anatomy and function of a fish respiratory, circulatory, and excretory systems part 3

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Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

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Page 1: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Anatomy and Function of a FishRespiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Page 2: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Respiratory System The function of the respiratory system is to take

oxygen into the body and pass carbon dioxide out of the body.

The most important respiratory organs in fish are the gills.

Inside the gills are respiratory organs which include:

1. Gill fillaments2. Gill cover (operculum)3. Gill rakers4. Gas bladder

Page 3: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Functions of the Gill filaments, Gill rakers, and Operculum

Gill filaments: Contain blood vessels called capillaries. Blood in the capillaries picks up oxygen

and gives off carbon dioxide.

Page 4: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Gill cover (operculum) Covers the gills. Protects the delicate gill filaments. Aids in moving water over the gill

filaments.Gill Rakers: Not on notes Keep food in the mouth . Located in the mouth cavity.

Page 5: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

How Water Moves Over Gills Water moves over the gills in a pumping

action with two steps.1. The mouth cavity opens, making it

larger and drawing in water.In this step, the gill covers are closed.

Page 6: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

2. The mouth closes, making the mouth cavity smaller.The gill covers open and the water passes out through them.

When swimming fast, some fish, such as sharks and tunas, just open their mouths and gill openings, letting water pass continuously through their gills.

Page 7: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

As the water passes over the gills, blood in the capillaries of the gill filaments passes carbon dioxide into the water and picks up dissolved oxygen from the water.

The blood then carries the oxygen to the body.

Oxygen is essential in the body because it combines with food molecules to release energy for the body as needs.

Page 8: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Gas BladderGas bladder: Operates as a buoyancy-adjusting organ. In some species, it serves as an accessory

respiratory organ(lung) when they crawl on land.

Produces sound in some species.- Muscles in the wall of the bladder contract

rapidly, producing a low-frequency(low-pitch) sound that is resonated and amplified in the bladder. (Not in notes)

Page 9: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Not On Notes Fish that have no gas bladder are

always more dense than the surrounding water, so they sink if they stop swimming. Sharks, for example, must keep swimming

to stay afloat. They use their tails and pectoral fins like

airplane wings, adjusting the amount of lift to control the depth of their swimming.

Page 10: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

How a fish regulates Buoyancy Some fish have a gas bladder lying below

the kidneys. In some fish, the bladder is part of the

respiratory system. In many fish, the gas bladder serves no

respiratory function but regulates the fish’s buoyancy instead.

It does this by making the fish’s density equal to the density of the surrounding water.

Page 11: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

The fish sinks if its body density is greater than the density of water.

The density of the gas bladder, filled mostly with oxygen and nitrogen gases, acts like an inflatable balloon inside the fish.

The gas bladder reduces the density of the fish’s body until it is the same as the density of the water.

In this way, the fish does not sink or rise, but floats within the water column.

Page 12: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

When the fish swims into shallow water, its gas bladder expands because the pressure of water surrounding the fish is less.

The fish compensates by absorbing some of the gas back into its body cells, bringing the gas bladder back to its original size.

Page 13: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

When the fish swims deeper, its gas bladder gets smaller because of the increase in water pressure.

Then more gas enters the bladder, enlarging it again.

In this way, the fish remains neutrally buoyant, which means it is equal in density to seawater.

Page 14: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Because gases move slowly in and out of the bladder, fish caught at great depths(really deep water) are often bloated when brought to the surface.

This is because the gas in the bladder expands rapidly when the fish moves from the high pressure of deep water to the lower atmospheric pressure outside of the water.

Page 15: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

A fish pulled quickly to the surface cannot absorb the gases quickly enough and the bladder expands suddenly.

Fish collectors must bring trapped fish to the surface slowly by stages to let the fish’s body absorb the gases from the bladder.

Page 16: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Circulatory System The circulatory system is a transportation system for

body fluids that carry nutrients, oxygen, and hormones to cells and carbon dioxide and waste from cells.

The circulatory components include: Heart Arteries Capillaries Veins Lymph ducts Blood Red blood cells White blood cells

Page 17: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Heart The heart pumps blood to all parts of the

body. In the fish, it is a muscular organ of four

chambers (2 main chambers: a thin walled atrium and a more muscular ventricle).

Valves between the chambers allow the blood to flow in only one direction.

When the heart muscle contracts, it forces blood into the arteries.

Page 18: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Arteries, Capillaries, and Veins A network of tubes called arteries,

capillaries, and veins connects the heart with all parts of the body.

Arteries: Carry blood from the heart to the capillaries.

Capillaries: Thin walls let molecules move out of the blood vessel and into the fluids around the tissues

Veins: Carry blood from the capillaries back to the heart.

Page 19: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Blood Blood is a liquid tissue made up of

plasma and blood cells. Plasma contains water, carbon dioxide,

hormones, nutrients, wastes, and other molecules.

Blood carries nutrients and hormones to the cells.

Blood also carries waste products away from cells.

Page 20: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Red Blood Cells There are two main types of blood cells. Red blood cells: Carry oxygen from the

gills to other cells in the body. Hemoglobin, which contains iron, is

found in red blood cells.

Page 21: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

When hemoglobin combines with oxygen, it turns bright red.

When hemoglobin releases its oxygen, it turns a very dark red.

Page 22: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

White Blood Cells White blood cells fight disease. They often concentrate around infected

wounds, killing bacteria and transporting wastes away from the wound.

Dead cells in a wound form pus.

Page 23: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Oxygen Concentration in Blood: Blood that is low in oxygen and

high in carbon dioxide is pumped by the heart to the gills, where it releases its carbon dioxide and picks up more oxygen through capillaries in the gill filaments.

Page 24: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

From the gills, the blood (now rich in oxygen) flows through branching arteries to the brain, digestive system and other tissues and organs.

From the digestive system, the blood absorbs nutrients and distributes them through the body.

In each tissue and organ, some of the blood plasma passes through capillaries and flows around the cells.(Found twice on your notes. Disregard it the second time).

Page 25: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Carbon dioxide and waste products move from the cells into the plasma.

The plasma then passes back into the capillaries and carries wastes away.

Page 26: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Lymph Ducts Lymph ducts pick up the liquid that

passes out of the capillaries and collects in parts of the fish’s body.

The lymph ducts return this liquid (called lymph) to the veins.

Page 27: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

The circulatory system works like a canal system.

It carries the oxygen and building materials needed to grow, maintain, and repair the body.

It transports white blood cells to destroy disease invaders.

It also carries wastes to the lungs, liver, and kidneys, which expel them.

Page 28: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Excretory System The excretory system removes wastes

produced by the body. The excretory organs include:

- Kidneys- Urinary duct- Bladder- Urogenital opening- Gill filaments

Page 29: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Kidneys Its chief organs are the kidneys, a pair

of long, dark-red organs lying just under the vertebrae.

In some fish, there may appear to be only one kidney.

The kidneys remove some waste products from the blood.

Page 30: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Waste products filtered by the kidneys are formed in cells of the body.

After filtering, usable materials such as sugars, salts, and water are absorbed back into the blood.

The remaining waste products pass from the kidneys down the urinary duct.

Page 31: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Urinary Duct, Bladder, and the Urogenital Opening The urinary duct carries waste products

from the blood to the bladder. The bladder stores the waste products

until they are eliminated from the body. The urogenital opening lets waste

products leave the body. This is the same opening through which

materials pass from the urinary system and the reproductive system.

Page 32: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Gill Filaments The gills, though usually considered part

of the respiratory system, are also excretory organs.

The blood carries other waste products and excess salts to the gill filaments.

Carbon dioxide and ammonia are excreted by the gills.

Salt is also excreted by the gills if fish lives in saltwater.

Page 33: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

Liver The liver also removes wastes from the

blood, but is considered part of the digestive system, NOT the excretory system.

The liver cleans blood after it has picked up digested products from the intestine.

Wastes are converted into bile and stored in the gall bladder, where they wait to be poured back into the digestive tract to aid in digestion.

Page 34: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

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Page 35: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

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Page 36: Anatomy and Function of a Fish Respiratory, Circulatory, and Excretory Systems Part 3

The End!!!Anatomy of a Fish Part 4

is next!!