slits to
highly vascularized gills the pharynx has become
specialized for gas exchange.
48Important developments of the Vertebrates
- The ancestors of vertebrates switched from filter
feeding to more active feeding, which required
movement and the ability to sense the environment
in detail. - With these changes came the need for a control
center to process information. The anterior end
of the nerve cord consequently became enlarged
into a brain.
49Important developments of the Vertebrates
- The vertebrate brain in fact developed into a
tripartite brain (with a forebrain, midbrain, and
hindbrain) that was enclosed within a protective
cranium of bone or cartilage.
50Important developments of the Vertebrates
- Sense organs have also become highly developed
among the vertebrates. - These include complex eyes, pressure receptors,
taste and smell receptors, lateral line receptors
for detecting water vibrations, and
electroreceptors that detect electrical currents.
51Important developments of the Vertebrates
- The development of the head in vertebrates with
its array of sense organs appears to have been
driven by the evolution of new embryonic tissues
that give rise to cells that play an important
role in the formation of sensory structures.
52Important developments of the Vertebrates
- A factor that may have played a major role in the
evolution of the vertebrates is the duplication
of Hox genes. - Hox genes play a major role in embryonic
development and vertebrates have four copies,
whereas invertebrates and amphioxus have only
one.
53Important developments of the Vertebrates
- The duplication of the Hox genes appears to have
occurred around the time vertebrates originated
and it may be that this gene duplication freed up
copies of these genes, which control development,
to generate more complex animals.
54Early vertebrate ancestors
- Fossils of early chordates are scarce, but a few
are known including Pikaia from the Burgess Shale
(approx 580 mya) that appears to be an early
cephalochordate and has a notochord and segmented
muscles.
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Pikaia
56Early vertebrate ancestors
- Another fossil from China Haikouella lanceolata
about 525mya. - This fossil has a notochord, pharynx, and a
dorsal nerve cord which are chordate characters,
but also pharyngeal muscles, eyes, a head, gills
and a brain which are vertebrate traits.
57Haikouella lanceolata
58Haikouella lanceolata
59Jawless early vertebrates
- A wide variety of armored jawless fishes called
ostracoderms are known from the Ordovician
(approximately 490-440 mya) up to near the end of
the Devonian period (about 360 mya). - These fish in many cases lack paired fins and so
probably were not precision swimmers.
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Ostracoderms
61Jawless early vertebrates
- The ostracoderms were heavily armored and jawless
with narrow, fixed mouths. They appear to have
been mainly filter feeders that used their
pharyngeal muscles to pump water. - Ultimately, the ostracoderms were outcompeted by
fish that possessed the next big evolutionary
development jaws.
62Early jawed vertebrates
- The origin of jaws was a hugely significant event
in the evolution of the vertebrates and the
success of the Gnathostomes the jawed
vertebrates, jaw mouth is obvious. - The first jawed vertebrates were the placoderms
haevily armored fish which arose in the early
Devonian (about 400mya) and possessed not only
jaws, but paired pelvic and pectoral fins that
gave them much better control while swimming.
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Early jawed fishes of the Devonian (400 mya).
64Jaws
- Jaws arose by modification of the first
cartilaginous gill arches, which aid in gill
support and ventilation. - It is believed that selection favored enlargement
of these gill arches and the development of new
muscles that enabled them to be moved and so pump
water more efficiently. - Once enlarged and equipped with muscles it would
have been quite easy for the arches to have been
modified into jaws.
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Note resemeblance between upper jaw
(palatoquadrate cartilage) and lower
jaw (Meckels cartilage) and gill supports
immediately behind in this Carboniferous shark
66Living fishes
- The living fishes (not a monophyletic group)
include - the jawless fishes (e.g. lampeys),
- cartilaginous fishes (e.g. sharks and rays),
- bony, ray-finned fishes (most of the bony fishes
such as trout, perch, pike, carp, etc) and - the bony, lobe-finned fishes (e.g. lungfishes,
coelacanth).
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69Living jawless fishes
- There are a little more than 100 species of
living jawless fishes or Agnathans (the term
agnathan does not represent a monophyletic
group). - These belong to two classes the Myxini
(hagfishes) and the Cephalaspidomorphi (lampreys).
70Characteristics of agnathans
- Lack jaws (duh!)
- Keratinized plates and teeth used for rasping
- Vertebrae absent or reduced
- Notochord present
- Dorsal nerve cord and brain
- Sense organs include taste, smell, hearing,
vision.
71Hagfishes class Myxini
- Hagfishes are a marine group of primarily
scavengers. - They use their keen sense of smell to find dead
or dying fish and invertebrates and rasp off
flesh using their toothed tongue. - As they lack jaws, they gain leverage by knotting
themselves and bracing themselves against
whatever theyre pulling.
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73Hagfishes
- Hagfishes are unusual in that they have body
fluids, which are in osmotic equilibrium with the
surrounding sea. This is unknown in other
vertebrates, but common in invertebrates. - They are also unusual in having a low pressure
circulatory system that has three accessory
hearts in addition to a main heart.
74Hagfishes
- Hagfishes have a remarkable (and revolting)
ability to generate enormous quantities of slime,
which they do to defend themselves from
predators. - A single individual can fill a bucket with slime.
75Lampreys Class Cephalaspidomorphi
- Lampreys occur in both marine and fresh waters
and about half of all species are ectoparasites
of fish (the others are non-feeding as adults and
live only a few months). - Lampreys spawn in streams and the larvae
(ammocoetes) live and grow as filter feeders in
the stream for 3-7 years before maturing into an
adult. Feeding adults live a year or so before
spawning and dying.
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77Lampreys
- Parasitic lampreys have a sucker-like mouth with
which they attach to fish and rasp away at them
with their keratinized teeth. - The lamprey produces an anticoagulant as it feeds
to maintain blood flow. When it is full the
lamprey detaches, but the open wound on the fish
may kill it. At best the wound is unsightly and
largely destroys the fishs commercial value.
78Sea lamprey close up of sucker and teeth
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81Introduced sea lampreys
- Landlocked sea lampreys made their way into the
Great Lakes around 1918 and caused the complete
collapse of the lake trout fishery by the 1950s. - Lamprey numbers fell as their prey base collapsed
and control efforts were introduced. Trout
numbers have since recovered somewhat, but
wounding rates are still high.
82Sea lampreys in Lake Champlain
- Lake Champlain also has large populations of sea
lampreys which spawn in the creeks that empty
into the lake. - Until recently, lampreys were believed to have
been introduced into Lake Champlain, but genetic
analyses indicate the population was established
perhaps as much as 11,500 years ago by lampreys
that migrated up the St. Lawrence.
83Sea lampreys in Lake Champlain
- As is the case elsewhere there has been a
campaign to control lamprey numbers primarily by
using lampricides in steams. - Controls do reduce lamprey wounding rates and
after control rates have fallen from 60-70 wounds
per 100 fish examined to as low as 30
wounds/fish.
84Class Chondrichthyes cartilaginous fishes
- The class Chondrichthyes has two subclasses
- Elasmobranchii, which includes the sharks and
rays. - Holocephali the chimaeras ratfish and
ghostfish.
85Two species of ray
86Hammerhead Shark
87Class Chondrichthyes
- The Chondrichthyes are an ancient group that
although not as diverse as the bony fishes have
persisted largely unchanged for hundreds of
millions of years. - There are about 850 living species, all of which
have cartilaginous skeletons, even though they
are descended from ancestors that had bone.
88Class Chondrichthyes
- The Chondrichthyes well-developed jaws, highly
developed sense organs, powerful swimming ability
and streamlined shape have enabled them to thrive
as marine predators for more than 350 million
years, as other groups have come and gone.
89Great White Shark
Hammerhead sharks
Whale shark
Two skates
90Diversity of sharks
91Sharks
- Sharks represent a little less than half of the
elasmobranchs and most are specialized predators. - The largest species is the whale shark, which is
a plankton feeder, but most of the others are
predators of fish, marine mammals, crustaceans
and whatever else they can catch.
92Sharks
- Sharks are very well streamlined, but are heavier
than water (because they lack a swim bladder) and
sink if not swimming forward. - Sharks increase their buoyancy by having a large
oil-filled liver that reduces their density, but
not enough to prevent them from sinking.
93Large liver of a great white shark
94Sharks
- Sharks have an asymmetrical heterocercal tail and
the vertebral column extends into the dorsal
lobe. - The tail provides both lift and thrust, while the
large flat pectoral fins also provide lift to
keep the head up.
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96Sharks
- Sharks have skin covered in dermal placoid
scales, which are small tooth-like structures
(with enamel, dentine and pulp just like real
teeth). - These scales give sharkskin a tough, leathery and
abrasive feel. - The scales are modified in the mouth to produce
the rows of replaceable teeth characteristic of
sharks.
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98Sand tiger shark (note multiple rows of teeth)
99Sharks
- Sharks use a variety of senses to track detect
prey. They have highly developed olfactory
senses and can detect minute quantities of blood
in the water. - They are also able to detect vibrations in the
water using a lateral line system.
100Lateral line system
- The lateral line system consists of a series of
fluid-filled canals that open to the outside. - Inside in the canals are sensory cells called
neuromasts that are very sensitive to vibrations
in the water
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102Organs of Lorenzini
- Sharks are also able to detect the faint
bioelectric fields that surround all animals.
This allows them to locate prey buried in sand or
sense prey at night. - The bioelectric detectors are called ampullary
organs of Lorenzini and are found in the sharks
head.
103Reproduction
- Reproduction in all Chondrichthyes is internal
and the male uses modified pelvic fins called
claspers to insert sperm. - The presence or absence of claspers makes it easy
to distinguish male from females.
104Great white shark claspers
105Reproduction
- All skates and some sharks are oviparous and lay
eggs soon after fertilization. - Other sharks are ovoviviparous and the eggs
develop within the mothers body and hatch either
in her or just after being released from her.
106Egg case of cat shark
Embryo of deep sea cat shark. There is a very
large yolk sac to support the embryos growth.
107Reproduction
- The remaining sharks are viviparous and the
offspring are nourished by a placenta,
unfertilized eggs or smaller siblings.
108Skates and rays
- More than half of all elasmobranchs are skates
and rays. - They have characteristically dorsoventrally
flattened bodies and greatly enlarged pectoral
fins, which they swim with using a wavelike
motion.
109Blue spotted ray
Manta Ray
110Skates and rays
- The spiracles are much larger in rays than in
sharks because water for the gills enters
exclusively through them as the mouth is usually
buried in the sand.
111Skates and rays
- Skates and rays are usually well camouflaged and
sit on the bottom. A few species are dangerous
because of their sharp and barbed tail
(stingrays) or because they can generate severe
electric shocks (electric rays). - Their teeth are for crushing prey and they mainly
feed on molluscs and crustaceans.
112Subclass Holocephali Chimaeras
- Chimaeras are a small group (about 35 species) of
deep sea cartilaginous fishes known commonly as
ratfish or ghostfish. - They have a large head, plate-like grinding
teeth, a cover over the gills and lack both a
spiracle and stomach. - The tail is thin and not much use in swimming.
Instead chimaeras depend on flapping their
pectoral fins for much of their movement.
113Male spotted ratfish
114Bony fishes Osteichthyes
- The term osteichthyes does not describe a
monophyletic group, but is a term of convenience
to describe the fishes whose skeletons are made
of bone that replaces cartilage during embryonic
development. - There are two classes the Actinopterygii (the
ray-finned fishes) and the Sarcopterygii (the
lobe-finned fishes)
115General characteristics of bony fish
- Skeleton made of bone of endochondral origin
(derived from cartilage). - Paired and median fins supported by dermal rays.
- Respiration mainly by gills. Gills covered with
operculum. - Swim bladder often present.
- Complex nervous, circulatory and excretory
systems present
116Class Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes)
- This is by far the larger of the two living
classes of fishes with more than 27,000 species. - Ancestral ray finned fishes in the Devonian were
small and heavily armored with ganoid scales
(thick, bony non-overlapping, relatively
inflexible scales) and heterocercal tails (shaped
like that of modern sharks).
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118Chondrosteans
- A few relic species (the chondrosteans) still
possess such characteristics. - These include sturgeon, paddlefish and the
African bichir.
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120Teleosts
- The vast majority of modern fishes are teleosts.
- They have replaced the heavy armored scales of
their ancestors with much lighter more flexible
scales that overlap each other and also have
evolved homocercal symmetrical tails.
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122Swim bladder
- Teleosts also have evolved extremely fine control
over their buoyancy and can remain neutrally
buoyant, which provides large energy savings. - Most pelagic teleosts have a swim bladder, which
evolved from paired lungs of Devonian fishes. - Gas can be secreted into or removed from the swim
bladder so that the fish remains at neutral
buoyancy.
123Swim bladder
- Some fishes (e.g. trout) can gulp or release air
by opening a pneumatic duct that connects to the
esophagus. - More advanced teleosts have discarded the
pneumatic duct and instead secrete gas into the
swim bladder using a gas gland or absorb it
through a highly vascularized part of the swim
bladder called the ovale.
124Gas gland
- When arterial blood arrives at the swim bladder
lactic acid is released by the gas gland, which
causes oxygen to be released by hemoglobin. - This raises the partial pressure of oxygen in the
blood above that in the swim bladder and so the
oxygen flows into the swim bladder.
125Rete mirabile
- In deep sea fish a very high gas pressure must be
maintained to resist the pressure of the water. - For example, at 2000 meters gas at a pressure of
200 atmospheres (more than the oxygen pressure in
fully charged steel cylinder) must be maintained
in the swim bladder even though the oxygen
pressure in the fishs blood is only 0.2
atmospheres (oxygen pressure at sea level).
126Rete mirabile
- Why doesnt the oxygen in the swim bladder flow
out into the blood? - Because of a structure called a rete mirabile
(miraculous net), which stops this loss. - The swim bladder is supplied with blood via an
artery. Before the artery reaches the swim
bladder it divides into an enormous number of
thin, parallel capillaries that run parallel to
but whose contents flow in the opposite direction
to a similar array of venous capillaries.
127Rete mirabile (below)
128Rete mirabile
- Let us assume the swim bladder contains gas at
100 atmospheres. Venous blood leaving the swim
bladder thus contains oxygen at that pressure. - As the venous capillary leaves the swim bladder
it runs parallel to incoming arterial blood which
contains blood with a slightly lower partial
pressure of oxygen.
129Rete mirabile
- Oxygen thus flows from the venous capillary to
the arterial capillary. - Along its entire length from the swim bladder the
gas pressure in the venous capillary is falling
as it gets further from the swim bladder, but the
pressure is always higher than that in the
parallel arterial capillary so gas always flows
from the venous capillary to the arterial
capillary. - Thus the rete acts as a trap that keeps gas in
the swimbladder.
130Respiration
- Fish obtain oxygen using gills, which consist of
filaments covered with a thin epidermal membrane
that is repeatedly pleated into thin, flat sheets
of tissue called lamellae. - The gills are found within the pharyngeal cavity,
which is covered with a flap called the operculum.
131Respiration
- The operculum protects the gills and also
maintains the streamlining of the body. - Water enters the mouth and is pumped across the
gills by movements of the pharynx and exits under
the operculum.
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133Respiration
- The lamellae of the gills are richly supplied
with blood, which flows in a countercurrent
direction to the flow of water maximizing the
amount of oxygen extracted. - The gills are very efficient and can extract up
to 85 of the dissolved oxygen in the water.
134Respiration
- Certain highly active fish such as mackerel with
high metabolic rates cannot obtain enough oxygen
by pumping water through their gills. - Instead they must swim forward constantly in
order to drive water through their mouth and over
the gills, a process called ram ventilation
135Lobe-finned fishes Class Sarcoptrygii
- Today the sarcopterygians are a very small group
that includes only six species of lungfishes and
two species of coelacanths. - However, all of the tetrapods (four-legged
vertebrates) are descended from a group of
sarcopterygian fishes known as the rhipidistians.
136Lungfishes
- There are six species of lungfishes one South
American, one Australian and four African
species. - As their name suggests, these fish, as all
sarcopterygians do, possess lungs and can breathe
air.
137Lungfishes
- The Australian lungfish can gulp air and survive
being in oxygen poor water, but cannot live out
of water. - In contrast, the South American and African
species can survive out of water for long periods
of time. - The African species live in seasonal steams and
ponds that dry out, but the lungfish survives by
burrowing into the mud and forming a cocoon in
which it survives until the water returns.
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139The discovery of living coelacanths
- Coleacanths were believed to have been extinct
for perhaps 50 million years when one was caught
by a South African fishing boat in 1938. - The curator of a small museum, M.
Courtney-Latimer, recognized the fish was unusual
and she brought it to the attention of the
icthyologist J.L.B. Smith who after some delay in
arriving identified the fish.
140The discovery of living coelacanths
- Unfortunately, the delay in arriving meant the
fish had badly decomposed and many important
structures had been lost. - Smith named the fish (Latimeria) in honor of
Courtney-Latimer and then embarked on a 14-year
quest to find another coelacanth. - But it wasnt until 1952 that a second was caught
off the Comoro Islands, north of Madagascar,
which is where the fish occur naturally (the 1938
fish apparently had drifted far from its normal
range).
141Images from the rediscovery of the Coelacanth
off the Comoros 1952.
142The discovery of living coelacanths
- In 1998 another population of Latimeria but a
different species was discovered off Indonesia
(10,000km east of the Comoros. - Coelacanths are large fish about 5 feet long and
when they swim they move their pelvic and
pectoral fins in the same pattern that tetrapods
walk.
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14416.20