Title: Osteichthyes
1Osteichthyes
2Osteichthyes
- Means fish with bony skeletons
- There are over 20,000 species of bony fish
3Where Do Most Fish Live?
- Most fish live in the epipelagic zone
4Photic Zones in the Ocean
5Why do fish move?
- To increase their chances of survival
- To help them reproduce
- To find food and shelter
- To get oxygen
- To migrate
- To avoid predators
- Fish want to use as little energy as possible to
get what they need
6What Slows Fish Down?
- Frictional drag the rubbing of the surface of a
fishs body against the water slows it down. - Ideal shape to reduce drag is a sphere
7What Slows Fish Down? 2nd Type of Drag
- Form Drag is caused by cross-sectional area
pushing through viscous (THICK) water - To reduce form drag the fish should be like a
long cylinder
8What Slows a Fish down?Type of drag 3
- Turbulance caused by movement of the natural
currents in the water. - The best shape to reduce this drag is like a
torpedo, 4.5 times the objects diameter.
9Barracuda
10Types of Fins
- Tail Fin (CAUDAL FIN)
- Paired Fins (PECTORAL and PELVIC FINS)
- Medial Fins (DORSA and ANAL FINS)
11External Anatomy of a Fish
12External Anatomy
13PRESSURE AND DEPTH
- The weight of air pressing on an average adult
person is about 8 tons. If this pressure were to
be suddenly removed from us our blood would boil
and we would die in seconds.
14How a Fish Swims
- A fish swims by contracting the muscles on one
side of its body like a wave along one side of
its body going from head to foot.
15How a Fish Swims
16Caudal Fins
- Caudal fins have different shapes
1. Homocercal --gt Top and bottom halves the
same size a. Rounded (Low A.R.) b.
Truncate (Intermediate A.R.) c. Forked
(Intermediate A.R.) d. Lunate (High A.R.)
2. Heterocercal --gt Top half different
size than bottom half
17Types of Caudal Fins
18Types of Caudal Fins
- Heterocercal often found on sharks
19Types of Caudal Fins
- Some shapes help the fish swim fast like the
lunate shape while others make the fish swim slow
but turn well
20Paired Fins
- Help the fish turn and stop
21Medial FinsDorsal and Anal Fins
- Help prevent the fish from spinning and keep it
stable in the water
22Measuring Fin Efficiency
- Aspect Ratio (fin height)2 / fin area Higher
aspect ratio faster fish
23Caudal FinsPush the fish forward
24Aspect Ratio and Fin Types
25Movement, Streamlining, and Speed
- The speed limit of a fish is determined by the
viscosity or thickness of the water - Streamlining of the fastest swimming fish (ex.
Tuna) reduces turbulence - Eyes are flattened against the head and male sex
organs are usually internal - Barracudas can reach speeds of 40 km/hr
- Yellowfin Tuna can reach speeds of 45 km/hr
- Larger Tuna can reach 110 km/hr
26Cruising Speed
- Cruising speed for fish is about
- 1 or 2 body lengths per second (BL/sec.)
27Measuring Length
28Kinds of Muscle in Fast Swimming Fish
- 75 of the total body mass of fast swimming fish
like tuna is muscle - There is a greater percentage of red muscle than
white muscle - Red muscle contains myoglobin, a pigment that
attracts oxygen. - The power output of red muscle is 6 times that of
white muscle
29Salmon
30Salmon Red Muscle
31Yellowfin Tuna
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33Barracuda
34Flounder
35Flounder Muscle
36Water Viscosity
- Water viscosity is the thickness of water caused
by the sticky cohesion of water molecules to each
other and the adhesion of water molecules to
other objects causing friction. - Cold water creates 2x as much friction as warm
water. - An organism in warm water must be smaller than a
same shaped organism in cold water to prevent
sinking due to viscosity
37Water Viscosity
38Fish Senses
- Sight some fish can see color and can see in
very dim light - Hearing fish can hear
- Smell fish have nostrils used for smelling
- Touch fish can feel objects against their skin
- Lateral line- A system of canals on the sides of
fishes that helps fish detect changes in
pressure, vibrations and currents
39Fish Eyes
40Fish Hearing
41Fish Smell
42Lateral Line
43Lateral Line
44Lateral Line
45Lateral Line
46Lateral Line
- Fish hear via their lateral lines, a line of
pressure sensors running along each side of the
fish that pick up pressure waves ( sound) in
water. When someone pounds on an aquarium, that
creates waves of pressure in the water that, to
the fish, would be analogous to cupping your
hands and pounding on your ears--NEVER POUND ON A
FISH TANK!
47Functions of the Lateral Line
- Detect changes in pressure and vibrations and
currents - Detect prey
- Swim together in a school
- Detect predators on the side or behind them
- Pick up vibrations from the swimming together of
other animals
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49BUOYANCY
50BUOYANCY
- Ways animals and plants avoid sinking
- By adjusting body density to the same density as
that of the water around them (neutral buoyancy).
- Having flattened or bristly shapes that increase
surface area and reduce sinking.
51Maintaining Buoyancy
- To maintain buoyancy the fish will either
- Adjust the density of its body by using a SWIM
BLADDER - They will adjust the density of the components of
their insides (they will consume lighter weight
ions and leave the heavier ones in the
surrounding water)
52SWIM BLADDERS
- A swim bladder is a balloon-like structure that
is - inflated to make the fish rise higher in the
water - or deflated to make the fish sink lower
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54SWIM BLADDER
55SWIM BLADDER
56No Swim Bladder
- Some fish like Tuna do not have a swim bladder
and must swim fast to prevent sinking - Some fish like catfish do not have a swim bladder
and spend their life on the bottom
57Respiration
- Fish use gills to absorb oxygen from the
surrounding water
58Comparison of Gas in Ocean Water and the
Atmosphere
Gas Chemical Symbol Percentage in
Air Percentage in Sea Water Nitrogen N 2
78.08 62.6 Oxygen O 2
20.95 34.3 Carbon Dioxide CO 2
0.033 1.4 Dissolved Oxygen
59Dissolved Gases
- Gas Ocean Atmosphere
- Oxygen 5-10ml/L 200ml/L
- Dissolved gases vary in water with temperature
and salinity. - Cold fresh water can hold more dissolved gas than
warm saltwater.
60Parts of a Gill
- Gill Arch - stiff structure that supports the
gill filaments and the gill rakers - Gill Rakers prevent food from clogging up the
gill filaments - Gill Filaments fingerlike projections where
oxygen is absorbed and carbon dioxide is removed
61Parts of a Gill
62 63How Fish Breathe
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67Counter-Current System
- Gas is exchanged in gills because water and blood
move along side each other in opposite directions
68PRESSURE AND DEPTH
- A column of water only 10 m deep exerts a
pressure of 1 ATM. Every 10 m of water exerts
another ATM of pressure. Organisms living at 100m
or 500m are subjected to 10 ATM or 50 ATM (plus 1
ATM of air pressure above the sea).
69PRESSURE AND DEPTH
70Fish and Body Temperature
- Types of temperature systems
- Endothermic (homeothermic) maintain a constant
internal body temperature (ex. Humans 98.60F) - Ectothermic or Poikilothermic - have a
temperature similar to their surroundings (ex. If
the water is 560F F then the fish will have a
body temperature around 560F)
71Fish Reproduction
- Most fish have internal sex organs that we cannot
see. - fish gonads (sex organs) produce gametes (sex
cells) only at certain times. - These times must be the same for both males and
females and must be timed to the most favorable
conditions.
72Fish Reproduction
- Fish may only reproduce when there
- 1. Is enough of the right kind of food
- 2.There are enough hours of light each day
- 3. The water is the right temperature
73Fish Reproduction
- Includes
- Courtship a series of behaviors designed to
attract mates - Spawning a release of gametes into the water
- Copulation a direct transfer of sperm into a
females body
74Fish Reproduction
- Most fish reproduce by spawning.
- This is when the female swims and lays eggs on
plants or sand in the water - The male fish swims behind her depositing sperm
into the water where some of it may land on and
fertilize the eggs
75Sunfish Spawning
76Fish Reproduction
- Other Fish give birth to live young like humans
(ex. Guppy giving birth)
77Fish Reproduction
- Some fishes are hermaphrodites. They have both
male and female gonads - Hermaphrodism is more common among the deep-water
fishes. (Gourami)
78Deep Sea Fish
79Fish Reproduction
- Reproduction in fishes involves many adaptations
that help individuals get together and select
mates.
80Fish Courtship
- Mandarin Fish Dancing to attract a female
81Fish Reproduction
- Sex Reversal
- Males may change to females or females to males
(ex. Clownfish)
82Sex Reversal
- Among some species of anemone fishes a single
large female who mates only with a single large
dominant male inhabits each sea anemone. All
others are small non-breeding males. If the
female disappears her mate changes into a female
and the largest of the non-breeding males becomes
the new dominant male. The new female can start
spawning as soon as 26 days after her sex change.