html5-img
1 / 45

Bony Fish

Bony Fish. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Osteichthyes. Class Osteichthyes. “Bony Fish” Skeleton made of bone Thin, flexible scales. Class Osteichthyes. Operculum – a gill cover that protects the gills

Télécharger la présentation

Bony Fish

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bony Fish Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Osteichthyes

  2. Class Osteichthyes • “Bony Fish” • Skeleton made of bone • Thin, flexible scales

  3. Class Osteichthyes • Operculum – a gill cover that protects the gills • Swim Bladder – a gas-filled sac above the stomach allows for adjustments in buoyancy

  4. Fins

  5. Fins • Upper and lower lobes of Caudal Fin almost always the same size • Fin rays – rigid spines that support a thin membrane

  6. Mouth & Jaws • Mouth of most bony fish is terminal or anterior end • Overall jaw movement is more than that of sharks with teeth that are fused to jaw

  7. Feeding • Most bony fish are carnivores • Well developed teeth used for capture and holding • Roof of mouth, gill rakers, and pharynx may have teeth to help hold

  8. Feeding • Grazers – fish that feed primarily on seaweeds and other plants • Some develop beaks to help scrape off algae or pieces of coral

  9. Feeding • Filter feeders filter plankton through their gills • Tend to be smaller, schooling fish such as herrings, anchovies, and sardines

  10. Internal Anatomy

  11. Digestive System • Digestive System: stomach, intestine, pancreas, liver, pyloric caecae • Pyloric caecae – slender tubes that secrete digestive enzymes • Plant eaters = long intestine, Meat eaters = short intestines

  12. Circulatory System • Two chambered heart • Gas exchange occurs in the gills

  13. Gill Irrigation • Gills share a common gill chamber • Mouth opens, operculum closes, and pharynx expands to allow in water and the opposite is true • Fast swimmers just open their mouths

  14. Nervous System • Brain & spinal cord • Olfactory sacs or bulbs located on either side of the head and connected to nostrils (smell) • Taste buds located in mouths or barbels

  15. Vision • Better eyes than chondrichthyes • Fish eyes focus by moving closer or farther away from subject • Many have color vision

  16. Hearing • Presence of inner ears • Chambers similar to the lateral line • Located on either side of the head just behind the brain • Can resonate/amplify sound through swim bladder

  17. Lateral Line • Detects vibrations in water • Small canals filled with sensory cells

  18. Behaviors • Territories – home areas that fish defend against intruders • Most common in crowded environments • Some defend as groups

  19. Behaviors • Schools – well defined groups of fishes • Well coordinated with no leaders • Used a protection by confusion • Increase swimming efficiency • Advantageous in feeding • No single reason and vary species to species

  20. Behavior • Migration – regular mass movements from one place to another • Anadromous fish – live mostly at sea and migrate to freshwater to breed (salmon) • Catadromous fish – breed a sea and live in rivers (eels)

  21. Subclass Dipnoi • “Lungfish” • Jaw fused to brain case • Caudal, dorsal, and anal fin connected • Pectoral fins long and tubular • Air breathing organ attached to esophogus

  22. Subclass Crossopterygii • “Coelacanths” • Cosmoid scale • Two dorsal fins and fleshy paired fins with skeletal elements • Thought to be extinct till found • Sometimes grouped with lungfish in Subclass Sarcopterygii

  23. Subclass Actinopterygii • Ray-finned fishes • Most familiar fish • Have fin rays, swim bladders, and a symmetrically lobed caudal fin

  24. Birds, lizards, turtles, dinosaurs, mammals Lungfish Cartilaginous Fish Lobed-Finned Fish Ray-Finned Fish Jawed Vertebrates

  25. Subclass Actinopterygii Superorder Teleostei Bass Goldfish Guppies Seahorses Sturgeons Tuna Etc. Superorder Holostean Garpikes Bowfins Superorder Chondrostei Freshwater Sturgeon Bichirs Paddlefish Reedfish

  26. Superorder Holostean • Fin arrangements make for more efficient swimmers

  27. Superorder Chondrostei • Lack bone • Sometimes classified with sharks • Though more in common with the telosts

  28. Superorder Telostei • Most prolific class • 96% of all fish • 12 suborders • Symmetrical caudal fin • Spines on fins

  29. Osteoglossmorpha • Order Osteoglossiformes • Order Hiodontiformes

  30. Elopomorpha • Order Elopiformes • Order Albuliformes • Order Notacanthiformes • Order Anguilliformes • Order Saccopharyngiformes

  31. Clupeomorpha • Order Clupeiformes

  32. Ostariophysi • OrderGonorynchiformes • Order Cypriniformes • Order Characiformes • Order Gymnotiformes • Order Silurioformes

  33. Protacanthopterygii • Order Salmoniformes • Order Escociformes • Order Osmeriformes

  34. Stenopterygii • Order Ateleopodiformes • Order Stomiiformes

  35. Cyclosquamata • Order Aulopiformes

  36. Scopelomorpha • Order Myctophiformes

  37. Lampridiomorpha • Order Lampriformes

  38. Polymyxiomorpha • Order Polymixiiformes

  39. Paracanthopterygii • Order Percopsiformes • Order Batrachoidiformes • Order Lophiiformes • Order Gadiformes • Order Ophidiiformes

  40. Acanthopterygii • Order Mugiliformes • Order Atheriniformes • Order Beloniformes • Order Cetomimiformes • Order Cyprinodontiformes • Order Stephanoberyciformes • Order Bericiformes • Order Zeiformes

  41. Acanthopterygii • Order Gobiescociformes • Order Gasterosteiformes • Order Syngnathiformes • Order Synbranchiformes • Order Tetraodontiformes • Order Pleuronectiformes • Order Scorpaeniformes • Order Perciformes - 46% of fish

More Related