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The Bony Fishes

The Bony Fishes. Ceolacanths: Lobed finned fishes. Ceolacanths: Lobed finned fishes. Ceolacanths are relics of an evolutionary line that gave rise to the tetrapods, or land vertebrates.

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The Bony Fishes

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  1. The Bony Fishes

  2. Ceolacanths: Lobed finned fishes

  3. Ceolacanths: Lobed finned fishes • Ceolacanths are relics of an evolutionary line that gave rise to the tetrapods, or land vertebrates. • Previously known only from fossils till the first living specimen was discovered in 1938. (Latimeria chalumnae). • Fins are attached by fleshy lobes.

  4. Ceolacanths: Lobed finned fishes

  5. Ray-Finned Fishes • Their fins are attached to the body by fin rays rather than fleshy lobes. • Most numerous and dominant group of vertebrates in the ocean.

  6. Bony Fish Anatomy • Median fins: Dorsal, caudal, and anal fins. Help to maintain a fish’s stability while swimming. • Paired fins: Pectoral and pelvic fins. Used in steering, and stabilization.

  7. Fish Colorization • Counter shading: the fishes back is colored dark, and fades to white on the belly. • When viewed from above the dark blends in with the surrounding water, when viewed from below the white belly blends in with the surface.

  8. Disruptive coloration • Disruptive Coloration: often found in reef fish. Breaks up the pattern. Often times a line will transect the eye. • Makes it more difficult for predators to see or attack the fish.

  9. Cryptic Coloration • Cryptic Coloration: “camouflaging” used to avoid predation.

  10. Poster Colors and Aposematic Coloration • Poster colors: bright showy color patterns that may advertise territorial ownership, aid in foraging individuals to keep in contact, or for sexual displays. • Aposematic coloration: Warning colors advertising to predators that to venomous or spiny to be worth eating.

  11. Locomotion in Bony Fishes

  12. Locomotion in Bony Fishes • The trunk muscles of fishes are arranged as a series of W-shaped bands. • These muscles contract in sequence from anterior to posterior and alternately form one side of the body to the other • By pushing the body against the water, the fish is propelled forward.

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