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External Anatomy of Fish

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Title: External Anatomy of Fish Last modified by: hrsbtech Created Date: 1/1/1601 12:00:00 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: External Anatomy of Fish


1
External Anatomy of Fish
2
(No Transcript)
3
The Head
4
Mouth Shape/ Position
  • Superior Mouth
  • Also known as an undershot or upturned mouth
  • Eats food above the fish
  • May eat at the waters surface
  • Terminal Mouth
  • Eats food in front of it
  • Inferior Mouth
  • Also known as an underslung mouth
  • Eats food below it
  • May eat off of the bottom

5
Operculum Gills
  • Gills
  • Allows gas exchange for the fish
  • Through the gills, fish are able to absorb oxygen
    and give off carbon dioxide
  • Operculum
  • The gill cover

6
Barbels
  • Also known as whiskers
  • located under the mouth of a fish
  • are tactile and taste organs used for locating
    food in dark or muddy waters

7
The Body
8
Body shapes
  • Ovate Body
  • Slow swimmer
  • Difficult for predators to swallow
  • Fusiform Body
  • High speed swimmers
  • The most common form
  • Truncate
  • A shortened type of fusiform
  • Elongate/Serpentine
  • Hides in rocks and weeds

9
Body Covering
  • covered with scales, which protect the body
  • Most fish get extra protection from a layer of
    slime that covers their scales called mucus.

10
Scales
  • Made of calcium, they are outgrowths of the skin
  • They overlap like shingles on a roof so that the
    skin of the fish is not exposed
  • The scales of a fish lie in pockets in the dermis
    and come out of the connective tissue.
  • Scales do not stick out of a fish but are covered
    by the Epithelial layer.
  • The ridges and the spaces on some types of scales
    become records of age and growth rate.

11
Types of Scales
  • Cycloid scales
  • Have a smooth edge on the backside
  • Found on soft-rayed fish
  • Ctenoid scales
  • Have teeth-like projections along the backside
  • Found on spiny-rayed scales
  • Placoid scales
  • Are similar to teeth
  • Made of dentin covered by enamel
  • Ganoid scales
  • Flat and basal looking
  • They overlap very little

12
Mucus (Slime)
  • helps them move through the water better by
    reducing friction
  • is a barrier to the entry of parasites, fungi,
    and disease organisms that might infest the fish
  • it seals in the fishs body fluids so that they
    are not diluted by the watery surroundings
  • makes the fish slippery when predators try to
    grab hold

13
Lateral Line
  • is a series of fluid-filled ducts located just
    under the scales
  • picks up vibrations in the water
  • fish are able to detect predators, find food, and
    navigate more efficiently
  • help the fish detect water pressure changes
  • It can detect minute electrical currents in the
    water
  • It runs in a semi line from the gills to the tail
    fin. It can be easily seen in fish as a band of
    darker looking scales running along the side.

14
Peduncle
  • The edge of the tail fin that lies on the end or
    outside of the caudal fin

15
Types of Fins
16
Fins
  • used for movement, stability, nest-building,
    spawning, and as tactile organs
  • can be single or paired

17
Tail fin
  • Also known as the caudal fin
  • Used for propulsion
  • Large, elongated caudal fins are often used to
    attract mates.

18
Types of Caudal Fins
  • Heterocercal Tail
  • the vertebrae extend into a larger lobe of the
    tail or that the tail is asymmetrical
  • Fast swimmer
  • Constantly moving
  • Two types
  • Epicercal means that the upper lobe is longer
  • Hypocercal means that the lower lobe is longer

19
  • Protocercal Tail
  • the caudal fin extends around the vertebral
    column
  • Slow swimmer
  • Bottom wriggler
  • Diphycercal Tail
  • three-lobed caudal fin
  • the vertebrae extend all the way to the end of
    the tail

20
  • Homocercal Tail
  • the vertebrae do not extend into a lobe and the
    fin is more or less symmetrical
  • Rounded
  • Good at turning
  • Fast for short distances
  • Often predators
  • Truncate Tail
  • Good at turning
  • Slower swimmer
  • Forked Tail
  • Fast swimmer
  • Lunate Tail
  • Long distance swimmer

21
Anal Fin
  • A single fin
  • Located on the underside of the body just forward
    of the caudal fin
  • Used to stabilize the fish while it is swimming
  • Long anal fins that are moved in an undulating
    manner are used for propulsion

22
Pelvic or Ventral Fins
  • A paired fin
  • located forward of the anal fin
  • are used to provide further stability in swimming
  • times these fins are modified as long,
    thread-like fins used as a tactile organ
  • Relate to the hind legs

23
Pectoral Fin
  • A paired fin
  • located near the gill cover
  • used for manoeuvring the fish
  • Sometimes the pectoral fins are equipped with
    spines for defence
  • Related to the front legs or arms

24
Dorsal fin
  • A single fin, but some species may have a second
    fin
  • located on the back of the fish
  • serves to help balance the fish while swimming
  • rays of this fin are often sharp, and a spine is
    often present

25
Adipose fin
  • is a tiny fin found between the dorsal and caudal
    fins on some fish
  • a soft, fleshy fin

26
Finlets
  • small fins
  • generally behind the dorsal and anal fins
  • they are rayless and non-retractable

27
Caudal Keel
  • May be single, paired, or double pairs
  • a lateral ridge on the caudal peduncle
  • usually composed of scutes
  • provides stability and support to the caudal fin
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