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Fish. 2. Fish Characteristics. All fish are ectotherms. They are adapted for living in nearly every type of water environment on Earth, freshwater and salt water. Some fish, such as salmon, spend part of their life in freshwater and part of it in salt water. Fish. 2. Fish Characteristics.
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Fish 2 Fish Characteristics • All fish are ectotherms. • They are adapted for living in nearly every type of water environment on Earth, freshwater and salt water. • Some fish, such as salmon, spend part of their life in freshwater and part of it in salt water.
Fish 2 Fish Characteristics • A streamlined shape, a muscular tail, and fins allow most fish to move rapidly through the water. • Fins are fan-like structures attached to the endoskeleton. They are used for steering, balancing, and moving. • Paired fins on the sides allow fish to move right, left, backward, and forward. • Fins on the top and bottom of the body give the fish stability.
Fish 2 Fish Characteristics • Most fish have scales, which are hard, thin plates that cover the skin and protect the body. • Most fish scales are made of bone. • They can be tooth shaped, diamond shaped, cone shaped, or round. • The shape of the scales can be used to help classify fish.
Fish • Most fish have a lateral line system, which is made up of a shallow, canal-like structure that extends along the length of the fish’s body and is filled with sensory organs. 2 Body Systems • All fish have highly developed sensory systems.
Fish 2 Body Systems • The lateral line enables a fish to sense its environment and to detect movement. • Some fish, such as sharks, also have a strong sense of smell. Sharks can detect blood in the water from several kilometers away.
Fish 2 Body Systems • Fish have a two-chambered heart in which oxygen-filled blood mixes with carbon dioxide-filled blood. • A fish’s blood isn’t carrying as much oxygen as blood that is pumped through a three- or four-chambered heart.
Fish • When a fish takes water into its mouth, the water passes over the gills, where oxygen from the water is exchanged with carbon dioxide in the blood. 2 Gas Exchange • Most fish have organs called gills for the exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen.
Fish 2 Feeding Adaptations • Some of the largest sharks are filter feeders that take in small animals as they swim. • The archerfish shoots down insects by spitting drops of water at them. • Most fish do not chew their food. • They use their teeth to capture their prey or to tear off chucks of food.
Fish 2 Reproduction • Fish reproduce sexually. • Reproduction is controlled by sex hormones. • The production of sex hormones is dependent upon certain environmental factors such as temperature, length of daylight, and availability of food.
Fish 2 Reproduction • Female fish release large numbers of eggs into the water. • Males then swim over the eggs and release sperm. • This behavior is called spawning. • The joining of the egg and sperm cells outside the female’s body is called external fertilization. • Certain species of sharks and rays have internal fertilization and lay fertilized eggs.
Fish 2 Reproduction • Some fish, such as guppies and other sharks, have internal fertilization but the eggs develop and hatch inside the female’s body. • After they hatch, they leave her body.
Fish 2 Types of Fish - Jawless Fish • Fish are grouped into only three categories - jawless fish, jawed cartilaginous (kar tuh LA juh nuss) fish, and bony fish. • Lampreys and hagfish are jawless fish. • Jawless fish have round, toothed mouths and long, tube-like bodies covered with scaleless, slimy skin.
Fish 2 Types of Fish - Jawless Fish • Most lampreys are parasites. They attach to other fish with their sucker-like mouth. • They then feed by removing blood and other body fluids from the host fish.
Fish 2 Types of Fish - Jawless Fish • Hagfish feed on dead or dying fish and other aquatic animals. • Jawless fish have flexible endoskeletons made of cartilage.
Fish 2 Jawed Cartilaginous Fish • Sharks, skates, and rays are jawed cartilaginous fish. • These fish have endoskeletons made of cartilage like jawless fish and have movable jaws that usually have well-developed teeth. • Their bodies are covered with tiny scales that make their skin feel like fine sandpaper.
Fish • Because of overfishing and the fact that shark reproduction is slow, shark populations are decreasing at an alarming rate. 2 Jawed Cartilaginous Fish • Sharks are top predators in many ocean food chains.
Fish 2 Bony Fish • Bony fish have skeletons made of bone. • A bony flap covers and protects the gills. It closes as water moves into the mouth and over the gills. When it opens, water exits from the gills.
Fish 2 Bony Fish
Fish 2 Swim Bladder • The swim bladder is an air sac that allows the fish to adjust its density in response to the density of the surrounding water. • The transfer of gases between the swim bladder and the blood causes the swim bladder to inflate and deflate. • As the swim bladder fills with gases, the fish’s density decreases and it rises in the water. • When the swim bladder deflates, the fish’s density increases and it sinks.
Fish 2 Lobe-Finned Fish • Lobe-finned fish have fins that are lobe-like and fleshy. • These organisms were thought to have been extinct for more than 70 million years. • But in 1938, some South African fishers caught a lobe-finned fish in a net. • Lobe-finned fish are important because scientists hypothesize that fish similar to these were the ancestors of the first land vertebrates, the amphibians.
Fish • A lungfish has one lung and gills. This adaptation enables them to live in shallow waters that have little oxygen. The lung enables the lungfish to breathe air when the water evaporates. Drought conditions stimulate lungfish to burrow into the mud and cover themselves with mucus until water returns. 2 Lungfish
Fish 2 Ray-Finned Fish • Most predatory ray-finned fish have long, flexible bodies, which enable them to pursue prey quickly. • Many bottom ray-finned fish have flattened bodies and mouths adapted for eating off the bottom. • Fish with unusual shapes, like the sea horse and anglerfish, also can be found.
Fish 2 Importance and Origin of Fish • Fish farming and commercial fishing are important to the U.S. economy. • Many fish eat large amounts of insect larvae, such as mosquitoes. • Some, such as grass carp, are used to keep the plant growth from clogging waterways. • Captive fish are kept in aquariums for humans to enjoy and from which to learn.
Fish 2 Importance and Origin of Fish • Most scientists agree that fish evolved from small, soft bodied, filter-feeding organisms similar to present-day lancelets. • The earliest fossils of fish are those of jawless fish that lived about 450 million years ago. • Today’s bony fish are probably descended from the first jawed fish called the acanthodians (a kan THOH dee unz). • They appeared in the fossil record about 410 mya.