naturalists at large: marine vertebrates

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EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT:

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Naturalists at Large Marine Vertebrates Slide Show

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Page 1: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT:

Page 2: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

WHAT MAIN CHARACTERISTIC

IS SHARED

BY ALL VERTEBRATES?

Page 3: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

CHORDATE Characteristics:

At some time in life they have: NOTOCHORD, or nerve cord - a rod like structure that supports back.

Page 4: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

IF YOU SAID BACKBONE, YOU ARE CORRECT!

VERTEBRATES ARE MEMBERS OF THE PHYLUM CHORDATO - (from the name notochord)also called Chordates

Page 5: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Your NOTOCHORD

is your spinal cord - It’s the

connection between the

brain and the nerves

Page 6: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

SOME VERTEBRATES have backbone made of CARTILAGE (connective tissue - softer than bone but still strong!

Page 7: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

•Backbones run down center of back.

•Made up of VERTEBRAE lined up in a row.

•Joints between vertebrae give you flexibility

Page 8: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

EACH VERTEBRAE HAS A HOLE IN IT THAT THE SPINAL CORD GOES THRU - like fingers fit into rings

Page 9: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

COW

FISH

BACKBONE

Page 10: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

The backbone is part of the ENDOSKELETON (internal skeleton). It’s job:

•SUPPORT

•PROTECT

•GIVES BODY SHAPE

•A PLACE FOR MUSCLES TO ATTACH

Page 11: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Endoskeleton also includes the skull(protects brain as u see in my picture), ribs(protects organs), arm and leg bones (help you move)..but YOU already knew that!

Page 12: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

How can you tell the difference between types of vertebrates?

BODY TEMPERATURE

Fish, amphibians, reptiles are ECTOTHERMS - body temp. changes with environment.

Birds and mammals are ENDOTHERMS - body controls temp by controlling internal heat it produces.

Page 13: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

One last fact about vertebrates:One last fact about vertebrates:

Chordates have slits in their throat called PHARYNGEAL

Most other vertebrates have their

pharyngeal slits disappear before birth.

PHARYNX

Page 14: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Fish keep these slits all their lives as part of their gills.

PHARYNGEAL SLITS

Page 15: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

FISH

Page 16: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

HOW DO FISH USE THEIR GILLS?

WHAT ARE THE 3 GROUPS OF FISH?

Page 17: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

FISH:FISH:

• vertebrates that live in water

•fins for movement

•ectothermic

•gills to breathe

•have scales - overlapping plates that protect skin

Page 18: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

OBTAINING O2

Fish swim along, open their mouth

& take in H20The H20 moves thru mouth to

gillsgills

GILLSGILLS: feather-like structures - red in color due to blood vessels in them.

Page 19: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

H20 flows over gills O2 moves into blood C02 flows out into H20

Page 20: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Like all vertebrates, fish have a closed circulatory system. The heart pumps blood

in a loop:

HEART GILLS BODY HEART

Page 21: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

MOVEMENT

FINS: thin membrane

stretched across bony supports

Page 22: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

FEEDING

FISH have highly developed nervous systems and sense organs to help in

capturing food and avoiding predators

Well, not like this…..more like….

Page 23: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Their eyesight is better than yours (remember there is

less light under water)

Sharks can smell and even taste a tiny amount of blood - as little as one drop- in 115 liters of water!

That is 57.5 two liter sodas!

Page 24: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

AND some fish have taste organs in the most unusual places. Catfish

have taste organs on their whiskers!

Page 25: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

FEEDING

Some fish like the

barracuda have sharp

teeth for stabbing

food

Page 26: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Others, like trout have short blunt teeth for gripping &

crushing insects

Page 27: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Filter Feeders like the Basking Shark and Manta Ray use comb-like structures on their gills to filter tiny plants and animals from the water.

Page 28: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Fish Reproduction

Most fish have external fertilization: as female

releases eggs, male spreads a cloud of sperm

over them.

Some fish like guppies and sharks have internal fertilization: when

the eggs are mature enough to live on their own, female gives birth.

Page 29: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Biologists classify fish into 3 groups:

Jawless Fishes

•Bony Fishes

•Cartilaginous FishesThey are grouped according to their mouth

structure and type of skeleton

Page 30: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

JAWLESS FISH

Page 31: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Jawless Fish

•No scales

•skeletons made of cartilage

•one fin (no pairs of fins)

•jawless mouth scrapes, stabs and sucks to get food

Lampreys are eel shaped parasites-use sharp teeth and suction-cup mouth to

feed

Page 32: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

CARTILAGINOUS FISH

Page 33: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

CARTILAGINOUS FISH

Sharks, Rays, Skates

•Skeletons made of cartilage

•Have jaws and pairs of fins

•Pointed, tooth-like scales cover bodies - rougher than sandpaper

•Carnivores

•Rays and Skates live on ocean floor - filter feeders - east mollusks, crustaceans, small fishes

Page 34: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

CARTILAGINOUS FISH - Sharks

•Streamlined bodies for quick movement

•Mouth on bottom part of head

•Jagged teeth arranged in rows - 1st couple rows are for feeding - remaining rows are replacement teeth. If a tooth is lost, one from next row moves up (NO DENTURES EVER NEEDED!)

Sharks

Page 35: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

SHARK TEETH ROWS

Page 36: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

CARTILAGINOUS FISH - Sharks

•Swimming or currents move water over gills

•Spend most of time hunting for food - will attack anything that smells like food.

•Poor eyesight - that is why they swallow strange objects at times.

Page 37: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

BONY FISH

Page 38: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

BONY FISH

Most familiar fish are bony fish: trout, tuna, flounder, salmon,

goldfish, etc.

•Covered with scales

•Pocket on each side of head that holds gills - flap over gills opens to release water

Page 39: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

BONY FISHSwim Bladder and Buoyancy

Fish neither sink or float. They have an organ called a SWIM BLADDER - sac that stabilizes body at different depths. It contains O2, nitrogen & CO2...

Page 40: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

...if the gas is less the fish sinks lower - if it is more the fish moves higher in the water. The change in the gas volume affects the Buoyancy Force - force that water exerts

upward on any underwater object

Swim Bladder and Buoyancy

LESS

MORE

THINK BALLOONS!

Page 41: Naturalists at Large: Marine vertebrates

Bony Fish Diversity

•Make up 95% of all fish species

• Live in salt and fresh water

•Some live in deep water and some in shallow