Transcript File
Chordates and Vertebrates
Chordates
The notochord is an elongate, rodlike, skeletal structure dorsal to the gut
tube and ventral to the nerve cord.
The notochord should not be confused
with the backbone or vertebral column
of most adult vertebrates.
The notochord appears early in the
embryo and plays an important role in
promoting or organizing the embryonic
development of nearby structures.
In most adult chordates the notochord
disappears
In some non-vertebrate chordates and
fishes the notochord persists as a
laterally flexible but incompressible
skeletal rod that prevents telescopic
collapse of the body during swimming.
Primitive Jawless Fish
Lamphrey and Hag fish
The most primitive of the
chordates evident in the fossil
record are the jawless
Ostracoderms.
They were jawless, bottom feeders
Their endoskeleton was cartilaginous
but the are covered with small bony
plates
They use a muscular pharynx to
suck food into their mouths and to
exchange gases in respiration.
Their gill slits were permanently
open
Jawless Fish cont.
As the fish swam, this fin
configuration drove the animal
down into the bottom where its
food was located.
The bony plates were useful for
protection but inhibiting when rapid
swimming was required.
They still had no axial skeleton
These animals are long, slender eel
like organisms.
These animals exist either as
bottom scavengers or parasites of
other fish. (Hag fish top right)
Jawed cartilaginous fish
The Chondrichthyes are the
modern cartilaginous fish
The present Chondrichthyes
include the sharks, skates and
rays. (Top left: skate Bottom
left
A ventral jaw with replaceable
teeth. The limited mobility of
the jaw means that the shark
must thrash around to break
up its prey
Sharks must continually swim
to avoid sinking. (Thought this
was interesting!)
The gills are not protected by
an operculum
Cartilagenous Fish
Cartilage is a soft,
flexible material
End of your nose, ears
Cartilagenous fish
have an entire
skeleton made of it
Class Chondrichthyes
Sharks, skates and
rays
First jawed fish
Cartilagenous Fish
Placoid Scales: tiny
“teeth” that point towards
posterior of animal
Gill Slits: openings to the
gills
Skates, rays and some
bottom-dwelling sharks
have gill slits on ventral
side
Spiracles: openings that
allow water to enter gill
chamber
Behind eye
Mouth can be used to
help spiracles pump
water over gills
Cartilagenous Fish
Fins
More rigid than bony
fish
Pectoral fins in sharks
provide lift
In skates and rays
pectoral fins are more
developed
Skates and Rays
Many species are
bottom-dwellers
Stingrays have a
spine at the base of
the tail that can inflict
a stab wound
Skates do not have
spines
Both eat crustaceans
and mollusks
Sharks
Group is more than 300 million years old
Lateral line organ
Used to detect motion in the water
Ampullae of Lorenzini
Sense electric fields generated by fish
Teeth
Constantly replaced
Many sharks have to swim as they can not pump water over their gills
Sharks
Reproduction
Claspers
Males use claspers to
transfer sperm to
females
Located between the
pelvic fin and body
Eggs
All sharks have eggs
Some species have
eggs that hatch
internally and are then
born live
Some species lay an
egg case known as a
Mermaid’s Purse
Bony Fish
Bony fish
Skeleton made of
bone
Have vertebrae
Have scales covered
with mucus
Barrier against infection
and reduces friction
with the water
Found in every aquatic
environment
Bony Fish
Obtaining oxygen
Use gills
Located under a
protective flap called
the operculum
Mouth and operculum
open at the same time
as water is drawn in by
the mouth and passed
over the gills
Bony Fish
Locomotion
Nekton
As opposed to plankton
Fins
Some are paired, others
are single
Paired: pectoral and pelvic
movement
Single: dorsal, anal and
caudal
Stabilization and thrust
(power)
Peduncle
Used as a major marker
for determining species
Base of caudal fin
Bony Fish
Pelagic v. Benthic
Pelagic refers to those
living in the middle of the
water column, open ocean
Benthic refers to those
living on the bottom
Speed
Depends on shape
Faster fish have more
sharp angles and bigger,
forked caudal fins
Bony Fish
Temperature
Bony fish are ectothermic
Their body temperature
depends on the
temperature of the
environment
Buoyancy
Swim bladder
Neutral buoyancy is when
the fish neither sinks or
floats
Swim bladder contracts
and fish sinks, bladder
expands and fish rises
Bony Fish
Feeding
Parasitic (lamprey)
Predatory
Strainers (planktoneaters
Suckers (use change
in volume to suck prey
into mouth)
Digestion
One-way digestive
system coupled with a
closed circulatory
system and 2chambered heart
Bony Fish
Reproduction
Takes place during spawning
Sperm and eggs are released into the water or fertilization takes
place internally
Eggs develop either floating or attached to a substrate