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Today’s Fishes Section 33.2
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Jawless Fish - Agnathans
Lampreys and hagfish Scaleless Eel-like bodies Multiple gill slits Unpaired fins Skeletons of cartilage Hagfish – ‘vultures of the sea’ scavengers Lamprey – parasites on other living fish
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Hagfish
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Lampreys
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Cartilaginous Fishes Sharks, skates and rays
Skeletons made of cartilage strengthened with calcium carbonate – lightweight and strong Streamlined body Placoid scales – give skin a rough texture Teeth are modified scales and are replaced as needed throughout lifetime
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Shark
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Skate roundish or triangular shape
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Ray kite-shaped with 1 or more venomous barbs in the tail
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Bony Fishes Largest group of fish Endoskeleton made of bone
Lateral line system – acts as a sensory organ to detect movement in the water (theirs and other objects) Operculum – hard gill cover which allows fish to move water over the gill while remaining still in the water helps fish conserve energy Swim bladder – allows fish to maintain water depth gas in fish rises; gas out fish sinks Two groups: ray-finned fish & lobe-finned fish
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Ray-finned fish Most fish are in this group
Teleosts – the most advanced Highly mobile fins Very thin scales Completely symmetrical tails 95% of all fish species
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Yellow perch – a ray-finned fish
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Lobe-finned fish Only 7 species – 1 coelacanth + 6 lung fish
Each fin has a long, fleshy, muscular lobe supported by a central core of bones May be a direct ancestor of amphibians, but probably not
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Coelacanth
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Lung fish
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