Teleost Fish: Bonytongues Through Anglerfish - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Teleost Fish: Bonytongues Through Anglerfish

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Onchorhynchus mykiss rainbow trout (landlocked); steelhead (anadromous) ... Anadromous species. Eggs laid in freshwater ... Landlocked and anadromous forms ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teleost Fish: Bonytongues Through Anglerfish


1
Teleost Fish Bonytongues Through Anglerfish
Ch. 14
2
Subdividision Euteleostei
  • Superorder Ostariophysi
  • Superorder Protacanthopterygii
  • Superorder Stenopterygii
  • Superorder Cyclosquamata
  • Superorder Scopelomorpha
  • Superorder Lampridomorpha
  • Superorder Polymixiiformes
  • Superorder Paracanthopterygii
  • Superorder Acanthopterygii

3
Primitive vs. Advanced Traits
4
Primitive vs. Advanced (continued)
5
Subdividision Euteleostei
  • Superorder Ostariophysi
  • Superorder Protacanthopterygii
  • Superorder Stenopterygii
  • Superorder Cyclosquamata
  • Superorder Scopelomorpha
  • Superorder Lampridomorpha
  • Superorder Polymixiiformes
  • Superorder Paracanthopterygii
  • Superorder Acanthopterygii

6
Subdividision Euteleostei
  • Superorder Ostariophysi -- Suckers Minnows,
    Characins, and Catfishes
  • Superorder Protacanthopterygii -- Pikes, Smelts
    and Salmonids
  • Superorder Paracanthopterygii -- Cods and
    Anglerfishes
  • Superorder Acanthopterygii -- Advanced Fishes

7
Superorder Protocanthopterygii
  • Contains three orders
  • Esociformes
  • Osmeriformes
  • Salmoniformes

8
Order Esociformes
  • Three families
  • Esocidae
  • Umbridae
  • Daliidae

9
Family Esocidae
  • Pikes, pickerels, and muskellunge
  • Predatory sagittiform bodies
  • Large mouth sharp teeth
  • Found in N. America and
  • Eurasia
  • Important recreational spp.
  • Largest muskellunge (musky)
  • North-Central US
  • Central Canada

10
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11
Family Umbridae
  • mudminnows
  • small
  • Slow-moving
  • Burrow in mud when disturbed

12
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13
Family Dalliidae
  • blackfishes
  • Australia and Siberia
  • Able to survive frozen in the ice
  • Remain inactive until the thaw

14
Order Osmeriformes
  • Two suborders
  • Argentoidea (argentines deep-sea smelts)
  • Osmeroidei (smelts, galaxiids)

15
Suborder Argentoidei
  • Argentines
  • deep-sea smelts
  • very numerous
  • harvested commercially in mid-water trawls

16
Suborder Osmeroidei
  • Smelts and galaxiids
  • Smelts
  • Small, silvery fish (lt 30 cm)
  • Popular food fish
  • Freshwater, anadromous, marine
  • Australian salamanderfish (galaxiid)
  • Turn head sharply left or right while perched on
    its pectoral fin
  • Lacks lung able to aestivate

17
Smelts
Salamanderfish
18
Order Salmoniformes
  • Family Salmonidae
  • Contains three subfamilies
  • Salmoninae - trouts, salmon, chars
  • Coregoninae - whitefishes
  • Thymalinae graylings
  • North America and Eurasia
  • High latitude species
  • Require high DO and cooler water for survival and
    reproduction

19
Subfamily Salmoninae
  • Trouts, salmons and chars
  • Many species have landlocked and anadromous forms
  • Onchorhynchus mykiss rainbow trout
    (landlocked) steelhead (anadromous)
  • O. nerka sockeye (anadromous) kokanee
    (landlocked)

20
Subfamily Salmoninae
  • Anadromous species
  • Eggs laid in freshwater
  • Fry hatch and develop into parrs (large spots on
    side of body)
  • Transform into smolts (migrates to the sea)
  • Grow to large size in sea
  • Return to FW to spawn and typically die after
    spawning
  • Transfer of nutrients upstream from seas to FW
    streams important ecologically
  • Dead salmon decay, biomass is utilized by
    scavengers that may ultimately be preyed upon by
    young salmon

21
Subfamily Salmoninae
  • Three important genera in North America
  • Onchorhynchus Pacific salmon
  • California through Canada to Alaska and
    throughout Siberia
  • Includes rainbow trout and cutthroat trout
  • Salmo Atlantic salmon
  • Massachusetts to Canada Iceland and Europe
  • Nearly extinct due to dams
  • Landlocked and anadromous forms
  • Includes brown trout introduced to US
    tolerates warm water and lower DO
  • Salvelinus North American Chars
  • Lake trout and Brook trout

22
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23
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24
Subfamily Coreginae
  • Whitefishes
  • Formerly an important species
  • Numbers have greatly declined relative to
    introduced species

25
Subfamily Thymalinae
  • Graylings
  • Small trout-like fishes
  • Grey irridescent bodies
  • Long dorsal fins

26
Marine Habitat
  • Classified into distinct areas
  • Pelagic- area away from the shoreline
  • Pelagic divided into distinct regions
  • Surface to 200 meters epipelagic
  • light penetration occurs
  • 200 meters to 1000 meters mesopelagic
  • Faint amount of light
  • Animals migrate up at night down during day
  • 1000 meters to 4000 meters bathypelagic
  • Practically no light

27
Stomiiformes
  • Marine hatchetfishes
  • Extremely flattened laterally
  • Photophores on ventral side
  • Photophores light producing organs
  • Provides countershading less visible to
    predators

28
Myctophiformes
  • Lantern fishes
  • Small black fishes
  • Photophores along entire body
  • Present in great numbers
  • Important food for many species

29
Lampridiformes
  • Bizarre species
  • Opah
  • Found close to the surface taken by the same
    pelagic longlines used to catch tunas and marlins
    and meat is sold

oarfish
30
Superorder Paracanthopterygii
  • Contains a number of orders that are grouped
    together because of similar morphology
  • Order Percopsiformes
  • Order Ophidiiformes
  • Order Gadiformes
  • Order Batrachoidiformes
  • Order Lophiiformes

31
Order Percopsiformes
  • Trout perch, pirate perch, and cavefishes
  • Possess a true spine
  • Possess an adipose fin
  • Pirate perch
  • Pelvic fins located below pectorals
  • Anus located in the throat
  • Cavefishes
  • Adapted to caves
  • Eyes reduced
  • Lost their pigment
  • Elongated bodies
  • Lateral line system very well-developed

Trout perch
32
Anal opening
Pirate Perch (Aphredoderus sayanus)
33
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34
Order Ophidiiformes
  • Cusk eels
  • Taeniform body shape
  • Found all over world
  • Mostly marine
  • Some brightly colored
  • Pearl fishes
  • Very thin fishes
  • Sharp pointed tails
  • Live inside invertebrates
  • In cloaca of sea cucumbers
  • Tickles it to get back in

35
Order Gadiformes
  • Cods and cod-like fishes
  • Large and economically important group
  • Possess isocercal tails
  • haddock, walleye, pollock and hake
  • Cod
  • Collected in great numbers off the European coast
  • Contains little fatcan be dried
  • Used by ocean-going travelers as a food source

36
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37
Order Batrachoidiformes
  • Toadfishes
  • Bottom dwellers
  • Lack pleural ribs
  • Large mouths
  • Able to produce sound
  • Muscular vibrations of swim bladder
  • midshipmen
  • Photophores
  • Arranged on their belly like the buttons of a
    midshipmens uniform

38
Order Lophiiformes
  • Anglerfishes
  • Possess modified dorsal fins rod and lures
  • Batfishes- odd shaped
  • monkfish
  • Bottom dweller
  • Taken in trawls
  • Once considered trash fish poor mans lobster

39
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