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Common Group Name: Fishes
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Phylum: Chordata Examples: Jawless Fishes Sharks and Relatives
(Cartilage Fishes) Bony Fishes
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Body Plan Vertebrate Bilateral Symmetry Paired fins Scales Gills Jaws
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All types of feeding in fishes: H, C, D, FF, P Path of Digestion:
Mouth- esophagus- stomach- pyloric ceca (enzymes for digestion)- intestine- anus
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Respiration Most fishes exchange gases using gills.
Water is pulled in through mouth- water pumped over gill filaments- oxygen rich water is taken in- oxygen poor water pumped out of slits.
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heart- gills- rest of the body- heart
Circulation Closed Circulatory System Heart pumped blood around in a single loop Path of blood: heart- gills- rest of the body- heart 4-part heart: sinus venosus, atrium, ventricle, bulbus (conus)arteriousus. *Only 2-chambers
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Excretion Some waste removed through gills.
Other waste is removed by kidneys. Kidneys also help control the amount of water in the body.
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Response Multi-part brain: 1) Olfactory Bulbs- receive smell
2) Cerebrum- processes smell 3) Optic Lobes- process info. from eyes 4) Cerebellum- coordinates body movements 5) Medulla Oblongata- functions of internal organs Highly developed sense organs for sight, taste, smell, sound, and touch.
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Movement Move by alternating contractions between paired muscles.
Fins aid in propelling and direction Swim bladder is a gas-filled organ that adjusts buoyancy.
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Reproduction Internal or external depending on species.
Oviparous- fish whose eggs develop externally. (Salmon) Ovoviviparous- fish whose eggs develop internally with nourishment from the egg. (Guppies) Viviparous- Fish whose eggs develop internally with nourishment from the mother’s body. (Sharks)
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Other Information Evolution of fishes:
Earliest fishes: jawless, bony plate armor Next Fishes: Jawless, little body armor, ancestors of lampreys and hagfishes Next Fishes: Jaws and paired fins arrived Modern Fishes: Two main groups that gave rise to cartilage fish and bony fish
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