Title: Marine Fishes
1Marine Fishes
- Pelagic organisms that can actively swim (against
a current) are known as nekton
- Nekton include some invertebrates such as
cephalopods and pelagic arthropods such as shrimp
and swimming crabs, but most nekton are
vertebrates
2Phylum Chordata, Subphylum Vertebrata
- Vertebrates (subphylum Vertebrata) share four
fundamental characteristics of the phylum
Chordata with 2 invertebrate subphyla - Subphylum Urochordata
- Subphylum Cephalochordata
- Vertebrates differ, however, in
the presence of a backbone, or
spine, and the presence of an
endoskeleton
3Subphylum Vertebrata
- The vertebral backbone consists of a dorsal row
of hollow skeletal elements, the vertebrae - The vertebrae surround and protect the nerve
cord, or spinal cord, which ends in a brain
protected by a skull made of cartilage or bone - Vertebrates exhibit bilateral symmetry and have a
distinct head, and organ systems
4Subphylum Vertebrata
5Marine Fishes
- Fishes were the first vertebrates, appearing more
than 500 million years ago
6Marine Fishes
- Fishes are the oldest and structurally-simplest
of all living invertebrates - Half of all vertebrates are fish!
- Most species of fish are marine
- Three groups are fish are currently recognized
- Jawless Fishes (superclass Agnatha)
- Cartilaginous Fishes (class Chondrichthyes)
- Bony Fishes (superclass Osteichthyes)
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8General Fish Morphology
http//www.users.totalise.co.uk/darrenbarton/id11
9.htm
9Jawless Fishes (Agnatha)
- The most primitive of all living fish are the
jawless fish (Agnatha) - As they lack jaws, jawless fish must feed by
suction with the aid of a round, muscular mouth
and rows of teeth - Body is cylindrical and elongated like that of an
eel or snake no paired fins or scales - lack true vertebral column!
- Cartilaginous skeleton
10Jawless Fish (Agnatha)
- Jawless fish include the hagfish and the lampreys
- Hagfish feed mostly on dead or dying fishes
usually found on deep, muddy bottoms - Exclusively marine
- Lampreys attach themselves to other living fishes
and suck their blood and tissue matter - Primarily freshwater
11Hagfish (left) vs. Lamprey (right)
http//chrisortlepp.com/photos/Hagfish-coiled.jpg
12Cartilaginous Fishes
- Cartilaginous fishes (Chondrichthyes) have a
skeleton made not of bone, but of cartilage,
which is lighter and more flexible than bone - Cartilaginous fishes have well-developed jaws and
paired fins for efficient swimming - Most cartilaginous fish also have rough,
sandpaper-like skin, the result of placoid scales
pointed tip directed backwards
13Cartilaginous Fishes
- Cartilaginous fishes include sharks, skates, rays
and chimeras, or ratfishes - Nearly all are marine
- 350 species of sharks 500 species of skates
and rays 30 species of chimeras
14Sharks (cue scary, cello music)
- Sharks are often referred to as living fossils
because many of the species alive today are
similar to ones that swam the seas gt100 million
years ago - Sharks have powerful jaws with rows of numerous
sharp, often triangular teeth - Lost or broken teeth are quickly replaced by
another, which shifts forward from the row behind
it as if on a conveyor belt
http//www.evolutionnyc.com//ImgUpload/P_455917_96
4647.jpg
15Sharks
- Sharks have fusiform, spindle-shaped bodies,
which cut easily through the water - A well-developed, muscular caudal fin propels
them through the water paired pectoral fins
enable steering and dorsal fins provide stability
16Sharks are efficient predators
- Many sharks exhibit counter-shading, appearing
dark on top and light on the bottom - Camouflage from above and below
- Why?
flmnh.ufl.edu
17Sharks, dog bites, lightning strikes, and falling
coconuts, oh my!
- Sharks have five to seven gill slits which are
located behind the head for respiration (well
come back to this) - More than 80 of all sharks are under 2 meters in
length (less than 6.6 feet), and only a few of
the remaining 20 are aggressive towards humans - FACT You are more likely to die from a dog bite
(or lightening strike) than a shark bite
18Fish are friends, not food
- In fact, sharks have WAY more to fear from humans
than we do of sharks - Shark populations are in considerable decline
worldwide - 80 global decline in shark populations!
- 26-73 million sharks killed every year for their
fins! - Potential increases in diseased,
unfit, and unhealthy prey
individuals
all-creatures.org
19Dramatic decline in shark populations
Myers, et al. 2007
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21Is your dinner endangered?
22Rays and Skates
- Rays and skates have dorsoventrally flattened
bodies, with 5 pairs of gill slits on the
underside (ventral side) of their body - Most are demersal, spending much of their lives
on the sea floor - Pectoral fins are
greatly extended
resembling wings
23Is it a ray, or a skate?
- Skates usually have 2 dorsal fins Rays lack
dorsal fins altogether - Skates have a muscular tail Rays have a
whip-like tail, usually with a prominent stinger
Ray
Skate
24Chimeras, or ratfishes
- Approximately 30 species of deep-water,
strange-looking cartilaginous fish are grouped
separately as chimeras, or ratfishes - Only one pair of gill slits, covered by a flap of
skin - Demersal (bottom-dwelling)
- Some with a long,
rat-like tail
25To summarize.
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28Bony Fishes (Osteichthyes)
- Bony fish (Osteichthyes) are the most successful
and abundant of the 2 groups of fishes (96 of
all fish 27,000 species) - Osteichthyes possess a hard, strong - but
lightweight - skeleton made of calcium that
supports them and is responsible for their
success (and diversity) as a group - Bony fish include tuna, cod, flounder, goldfish,
and other familiar species
29Bony Fishes (Osteichthyes)
- The composition of their skeleton is not the only
distinguishing feature of bony fishes - In contrast to the tiny, pointed placoid scales
of cartilaginous fishes, bony fish usually have
cycloid or ctenoid scales, which are thin,
flexible, and overlapping - Cycloid scales have a smooth outer edge
- Ctenoid scales have a toothed outer edge
30Bony Fishes (Osteichthyes)
- The scales are made of bone and are covered by a
thin layer of skin and a protective mucus - Bony fish are also characterized by the presence
of a gill flap, or operculum
31Bony fish have a bony opeculumCartilaginous fish
have gill slits
kmle.co.kr
32Bony Fishes (Osteichthyes)
- Bony fish are subdivided into two major groups
- Lobe-finned fishes
- Ray-finned fishes
- Lobe-finned fishes are largely extinct, but
include lungfishes and coelacanths - Ray-finned fishes, in contrast, are far more
successful, and can be further divided into
soft-rayed and spiny-rayed bony fish
33Soft-rayed vs. Spiny-rayed
- Soft rayed fish representatives include
- Cod
- Trout
- Herring
- Spiny-rayed fish representatives include
- Bass
- Groupers
- Reef fish
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35Fishes of Long Island
36Fishes of Long Island
37Flatfish (doormats) of Long Island
KEY Right-sided Left-sided
38Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny?!!?
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