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Fish Lecture Notes
Fishes
A. Originated in the sea
B. 69% of earth covered with water creates many
habitats
C. 25,000 species of living fishes
D. Evolution of Fishes
1. Eary Crainiates
a. Late Cambrian to middle Ordovician
b. Aquatic filter feeders
c. advantages over proto chordates
d. muscular suction for filter feeding rather than cilia
e. more food - grow larger
2. Ostracoderms - no jaws
3. Agnathans (early Carboniferous)
4. Gnathostomes (mid Silurian)
a.
Chondrichthyes (Sharks, Skates, & Rays) > early Devonian
b. Osteichthes (Bony fishes)
Agnathans (Jawless Fishes)
I. Appear in early carboniferous
II. Characterized by
a. no jaws
b. no paired appendages
c. circular mouths (cyclostomata)
III. Two distinct Groups - Hagfishes and Lampreys
A. Hagfish (Myxinoidea)
i. no bone (no vertebral
column)
ii. entirely marine
species
iii. 40 species in 6 genera
iv. world wide distribution
v. live in mud burrow
colonies in deep regions of the continental shelf
vi. eat polycheate worms
and shrimp (probably mole like)
vii. also attracted to bait
and other foods (super scavangers) (knot feeding)
viii. accessory hearts,
not coordinated
ix. slime defenses
x. recently decimated
by eel-skin industry
B. Lampreys (Petromyzontidae)
i. 40 species
ii. possess vertebra
iii. most are anadromous
(up stream to breed)
iv. adults do not
feed or migrate
v. worldwide distribution
except tropics and polar regions
vi. feed on vertebrate
fluids
vii. Reproduction -
a. spawn after temperature triggered migration attach to rock and thrash
about to make nest (oxygenates) male
and female wrap around - fertilize eggs die
b. larvae hatch - drift downstream - burrow into mud and filter feed
for 3 to seven years
c. metamorphosis in parasitic juvenile
viii. expansion into the
great lakes devastated comercial fishing stocks
ix. now controlled
with traps and pesticides
Gnathostomes (jawed fishes)
A. Jaws (major inovation!)
1. allows for expansion of feeding modes and substrate
manipulation
2. arose from modification of a gill arch
3. internally supported paired appendages
4. a variety of other neural, muscular and
endocrine differences
B. Origin of Fins
1. three dimensions to control - extremely
important in adaptating to conditions
a. yaw (swinging right
to left
b. pitch (up and down)
c. roll (rotation
around the body axis)
2. fins projecting horizontally from body
control roll
3. move fins forward - controls pitch
4. vertical fin controls yaw
Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes)
I. Appear in early devonian
II. Two groups: Holocephali (ratfish and chimaeras) and Elasmobranchii
(sharks, skates and rays)
A. Holocephali (whole head) (30 species)
1. little agreement @ phylogony
2. single gill opening
3. ratfish or chimaera (mythological
beast - fantasy critter)
4. ratfish from long tail
5. found deeper than 80
m
6. pavement like teeth for
crushing mollusks
7. defensive dorsal spine
with poison gland
8. lay leathery eggs
B. Elasmobranchii (plate gilled)
1. five to seven gill openings
2. Squalomorph sharks (80
sp)
i. smaller brain size
ii. more ancestral
iii. dog fish, cookie-cutter , basking, megamouth
iv. deep / cold water (except dogfish)
v. some bioluminescence
3. Galeomorph sharks (280
sp)
i. modern
ii. nurse, mackerel (great white)(tiger sharks)(hammerheads)
iii. dominant carnivores in warm shallow seas
4. Eight key adaptations
for evolutionary success
i. Buoyancy
a. reduce weight (cartilaginous)
b. no gas filled bladder
- sharks without liver has density of 1.062 - 1.089 gms/ ml
- seawater is 1.030 mg/ml
- shark liver is 0.95 mg/ml (may be as much as 25% of body mass)
- adjust oil content adjusts buoyancy (shark liver oil)
ii. Respiration
a. spiracles anterior to gill openings (draw in water)
iii. External Covering
a. placoid scales - give lightweight protective coat
b. increase hydrodynamic efficiency (reduce turbulence)
c. grow larger as individual grows
(tenoid scales of bony fish serve the same function but didn’t evolve
until several hundred million years later)
iv. Feeding
a. Jaw attachment
- only loosely attached
- both upper and lower can move up or down relative to the brain
case
- hyostylic
> allows for multiple jaw positions (cranial kinesis)
> can drop away from brain case and open wide to bite organisms larger
than itself
b. Teeth
- triangular and serrated (modified placoid scales which are continually
shed)
- shark bites - 2800kg (cm2)
- protrudes jaw to set teeth further in - thrashes to create lateral
motion
- saws off a chunk of flesh. Can eat both large and small prey
- often kill by exsanguination (hold prey as it bleeds to death)
- largest sharks eat small things
- basking sharks - teeth are whip like - form strainers like
baleen
- whale sharks use gill rakers to collect food
- megamouth - mouth lined with reflective crystals - bioluminescent?
v. Movement
a. heterocercal tail increases propulsion
vi. Sensory systems
a. lateralalis system (vibration)
- detect struggling fish
- helicopter rotor vibrations
b. ampullae of Lorenzini - electro reception
- sensitive to 0.01 microvolts
- detect electric fields
- muscle contraction generate changes in electrical potential
- use for prey detection and possibly navigation
- chemo reception well refined (1 part in 10 billion)
c. sharks probably find prey by mechano and chemo reception but rely on
electroreception for final attack
d. vision - teatum lucidum (layer of guanine crystals0
- reflects light (eyeshine)
- controlled on bright light by expansion of cells with melanin pigment
vii. Osmoregulation
a. become isotonic with sea water by retaining nitrogenous wastes
b. rectal gland excretes sodium and chloride
viii. Reproduction
a. internal fertilization
b. males wrap around females and insert claspers
c. sometimes bite to hold on
d. relatively small number of offspring with greater parental investment
5. Skates and Rays Hypotremata
(456 sp)
i. benthic
ii. durophagous habits
iii. swim with large pectoral fins
iv. reduced placoid scales improve flexibility
v. remaining senticles are enlarged along dorsal surface (some venomous)
vi. some have tissues in tail which emit electric discharge
vii. id conspecifics
a. torpedo rays discharge up to 200 V to stun prey