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Phylum: Chordata C lass: Pisces (Fishes). Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata. Common Characteristics. 1. Vertebrate 2. Cranium - skull 3. Endoskeleton - bone or cartilage. 4. Streamline shape 5. Muscular Tail 6. Fins 7. Gills 8. Scales
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Phylum: ChordataClass: Pisces (Fishes) Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata
Common Characteristics • 1. Vertebrate • 2. Cranium - skull • 3. Endoskeleton- bone or cartilage. • 4. Streamline shape • 5. Muscular Tail • 6. Fins • 7. Gills • 8. Scales • 9. Lateral Line – rows of sensory pores along the length of the fishes body that pick up vibrations in the surrounding water.
B. Classes Of Fishes • 1. Agnatha – • Jawless • 2. Chondrichthyes – Cartilaginous • 3. Osteichthyes- Boney
Agnatha – Jawless fish Hagfish 1. Jawless • 2. Two Moveable plates • 3. Rough tongue used to pinch off chunks of flesh of another fish. • 4. Burrows through the body of dead fishes through gills or anus, eating all the internal parts. • 5. Releases a slime for defense
Lamprey • 1. Spend half it’s life free-living and half as a parasite. • 2. Uses it’s disk-shaped mouth with circular rows of sharp teeth to attach to a host and scraps a hole in the flesh, secreting a chemical that keeps the host blood from clotting and feeds on the blood or fluids that leak out. • 3. External fertilization
B. Chondrichthyes – cartilaginous fishes 1. Sharks teeth – Rows of teeth, shape and size depends of it’s feeding habit and what kind of species it is.
Sharks • 3. Olfactory Bulbs – In the brain region that intercepts smell. • 4. Shark Skeleton – made of Cartilage. • 2. Placoids - Plate-like scales , tooth like spines, Very sharp and jagged edges
Chondrichthyes • 1. Rays • 2. Skates • 3. Sharks
Mako Sharks Hammer head TIGER LEMON Great White BULL
6. Gills – a sharks gills are not covered by an operculum, gills are exposed by gill slits. Sharks lack an operculum but they can still remain still because of the structures on their gills that allows water to constantly flow over them.
7. Rectal Gland – remove excess sodium and chloride ions from the blood and releases them in to the rectum for elimination. (urine)
1. Internal Fertilization • A. Claspers – Males modified pelvic fins and used to transfer sperm into the females body. • B. Some of the fertilized eggs are hatched outside the sharks body and some develop inside the females body. • C. No parental care
C. Osteichthyes – Bony fishes 2 .sub-classes a. Ray-finned fishes – Fins have sharp pointed bones covered with skin. b. Fleshy-finned fishes - lobed 1) Lung fish – lunged fishes
2) Coelacanth – very primitive, the front fins are more limb–like appendage, than fin like. Thought to eventually use fin-limb like appendages to climb out of the water?
4. External Anatomy of a Boney fish • A. Head, trunk and a tail region. • B. Operculum – Hard plate, opens at the rear, covers and protects the gills.
C. Fins • 1. Caudal – Tail, forward movement • 2. Dorsal – top, Pair, Defense • 3. Anal – below tail, steering • 4. Pelvic – below and behind head, NAVIGATOR • 5. Pectoral – side of the head region, stopping
5. Internal Anatomy • A. Digestive System – • 1. Mouth Pharynx, esophagus, stomach, intestines, anus • 2. Accessory organs • A. Liver – produces bile • B. Gall Bladder – stores bile • C. Pancreas – releases enzymes 3. Villi – projections in the intestines that increase the surface area for absorption.
6. Circulatory • 1. Closed system • 2. Fishes heart - 2 Chambers,- 1 Atrium and 1 Ventricle. • 3. 4 parts - • a. Sinus Venosus, • b. Atrium, • c. Ventricle • d. BulbusArteriosus • 4. Blood Vessels