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Fish Adaptations

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Electric eel. Gut. Some tropical catfishes. Modified swim bladders. Gars, bowfin. Lungs ... Muscle contractions create electric currents in water ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fish Adaptations


1
Fish Adaptations
2
Why do I have to learn about fish?
  • Fish are the most diverse group of vertebrates
    with 25,000 species
  • Fish are weird and interesting
  • Wildlife majorsthis may be
  • your only class to learn
  • about them

3
Properties of Water
  • Salt water covers 70 of the earth
  • Fresh water covers 1
  • 1/30 as much oxygen in water as in air
  • 800 times denser than air
  • 18 times as viscous as air
  • High specific heat
  • High electrical conductivity

4
How does a fish breathe under water?
  • Water flows in through mouth, out through gills
  • Gills are structures to exchange CO2 and oxygen
  • In gills, blood picks up oxygen from the
    surrounding water
  • Blood goes to body, then back to heart to repeat
    cycle

5
Gill is under a flap called the operculum
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8
Gill arch (gives gill support)
Gill raker (for trapping food)
Gill Filament (where gas exchange happens))
Heart
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10
Countercurrent O2 Exchange
11
Obtaining OxygenGills
  • Buccal pumping
  • Water is pumped into mouth and
  • out of operculum
  • can be used when fish are at rest
  • Ram ventilation
  • Water is pushed over gills by swimming with mouth
    open
  • fish must swim continuously

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13
Obtaining Oxygen--Skin
  • Oxygen diffuses from water through the skin
  • Used by larval fish of many species, and adults
    of a few species

14
Obtaining OxygenBreathing Air
  • Water does not provide enough oxygen for some
    fish
  • Facultative air breathers
  • Breath air only when necessary
  • Obligate air breathers
  • Must breath air or will die

15
Obtaining OxygenBreathing Air
  • Methods of breathing air
  • Modified gills
  • Walking catfish
  • Mouth
  • Electric eel
  • Gut
  • Some tropical catfishes
  • Modified swim bladders
  • Gars, bowfin
  • Lungs
  • lungfish

16
Buoyancy
  • Strategies to stay afloat
  • Swimbladder
  • Fat stored in the body
  • Shape of fins
  • Reduction of heavy tissues

17
BuoyancySwim Bladders
  • Overcomes inadequacies of other methods of
    staying afloat
  • Fish adds gas to swim bladder when it swims down
  • Removes gas when it swims up

18
Physostomous fish (open swim bladder)
  • phys bladder, stoma mouth
  • gulp air at surface to fill bladder, burp to
    empty it

19
Physoclistous fish (closed swim bladder)
  • phys bladder
  • clist closed
  • regulate amount of air in bladder by secreting
    gas from blood through gas gland
  • Fish free from going to surface all the time

20
Thermoregulation (staying warm)
  • Fish are ectothermic (cold-blooded)
  • Must maintain certain body temperatures for
    metabolic functioning
  • Behavioral thermoregulation
  • Swim to different parts of the water column at
    different times of day
  • Physiological thermoregulation
  • Only a few warm-bodied fish species have this
  • Still do not have constant body temperatures like
    mammals or birds

21
Regulation of Ions and Body Fluids
  • A fish can be
  • Isotonichas the same concentration as
    surrounding water (Hagfishes)
  • Hypotonichas a lower solute concentration than
    surrounding water
  • Hypertonichas a higher solute concentration than
    surrounding water

22
Sensory Systems
  • Light only penetrates top portion of water column
  • Water is often muddy
  • Sound travels faster in water
  • Fish need to detect predators, prey, mates as
    well as find their way around

23
Vision
  • Light only penetrates to 1000m in clear water
  • Most fish see as well as
  • humans
  • Many see in color
  • Lenses are perfectly spherical, to help them see
    underwater

24
Taste
  • Taste buds may be anywhere on body
    surfaceusually in mouth, on head, and on
    anterior fins
  • Catfish have taste buds on barbels

25
Smell
  • Sharks and salmon can detect odors present in 1
    part per billion
  • Salmon use smell to navigateget lost if their
    noses are plugged
  • Fish can smell fear
  • Pheromones

26
Touch
  • Water is incompressible (unlike air)
  • Fish can detect water currents of 0.025 mm/sec
  • Neuromast organs
  • Clusters of hair cells
  • Lateral line system
  • Neuromasts organized in a series of lines on
    head, along sides of body and tail

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Hearing
  • Sound travels 1433m/sec in water, only 335m/sec
    in air
  • Most fish hear well
  • No external earsinstead sound waves are received
    by tissue and other special structures (like
    human inner ear)
  • Many species communicate audibly!
  • Listen to this
  • www.fishtalk

29
Electroreception
  • Water conducts electricity (especially salt
    water)
  • Muscle contractions create electric currents in
    water
  • More about this later when we discuss sharks

30
Ampullae of Lorenzini
31
Electrolocation
  • Special sensory organs present in the skin of
    some fish that can emit weak electric charges
  • Works like sonar
  • Used to detect prey and find their way in murky
    water

32
Locomotion
  • Water is dense, so resists movement through it
  • Ways fish lower the resistance
  • Streamlined bodies
  • High proportion of body devoted to muscle
  • Efficient means of thrusting themselves forward

33
How fish swim
  • Two swimming types  
  • Cruisers
  • swim almost continuously in search for food
  • tuna
  • Burst Swimmers
  • stay in a small area

34
  • Thrust
  • Force in direction of movement
  • Lift
  • Force in right angle to thrust
  • Drag
  • Force opposite direction of movement

35
Pressure drag
Frictional drag
Vortex drag
Fish shape and fish slime minimize drag
36
Why does a fish need fins?
  • To control body orientation
  • Yaw (swinging back and forth)
  • Pitch (tilting up and down)
  • Roll (rotating around body axis)

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38
Fish Food
  • Zooplankton
  • Algae
  • Smaller fish
  • Large fish and mammals

39
What is plankton?
  • phytoplanktonmicroscopic plants and bacteria
  • zooplanktonmicroscopic animals
  • macrozooplanktonlarger fish eggs and larvae and
    pelagic invertebrates

40
What is algae?
  • Pond scum, seaweed, freshwater and marine
    phytoplankton, etc.
  • Have chlorophyll (make their own food)
  • Protista or plantae kingdom?

41
Reproduction
  • Who is whom?
  • In most species, there are separate
  • males and females
  • Some species are born male, change to females
    later
  • Others born female, change to male
  • At least one species is all female

42
Reproduction
  • Egg scatters
  • Nest Builders
  • Egg depositors
  • Mouth breeders
  • Egg buriers
  • Livebearers

43
Vocabulary
  • Buccal
  • Obligate
  • Facultative
  • Gill
  • Respiration
  • Diffusion
  • Countercurrent
  • Neuromast organs
  • Pheromones
  • Physoclistous
  • Physostomous
  • Ectothermic
  • Thermoregulate
  • Isotonic
  • Hypotonic
  • Hypertonic
  • Barbel
  • Pelagic
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