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Class Osteichthyes

Class Osteichthyes. “Bony Fish”. Class Osteichthyes. Subphylum Vertebrata. Phylum Chordata. Kingdom Animalia. General Characteristics. The largest (by species) class of vertebrates Over 29,000 known species Bony skeleton of calcium

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Class Osteichthyes

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  1. Class Osteichthyes “Bony Fish”

  2. Class Osteichthyes Subphylum Vertebrata Phylum Chordata Kingdom Animalia

  3. General Characteristics • The largest (by species) class of vertebrates • Over 29,000 known species • Bony skeleton of calcium • Dermal scales provide protection, but are very different from chondrichthyes scales • Epidermal mucous secretion=reduce friction • Bilateral symmetry • Appendages adapted for aquatic environment

  4. General Characteristics • Aquatic respiration • Paired gills • Gills covered by operculum (allows fish to breathe without swimming) • Habitat – salt, fresh, warm, cool – anywhere!!

  5. General Characteristics • Swim bladder – • Creates neutral buoyancy • Can also act as resonating chamber for hearing • Mouth/jaw well developed • Fine teeth

  6. Scales • 3 types of scales • Ganoid • Very tough, external coating of protective enamel • Diamond shape, shiny • Uncommon in modern fish (found on sturgeon, gar)

  7. Scales • Ctenoid • Terminate in tiny spines along posterior edge • Most common type of scale in bony fish

  8. Scales • Cycloid • Smooth • Overlap for flexibility • Grow in concentric rings each winter – “age rings”

  9. Skeleton • Endoskeleton – axial & appendicular • Axial – pertaining to the central axis of the body – skull, vertebrae, ribs, spines, caudal vertebrae • Appendicular – parts of the skeleton adjacent to the axial skeleton – pectoral girdle, pelvic girdle, fin rays

  10. Muscular • Segmented muscles (myomeres) – overlapping, segmented muscles in a zig-zag shape, used for swimming and undulating tail movement

  11. Digestive • Complete – mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, pyloric valve, pyloric caeca, intestines, anus • Also have liver & gall bladder to aid in digestion

  12. Circulatory • Closed – two chambered heart • Pericardial cavity with an auricle & a ventricle • Arteries lead away from heart to gills – veins return blood to the heart • Capillaries close the system between arteries & veins at the cells

  13. Respiratory • Aquatic – gills • Gills covered by muscular plate – “operculum” • Gill filaments – minute capillaries for absorption of O2 & excretion of Co2 • Gill arch – provides cartilaginous support • Gill rakers – protect against foreign substance entering gills (cleaning & filtering water)

  14. Excretory • Two kidneys – strains fluid nitrogenous waste • Ureter – Fluid tube leading to urinary bladder

  15. Nervous system/sensory • Brain well developed – division of function • Nerve cord branches to lateral spinal nerves • Cerebral hemisphere – capable of “thinking” • Olfactory lobes – receive & process signals from nostrils • Nostrils – olfactory sacs pick up dissolved substances (aquatic smelling) • Auditory – inner ear • Otolith – bone growth for equilibrium & balance

  16. Nervous system/sensory • Lateral line – picks up low frequency vibrations – aquatic touch/hearing • Optic lobes – midbrain area, process vision • Eyes – well developed, binocular – allow fish to be predaceous • See in color; some can see ultraviolet light • Taste buds – fish have taste preferences, can distinguish what’s “good”

  17. Reproduction • External fertilization (oviparous) – most species • Brook trout – 80 eggs • Ocean sunfish – 5,000,000 • A few species are viviparous

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