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Planktivory

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... manta rays, basking shark, whale shark, megamouth, paddlefish, ... Basking shark ... Basking Shark Gill Arches. Gill rakers shed during cold months. May ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Planktivory


1
Planktivory
2
Sponges
3
Jellyfish
Filter feeding in Aurelia (Moon Jelly)
4
Corals
Hermatypic
Ahermatypic
5
Bivalves
6
lancet
7
Christmas tree worms
8
Filter feeding in Krill
the six thoracopods form a very effective
"feeding basket"
9
Barnacle feeding
Modified legs
10
tunicate
Oikopleura
Predator
Filter feeder
11
Planktivory
Suspension feeders Animals that process large
quantities of water through a feeding apparatus
(gill rakers, baleen). Gill rakers trap
particles such as zooplankton, phytoplankton and
detritus.
12
Baleen
13
Includes manta rays, basking shark, whale shark,
megamouth, paddlefish, gizzard shad, menhaden,
and bighead carp.  
14
Flamingo
15
  • Feeding strategies
  •  A)   Obligate and faculative planktivores
  • Most fish are planktivorous at some point in
    their life, either as holoplankton or
    meroplankton.
  • Facultative planktivores (ex. sunfishes) are
    opportunistic feeders. Prey selection depends on
    food availability
  • Obligate planktivores (ex. blueblack herring,
    Atlantic Menhaden) feed exclusively on plankton  

16
  • B) Ram feeding and suction feeding
  • Ram feeding creates a forward motion in which
    water is delivered into the mouth opens mouth
    wide as possible and rams prey
  • continuous ram feeders
  • intermittent ram feeders
  • Suction feeding predator remains relatively
    stationary, comes close to prey and then sucks
    prey in.
  • continuous suction feeders
  • intermittent suction feeders

Suction feeder
Nonsuction feeder
17
Jaw Protrusion
Sling-jaw wrasse
18
  • Ram Feeders
  • Continuous
  • Intermittent

19
Continuous ram feeders (tow-net)- water passes
continuously through mouth, over gills and exits
through gill slits or operculum. 20 species
fish In fish extensive elaboration of the
branchial (gill) apparatus
20
  • Manta Ray
  • They have no teeth.
  • Cephalic flaps channel water containing plankton
    into mouth
  • To prevent gills from clogging, a screen of small
    tiny protuberances located in the throat, hold
    the food until it can be swallowed.

21
Megamouth, Basking Shark and Whale Shark-
Generally these planktivorous sharks have tiny
numerous teeth and elongated gill rakers. The
gill rakers help to strain plankton.
22
  • Basking shark- (10 meters long)
  • Swims about 2 knots with mouth open and
    bristle-like gill rakers erect while filtering
    particulate matter
  • It then closes its mouth forcing water over the
    gills it is an indiscriminate planktivore
  • Has five pairs of gill slits and can filters 540
    liters zooplankton/day and over 1500 gallons of
    water/ hour (1850 m3 water/hour)

23
Basking Shark Dentition
(A) Labial, (B) basal and (C) lateral views of
basking shark teeth, ex Compagno (1990) NOAA
Tech. Rep. NMFS 90,D) Enlarged photo of a
portion of jaw,ex Radcliffe (1916) Bull. Bur.
Fish. Circ. 822
24
Basking Shark Gill Arches
  • Gill rakers shed during cold months.
  • May be hibernation

25
  • Paddlefish- Order Acipenseriformes
  • freshwater, rarely brackish found in China and
    the US
  • gill rakers are long and in the hundreds- used
    for plankton feeding, minute teeth are present
  • Polyodon spathula (US- Mississippi drainage)-
    plankton-feeding non protrusible mouth
  • Psephurus gladius (China- Yangtze River)-
    piscivorous with a protrusible mouth

26
Continuous ram feeding
27
  • Intermittent ram feeders
  • takes one gulp of water at a time, extracts
    particles and repeats the process
  • In using this method, the predator needs to be
    able to grab prey before it moves out of the way.
  • Seen in whales, not sure about in fish????

28
  • Suction Feeders
  • Continuous
  • Intermittent

29
  • Continuous suction feeders (pump filter feeders)-
    creates and osculatory pump and draws water in
    over sieving device. Animal remains still while
    suctioning.
  • Ammocetes (lamprey larvae)-spends 3-7 years
    filter feeding and burrows into sand
  • Feeding
  • a current of water is drawn in by muscular
    action
  • water enters buccal cavity and washes over gills
  • uses gills to filter particles for food
  • in ammocetes, filtering linked to breathing.

30
  • Intermittent suction feeders (intermediate
    feeding)
  • relatively unspecialized
  • intermediate condition between ram and suction
    feeding on individual prey
  • they dont alter their swimming speed or
    direction to focus attention on individual
    plankton.  

31
Diurnal and Nocturnal Planktivores
32
Diurnal Planktivores
Typically feed by forming aggregations in the
water column prey- swimming crustacea, larvaceans
and fish eggs
33
Diurnal Planktivores
  • modifications to jaw, head and dentition usually
    small mouth, reduced or absent teeth
  • jaw protrusion mainly functions to produce
    suction
  • Can feed on zooplankton smaller than 1mm

34
Diurnal Planktivory
  • Adaptations
  • streamlining
  • deeply forked caudal fins
  • aggregation

35
Crepuscular changeover- diurnal fish leave
typically in order of small fish first.mid
sized . then large Very active time. In
nocturnal species- fish enter waters above the
reef at night fall by size order (small to larger)
36
Nocturnal Planktivores
  • Difficulty in visually locating prey in dim light
  • adaptation- large eyes ex. squirrel fish
  • Feeding on zooplankton larger than 1 mm
  • Possibly due to
  • 1.)   inability to see smaller ones
  • 2.)   more efficient
  • 3.)   prey more vulnerable

37
  • Adaptations to nocturnal threats from predators
  • streamlined bodies and deeply forked tails are
    less developed
  • less aggregation occurs at night
  • countershading using luminescent organs
  • Nocturnal planktivores more widespread throughout
    reef than diurnal counterparts

38
Inquiry
  • Describe key characteristics of nocturnal and
    diurnal planktivorous fish.
  • What types tools do animals use to catch
    plankton.
  • What is the advantage and disadvantage of jaw
    protrusion?
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