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Chapter 31: Fishes and Amphibians

Chapter 31: Fishes and Amphibians. Section 1: Fishes. What is a Fish?. Fishes and other vertebrates have at some time during their development a notochord, a hollow dorsal nerve cord, and pharyngeal slits

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Chapter 31: Fishes and Amphibians

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  1. Chapter 31: Fishes and Amphibians Section 1: Fishes

  2. What is a Fish? • Fishes and other vertebrates have at some time during their development a notochord, a hollow dorsal nerve cord, and pharyngeal slits • In most vertebrates, the notochord is replaced during development by a backbone, or vertebral column, which encloses and protects much of the nerve cord • In addition, most vertebrates have two sets of paired appendages, a closed circulatory system with a ventral heart, and either gills or lungs for breathing

  3. What is a Fish? • Fishes can be defined as aquatic vertebrates that are characterized by scales, fins, and pharyngeal gills • There are so many fishes, living and extinct, that their correct scientific classification is complicated • For our purposes, we can say that the living fishes fall into three main groups: jawless fishes, sharks and their relatives, and bony fishes • Sharks and their relatives are also known as cartilaginous fishes because their skeletons are made up of soft, flexible cartilage rather than bone

  4. In ocean water deep below the reach of sunlight live fishes that sparkle with light produced by their own body. The lights on the viperfish may serve to attract prey or distract predators.

  5. Representatives of the three main groups of living fishes are shown here. The lamprey is a parasitic jawless fish. The blue-spotted stingray is a venomous bottom-dwelling cartilaginous fish. The Potter’s angelfish, which is found only in Hawaiian coral reefs, is a bony fish.

  6. Evolution of Fishes • Fishes are the most primitive living vertebrates • The first fishes were odd-looking jawless creatures whose bodies were covered with bony plates • Lived in the oceans of the late Cambrian period (540 MYA) • For over 100 MY, fishes retained the basic armored jawless body plan

  7. Evolution of Fishes • Then, during the Ordovician and Silurian periods, fishes underwent a major adaptive radiation • Jawless fishes – little armor • Jawless fishes – no armor • Still other were armored fishes that possessed a feeding adaptation that would revolutionize vertebrate evolution: jaws

  8. Evolution of Fishes • Jawless fishes are limited to eating small particles of food • Jaws made it possible for vertebrates to nibble on plants, munch on other animals, and defend themselves by biting • Also evolved pectoral and pelvic fins • More control over their movement

  9. Form and Function in Fishes • Fishes have entered many environments and evolved adaptations that enable them to survive a tremendous variety of conditions

  10. Feeding • Every mode of feeding is seen in fishes • Herbivores, Carnivores, Parasites, Filter feeders, Detritus feeders • A single fish may exhibit several modes of feeding, depending on what type of food is available • The adaptations for feeding in fishes are often remarkable • Sawfish • Parrotfish

  11. Feeding • Most fish do not chew their food • Instead, they tear their food into chunks or swallow their prey whole

  12. Feeding • From the mouth food passes through the esophagus and into the stomach, where it is partially broken down • In many fishes, the food is further processed in the pyloric ceca, which are located at the point where the stomach and the intestine meet • Secrete digestive enzymes and absorb nutrients from the digested food

  13. Feeding • The intestine receives partially digested food from the stomach and pyloric ceca and completes the process of digestion and nutrient absorption • Any materials that remain undigested after passing through the intestine are eliminated through the anus

  14. Fishes are adapted to many modes of feeding. Some male anglerfishes are parasites that are nourished by the blood of their much larger mates. Note the male attached to the head of this female. The parrotfish uses its “beak” to bite off chunks of algae covered coral. It digests the plant material and passes the crushed coral dust through its gut. The sawfish slashes its way through schools of fishes, then doubles back to devour the dead or wounded prey.

  15. The internal organs of a typical bony fish are seen here.

  16. Respiration • Most fishes breathe with gills that are located on either side of the pharynx • Most fishes breathe by pumping water through the mouth, over the gill filaments, and out through slits in the sides of the pharynx • A number of fishes have an adaptation that allows them to survive in oxygen-poor water or in areas where bodies of water often dry up

  17. Respiration • They have specialized organs that serve as lungs by obtaining oxygen from the air • Modified swim bladder • Swim bladder is a gas filled sac that controls the fishes buoyancy

  18. In some fishes, such as sharks, the gill chambers open to the outside through a number of slits. In other fishes, the gill chambers empty through a single opening that is covered by a protective flap.

  19. Internal Transport • Typically have closed circulatory systems with a heart that pumps blood around the body • The heart consists of two muscular pumping chambers • Atrium • Ventricle • Pumps blood out of the heart into a muscular vessel called the aorta

  20. Almost all fish have a closed circulatory system in which a two-chambered heart pumps oxygen-poor blood from the body to the gills. Oxygen-rich blood then travels from the gills to all parts of the body.

  21. Excretion • Most fishes get rid of nitrogenous wastes in the form of ammonia • Some wastes diffuses through the gills into the surrounding water • Others are removed by the kidneys, which are excretory organs composed of many tubules that filter nitrogenous wastes from the blood and concentrate them • Kidneys help fishes control the amount of water in their body

  22. Response • Fishes have a fairly well-developed nervous system organized around a brain • The most anterior parts of a fish’s brain are the olfactory bulbs, which are connected by stalks to the two lobes of the cerebrum • Cerebrum – sense of smell, taking care of young, exploring environment • The optic lobes process information from the eyes • The cerebellum coordinates body movements • The medulla controls many internal organ functions and maintains balance

  23. Response • Posterior to the brain is the spinal cord • In cartilaginous and bony fishes, the spinal cord is enclosed and protected by the vertebral column • Between each set of vertebrae, a pair of spinal nerves exits the cord and connects with internal organs and muscles

  24. Response • Most fishes have superbly designed sense organs that collect information about their environment • Chemoreceptors • Most fishes have ears inside their head, but they cannot hear sounds well • Detect vibrations

  25. The brain of a typical fish has several clearly visible parts.

  26. The sense organs in fishes are highly developed. A chimaera’s huge silvery eyes enable it to see in the permanent dark of its deep-water home. The lateral line, which appears as a series of tiny dots in the pink stripe of the rainbow trout, detects water movements. Some fishes, such as the elephant fish, are able to detect electricity.

  27. Reproduction • Most fishes have separate male and female sexes • A number of fishes are born as males but change to females as they grow older • Many fishes are oviparous • Lay eggs • External fertilization

  28. Reproduction • Some species of fishes are ovoviviparous • Young develop inside the mother’s body but are not directly nourished by the mother’s body • Other species are viviparous • Truly live-bearing

  29. Some newly hatched fishes, such as salmon, are nourished by a yolk sac on their belly.

  30. Jawless Fishes • Divided into two classes • Lampreys and hagfishes • Only vertebrates that do not have backbones as adults • Instead, their long, snakelike bodies are supported by a notochord

  31. Modern jawless fishes are divided into two classes: lampreys and hagfishes.

  32. Lampreys • Filter feeders • Adult’s head is completely taken up by a circular sucking disk with a round jawless mouth in the center • Live by attaching themselves to fishes and scraping away at the skin with their large teeth and a strong tongue • Then suck up tissues and body fluids • Rarely kill their host, but do leave it in a weakened condition with a large open wound that is easily infected

  33. Hagfishes • Most primitive vertebrates alive today • Pinkish-gray wormlike bodies • 4 – 6 short tentacles around the mouth • Lack eyes • Do have light detecting regions scattered around their body • Feed on dead and dying fish by using a toothed tongue to scrape a hole into the fish’s side

  34. Hagfishes • Peculiar traits • Secrete incredible amounts of slime • Have six hearts • Open circulatory system • Tie themselves into knots

  35. Sharks and Their Relatives • Class Chondrichthyes • Contains sharks, rays, skates, etc. • All members have an endoskeleton made entirely of cartilage • 225 living shark species • Curved tails, torpedo shaped bodies, and rounded snouts • Enormous number of teeth • 3000 arranged in 6 – 20 rows

  36. Sharks and Their Relatives • Not all sharks attack people • Some are filter feeders • Others have flat teeth adapted for crushing the shells of mollusks and crustaceans • Each year more people are killed by lightning than by sharks

  37. Sharks and Their Relatives • Rays and skates are adapted for living on the ocean floor • Flattened from top to bottom • Swim by flapping their large wing like pectoral fins • Most reach a maximum length of about 1 meter

  38. Cartilaginous fishes include sharks and rays. The wobbegong, or carpet shark, is a bottom dweller that feeds primarily on fishes. The leopard shark is one of the most attractive sharks. Its teeth are adapted for crushing the shells of mollusks and crustaceans. The underside of some rays seems to have an almost human face.

  39. Bony Fishes • Class Osteichthyes • More species in this class than in any other vertebrate class • About 40% of all vertebrates are bony fishes • Somewhere between 15,000 and 40,000 species alive today

  40. Bony Fishes • Almost all bony fishes belong to the enormous group called the ray-finned fishes • Includes everything from guppies to groupers, salmon, and eels • The name refers to the thin bony spines, or rays, that are connected by a thin layer of skin to form the fins • These fins are adapted to a wide variety of functions

  41. Bony Fishes • Only seven living species of bony fishes are not classified as ray-finned fishes • These are the lungfishes and the coelacanth • These fishes are of interest because they give us an idea of what the lungs and limbs may have been like in the ancestors of terrestrial vertebrates • The six species of lungfishes alive today are found in Australia, Africa, and South America • When water is available, lungfish use their gills to eliminate carbon dioxide, but they get most of their oxygen by gulping air into a simple sac that functions as a lung • During the dry season, lungfish burrow in the mud and enter a dormant state

  42. Bony Fishes • The single species of coelacanth alive today is the only surviving member of the lobe-finned fishes • Unlike ray-finned fishes, which have many bones in the bases of their fins, coelacanths have few bones in their fin bases • Attached to those bones are a few large rays that form the fins • Ancient lobe-finned fishes seemed to have lived in swampy areas where shallow pools alternated with mud flats and sand bars • The modern coelacanth lives in water about 70 to 400 meters deep in a relatively small area of ocean off the western coast of Africa

  43. Bony Fishes • Coelacanths were thought to have disappeared with the dinosaurs about 70 million years ago • In 1938, however, fishermen sailing in the ocean off the coast of Africa caught a coelacanth • Scientists were enormously excited to find living coelacanths because these animals represent a fascinating piece of evolutionary history • The closest thing we known of to the ancestors of all land vertebrates

  44. How Fishes Fit into the World • Fishes are vital parts of many biological systems • For many birds and mammals fishes are important foods • As predators and herbivores, fishes help control the populations of the organisms they eat • Since prehistoric times, humans have caught fishes for food and recreation • For at least 4000 years, humans have also raised fishes in artificial ponds

  45. Bony fishes come in a wide variety of forms and colors. The porcupine fish can inflate itself into a prickly ball when threatened. The moray eel has a narrow snakelike body. The bright colors of angelfish may be a means of communication within its species. The hawk fish's narrow snout enables it to pluck bits of food from crevices.

  46. A few fishes manage quite nicely out of water for brief periods of time. African lungfishes get most of their oxygen from the air, which they gulp into a simple sac that serves as a lung. Mudskippers climb out of the water onto logs and rocks. As you can see, the mudskipper’s bulging eyes are quite mobile, enabling it to appear as if it has eyes on the back of its head.

  47. Chapter 31: Fishes and Amphibians Section 2: Amphibians

  48. Amphibians • About 4,000 living species • Amphibians are the smallest major group of vertebrates • Range in size from tiny tropical tree frogs 1cm long to enormous salamanders 170 cm long • Some have long tails and walk on four legs • Others have no tails and leap from one place to another with large hind legs

  49. Amphibians • They are descendents of ancestral organisms that evolved some of the adaptations necessary for life on land • Nearly all of them are restricted to moist areas, and most of them must return to water to breed

  50. Representatives of the three orders of living amphibians – salamanders, frogs and toads, and legless amphibians – are shown here.

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