Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAmberlynn Carpenter Modified over 9 years ago
2
Natural History of Sharks, Skates, and Rays Sensory Biology MARE 380 Dr. Turner
3
Sensory Biology Legendary sensory abilities Often exaggerated; some deserved Not just sense of “smell” but an array of senses working in conjunction Wired to relative large fish brain
4
Sensory Performance Often characterized in two ways: Sensitivity – minimum stimulus detected by the system Acuity – the ability of the system to discriminate stimulus characteristics - location, type, etc.
5
Sensory Performance Vision Hearing Mechanosenses Electrosenses Olfaction & other Chemosenses
6
Vision Eyes located laterally (Selachians), dorsally (batoids & benthic sharks) Small related to body size (except Bigeye Thresher) Nearly 360° visual field Blind areas in front of snout; behind head Binocular overlap small
7
Vision Nearly 360° visual field Blind areas in front of snout; behind head Binocular overlap small
8
Vision Some species (carcharhinids & sphrynids) have a 3 rd eyelid (nictitating membrane) Extends from lower nasal corner to protect eye from abrasion during feeding or contact
9
Vision Some sharks w/out membrane can roll eye into orbit to protect (e.g. – white, whale shark)
10
Vision Unlike Teleosts – have dynamic iris – increase size of pupil in dim; decrease in bright
11
Vision Unlike Teleosts – have dynamic iris – increase size of pupil in dim; decrease in bright
12
Vision Unlike Teleosts – have dynamic iris – increase size of pupil in dim; decrease in bright
13
Vision Unlike Teleosts – have dynamic iris – increase size of pupil in dim; decrease in bright
14
Vision Possess yellowish pigments in eye similar to some teleosts & diurnal terrestrial animals Also tapetum lucidum – reflective back retina Color vision hypothesized…not known
15
Vision a) tapetum lucidum – reflective plates behind retina (b); intensifies light that strikes it When light increases a black melanin makes them opaque (c)
16
Hearing Do not make noise; hearing shaped by ambient Shark hearing lower than teleosts, especially those with air-bladder connected to ear Unknown as to whether attracted to sound Upper portion – balance 3 semicircular canals (a,b,c) & utricle (d) Lower portion – hearing saccule (sacculus) (e) which receives sounds along endolymphatic duct (f)
17
Hearing Can localize on sound which shows directional hearing – to 10°
18
Mechanosenses Detection of water movements (large & small scale) critical Lateral line system is stimulated by different movement between the body & surrounding water – used to detect dipole sources (prey) and uniform fields (currents) Used for rheotaxis, predator avoidance, hydrodynamic imaging, prey detection, social communication & mating in bony fishes
19
Mechanosenses Mechanosensory Neuromast – group of sensory hair cells surrounded by support cells and covered by gelatinous cupula Functional unit of all lateral line end organs
20
Mechanosenses Distributed on skin surface in grooves on raised papillae (skates, ray, some sharks) or b/w modified placoid scales (sharks) b c A – pore B – mucus-lined inner canal C – sensory cilia D – sensory nerves
21
Mechanosenses
22
Although used for rheotaxis, predator avoidance, hydrodynamic imaging, prey detection, social communication & mating in bony fishes Limited to prey detection & rheotaxis (Movement of an organism in response to a current of water or air)
23
Electrosenses All elasmobranchs possess an elaborate ampullary electroreceptor system that is exquisitely sensitive to low-frequency electric stimuli
24
Electrosenses Consists of subdermal groups of electroreceptive units – Ampullae of Lorenzini Originally thought to be mechanoreceptors
25
Ampullae of Lorenzini Marine elasmobranchs – many individual ampullae are grouped into discrete, bilateral cephalic clusters from which project the subdermal canals that radiate in many directions and terminate at individual skin pores on the head of sharks and the head and pectoral fins of skates & rays
26
Is This Them? “Is this them? Are these they? Who talks like that?!?” - Henchman 21 & 24 A – pore B – canal C – ampullae D – nerves Consists of (ampulla) & a subdermal canal about 1mm wide that projects to the surface
27
Olfaction & Chemosense Originally thought to be most important mechanisms for finding food Lateral olfactory epithelium (sacs)
28
Olfaction & Chemosense Each nares is blind slit divided in 2 by fold Water forced into specific olfactory cells as moves through nostril – flow-thru
29
Make Sense? a - Acoustic-lateralis system b - smell c - sight d – Ampullae of Lorenzini
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.