Classes: Agnatha, Chondrichthyes, and Osteichthyes FISHIES Classes: Agnatha, Chondrichthyes, and Osteichthyes
______ are the dominant aquatic vertebrates.
Fish have adaptations to an aquatic environment that make their movements through water ________________________
_______________ South American Freshwater Fish
Internal Anatomy of _____ Fish
________________ Large sheets of thin frilly tissue filled with capillaries that take in dissolved oxygen from the water and release carbon dioxide.
Circulatory system: pumps blood in a single loop through a __________ chambered heart.
Countercurrent Flow The _____________ movement of water against the flow of blood in the fish’s gills. Maximizes the amount of oxygen the fish can pull from the water.
Swimming and Maneuvering Most fish swim by contracting large segmented muscles on either side of their body from the head to the ___________. This makes an S-shaped wave that pushes it through the water. They counteract these movements with their _____________.
_______ Anatomy of Bony Fish
Fins Surfaces that project from a fish’s body Keep the fish _________________ Direct the movement of the fish
Fins
_______________________ Class Agnatha Existed since the Cambrian and continues to live Do not have paired fins Have a notochord in both larvae and adults Light sensitive pineal eye No identifiable __________________ Ectothermic Two-chambered heart External Fertilization
Sea Lamprey Petromyzon marinus
Hagfish Myxine glutinosa
Jaws Evolved from gill arches Most jawed vertebrates have teeth on their upper and lower jaws. Teeth used to ________________ and process food
Jaws Gave vertebrates a huge advantage as predators and pushed them to the top of the _________________.
Two groups of jawed fish still exist: Cartilaginous Fish and Bony fish
Cartilaginous Fish Skeletons made of cartilage while ancestors had skeletons made of bone They have lost the ability to make ___________________ Cartilage is unique – it’s stronger than human cartilage.
Two Groups of Cartilaginous Fish Holocephali: chimeras Elasmobrachs: sharks, rays and skates
Holocephali: chimeras Small group of deep-sea fish with platelike grinding teeth. Feed on crustaceans and other invertebrates
Elasmobranchs: sharks, rays and skates ___________ species of sharks 400 species of rays and skates Ray Skate
Sharks Most hunt other ________________ Some eat seals and sea lions
Filter feeder, eats plankton Biggest Sharks _____________ Feed on plankton, krill and algae Basking Sharks Filter feeder, eats plankton
Great White Shark
All Fish Have a ______________________system This is a series of shallow canals on the sides of the fish made up of cells that are sensitive to small changes in water movement. This allows them to have a sense of “distant touch”.
External Anatomy of Bony Fish
Class Osteichthyes Bony Fish More than ______________ species Living in nearly every aquatic environment on Earth Some have become parasites of other fish One group can even spend short periods of time on land
Characteristics internal skeleton ossified (i.e., endochondral bone) ____________________or lung present bony scales (ganoid, cycloid, ctenoid, or cosmoid) gill slits covered by an operculum (single external gill opening) late Silurian to Recent
____________________ Genus Hippocampus Unique because males become pregnant when the females deposit the eggs into the birthing pouch.
Nile Knifefish Will aggressively bite anything that moves Discharges an electrical charge