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Chapter 18 Fishes
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Characteristics Phylum: Craniata (describes the skull that surrounds their brain Much evolution occurred in freshwater Much evolution involved the movement of fish between fresh and marine environments Over 41% of fish live in freshwater even though only small percentage of the Earth’s water resources is freshwater
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Subphylum Hyperotreti: Hagfishes
20 species Heads are supported by cartilage and brains enclosed in a fibrous sheath Retain a notochord 4 pairs of sensory tentacles surrounding their mouths Cold water marine habitats Most primitive group in the craniata Live buried in the sand and mud Feed off of soft bodied invertebrates and scavenge dead and dying fish Slimy skin
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Subphylum Vertebrata: Ostracoderms
Extinct agnathans Had bony armor as a defense Bottom dwellers Filter feeders
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Subphylum Vertebrata: Hyperoartia- Class Cephalaspidomorphi
Lampreys Found in freshwater and marine environments Prey on other fish and their larvae as filter feeders Mouth of an adult lamprey is suckerlike with lips that have sensory attachments Have salivary glands with anticoagulant secretions and feed mainly on the blood of their prey
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Lampreys Adult lampreys live in the ocean or the Great lakes, at the end of their lives they migrate to freshwater to spawn They build spawning nests in shallow water, a female attaches to a rock with her mouth, male use their mouth to attach to the female head and wrap themselves around the female Eggs are shed in batches and fertilized externally and then covered in sand
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Gnathostomata 1. 2 important evolutionary developments
Jaws: allowed for more efficient gill ventilation Paired appendages: used to counteract the tendency to roll during locomotion and control the pitch of the the swimming fish 2 classes: cartilaginous and bony fish Contain the armored fish which are extinct and acanthodians which are also extinct
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Class Chondrichthyes Includes sharks, skates, rays and ratfishes
Most are carnivores or scavengers Have biting mouthparts and paired appendages
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Subclass Elasmobranchii
About 820 species no swim bladders Cartilaginous skeleton Born with full sets of teeth
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Tiger Sharks Found in tropical and temperate waters
Can grow up to 16 ft. Solitary, nocturnal Wide spectrum of food
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Whale Shark Slow moving filter feeding shark
Largest: 41 feet and pounds Found in warm oceans Life span of 70 years
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Whale Shark Feed mainly on plankton Docile
Does not pose a threat to humans
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Hammerhead Shark Utilize electroreception
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Distribution Hammerhead sharks Tiger sharks
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Stingray http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/stingray
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Subclass Holocephali About 30 species Have an operculum: gill cover
Lack scales
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Class Osteichthyes Bony fish
Have swim bladders: an internal gas filled organ that contributes to the buoyancy of fish
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Subclass Sarcopterygii
Have muscular lobes associated with fins and use lungs in gas exchange They survive stagnation by breathing with lungs but normally use gills
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Coelacanths Rare order of fishes that were thought to have been extinct but rediscovered in 1938
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Osteolepiforms Prehistoric lobe finned fish Extinct
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Subclass Actinopterygii
Ray finned fishes Possess swim bladders Sturgeons, paddlefishes
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Sea Horses 54 species Class actinopterygii
Female deposits up to 1500 eggs in a male seahorses pouch who then carries them for up to 45 days till they emerge from pouch
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Sea horses
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