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Part 3 “Fishes” – an introduction
72

Part 3

Feb 24, 2016

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Part 3. “Fishes” – an introduction. “Fishes”. Vertebrata. Figure 24.2. Vertebrata. “Fishes”. Fish Diversity. ca . 25,000 described species. 482 families with living representatives. Smallest < 1cm. Largest > 12m. Smallest < 1cm. Largest > 12m. Deepest. 8,370m (27,455 feet) . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Part 3

Part 3“Fishes” – an introduction

Page 2: Part 3

“Fishes”

Page 3: Part 3

Vertebrata

Page 4: Part 3

Figure 24.2Vertebrata

“Fishes”

Page 5: Part 3

Fish Diversityca. 25,000 described

species

482 families with living representatives

Page 6: Part 3

Largest > 12m

Smallest < 1cm

Page 7: Part 3

Largest > 12m

Smallest < 1cm

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8,370m (27,455 feet) Deepest

Abyssobrotula galatheae 

Highest5,200m (17,000 feet)

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Hottest

Coldest

up to 43.8° C (110.8°F)

-1.86° C (28.6°F)

Cyprinodon pachycephalus

Page 10: Part 3

Hypersaline

Cyprinodon variegatus

Up to 3x sea water

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Torrential water

Colorado River Fishes

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Trogloglanis pattersoni

Satan eurystomus

Caves

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Anoxic water

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Airbreathing

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Diet

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Reproduction

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Life Spansseveral weeks

150+ years

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Primitive and early fishes

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Living jawless fishes = “agnatha”

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Jawless Fishes (living)

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Jawless Fishes (living)

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Class Myxini

Hagfishes

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We’re craniates, but not vertebrates

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*distinct head, *tripartite brain *paired specialized sense organs *1 pair semicircular canals *glomerular kidney

*2 pairs semicircular canals*vertebrae

Craniate

Vertebrate

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Habitat – Life History

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Hagfishes at home

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Slime glands and slime

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Hagfish Eggs

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Mxyine glutinosa L.

1 Family

6 generaca. 40 species

Class Myxinihagfishes

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Physiology very ‘invertebrate-like’

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Human interactions

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Hagfish fishery

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Eel Skin

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Vertebrata

Vertebrates

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Vertebrata

at least 2 semicircular canals

vertebrae

fancy, vertebrate physiology

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Lampreys are vertebrates

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Class CephalaspidomorphiLampreys

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LampreysWe have vertebrae

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2 families

6 genera

41 species

Lampreys

Class Cephalaspidomorphi

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Lampetra tridentata

Local Diversity

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Lampetra similis

Lampetra ayresi

Lampetra richardsoni

California Diversity (freshwater)

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Predaceous lampreys

Brook lampreys

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Predaceous or parasitic life mode

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Predaceous lampreys

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Brook lampreys

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Lampreys nesting

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Ammocoete

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Lamprey ammocoete larva

Cephalochordate (amphioxus)

Craniate Origin?

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Ammocoete

AmphioxusNiche + anatomy

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Biodiversity and ConservationLampreys have an image problem

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Great Lakes

and sea lampreys

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Most Jawless fishes are fossil only

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All sorts of fossil jawless fishes

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Mineralized bone

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Hagfishes and lampreys (living)

Fossil things – “Ostracoderms” and conodonts

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†Condodonta

Earliest vertebrate ? (with bone)

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†Condodonta

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†Condodonta

earliest bone

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†”Ostracoderms”

Fossil jawless fishes were more sophisticated that the surviving ones

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Hagfishes and lampreys (living)

Fossil things

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*Smallish

*Bony armor

*Internal cartilaginous skeleton

† “Ostracoderms”

*Mostly benthic

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† “Ostracoderms” - niche

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†”Ostracoderms” – 2 major radiations

More primitive

More advanced

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Primitive ostracoderms

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Advanced ostracoderms

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Jawed vertebrates derive from “ostracoderms”

More advanced

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on to creatures with jaws….

Jawed vertebrates

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Early gnathostomes