510 likes | 945 Views
Ichthyology. “jawed fishes”. Class Chondrichthyes- cartilaginous Subclass Elasmobranchii- sharks, rays, and skates Subclass Holocephali- chimeras & ratfishes Class Osteichthyes- bony fishes Subclass Dipnoi- lung fishes Subclass Crossopterygii- coelocanth
E N D
“jawed fishes” • Class Chondrichthyes- cartilaginous • Subclass Elasmobranchii- sharks, rays, and skates • Subclass Holocephali- chimeras & ratfishes • Class Osteichthyes- bony fishes • Subclass Dipnoi- lung fishes • Subclass Crossopterygii- coelocanth • Subclass Actinopterygii- modern bony fishes
Class Chondrichthyes:(Cartilaginous Fishes) • general diagnostic characters: • reduced dermal armor • cartilaginous endoskeleton & girdles • tricuspid teeth • gill slits • fins: two dorsal, no anal, stiff pectorals, flexible pelvic • heterocercal tail
1st Elasmobranch Radiation diagnostic characters: • shark-like appearance • terminal mouth; amphistylic jaw suspension • unique tooth replacement • claspers
2nd Elasmobranch Radiation diagnostic characters: • heterodont dentition • unique pectoral & pelvic fin arrangements • heterocercal tail
Extant Forms • Elasmobranchii [sharks (360 species) , skates & rays (456 species); appear in the Jurassic
diagnostic characters of sharks • hyostylic jaw suspension & rostrum • cranial kinesis- allows consumption of large food items • pectoral girdle fused ventrally • placoid scales • lack gas bladder; liver provides buoyancy (~ 25% of body mass).
sensory systems • lateral line system (mechanoreceptors) • ampullae of Lorenzini (detects electrical impulses) • acute chemosensory • tapetum lucidum • internal fertilization and large female investment; oviparity, ovoviviparity, & viviparity
diagnostic characters of skates & rays • hard teeth with flat crowned plates; mostly adapted for feeding on benthic invertebrates • swimming via undulations of pectoral fins • stingrays (family Dasyatidae) modified placoid scales form a sting at the base of the tail • manta rays (family Mobulidae) plankton feeders
Shark Anatomy Link Click Here
Class Osteichthyes: “bony fishes” • most abundant and diverse vertebrates >21,000 species • bony scales (enlarged in the head region) • operculum covering the gills • stream-lined; laterally compressed • ossified endoskeleton; secondarily lost in some species
Dipnoans • subclass Dipnoi- "double breathers"; lungfishes • upper jaw fused to the brain case; large, crushing tooth plates • two dorsal fins • paired fins
Crossopterygians • dominant fresh water predators during the Devonian period • rhipidistians (ancestor to amphibians) & coelacanth; Latimeria (extant)
important structural characteristics: • lobed fins with elements connecting to pectoral & pelvic girdles • autostylic jaw suspension- jointed braincase (jaw connects directly to the brain case) • labyrinth tooth- complex folding of the enamel
Actinopterygians (ray-finned fishes) • most modern bony fishes; subclass Actinopterygii • important structural characteristics: • ganoid scales • distinctive pectoral & pelvic girdles • fins attach to the body via flexible fin rays instead of a fleshy lobe • branchiostegal rays • no internal nares