Fish- is a cold-blooded aquatic vertebrate
breathing by means of gills, with paired
appendages in the form of fins and with a body
covering of scales.
Fish is any member of a paraphyletic group of
organisms that consist of all gill- bearing aquatic
craniate animals that lack limbs with digits.
Although fish are vertebrates - like humans, birds, cats, dogs and
elephants - they are also almost like an alien in a lot of ways.
◦ Fish are designed to live in water.
◦ They move through the water and balance
not with hands and feet but with fins.
◦ For most fish, they breathe not through
lungs but by using gills to extract oxygen from the water.
◦ They are cold-blooded, with their body temperature usually the
same as the surrounding water.
And while we can survive in their world with the help of wetsuits and
breathing equipment or submarines, they can't live in our world -
they are literally like a fish out of water.
Ectothermic
Vertebrates
Have scales
Swim with fins
Almost all exclusively aquatic
Filter oxygen from water over gills
Moonfish or Opah (Lampris guttatus) is the first
warm-blooded fish ever discovered.
Most fish are ectotherms, meaning they require heat
from the environment to stay toasty. The opah, as an
endotherm, keeps its own temperature elevated even
as it dives to chilly depths of 1,300 feet (396 meters)
in temperate and tropical oceans around the world.
The opah, also known as the moonfish,
has relatively small red fins decorating its
large, round body, which can grow up to 6
feet (1.8 meters) long. These fins, which
flap rapidly as the fish swims, turn out to
be important in generating body heat for
the opah.
Ichthyology – study of fishes
Also known as Fish Science, is the branch
of biology devoted to the study of fish.
This includes bony fishes (Osteichthyes),
cartilaginous fish (Chondrichthyes), and jawless
fish (Agnatha).
While a large number of species have been
discovered and described, approximately 250 new
species are officially described by science each
year.
According to Fishbase, 34,300 species of fish had
been described as of October 2015
Class Agnatha – Jawless Fish
Class Chondrichthyes – Cartilagenous Fish
Class Osteichthyes – Bony Fish
Earth’s surface- 510M km2
Ocean covers- 361 M km2 (70.8%)
Freshwater- 0.0093%
About 34,300 species of fish ( 58.2%- marine, 33.1%- freshwater)
Marine - deep benthic (6.4%)
deep pelagic (5.0%)
Epipelagic (1.3%)
Shallow cold (5.6%)
Shallow warm (39.9%)
Diadromous (0.6%)
Freshwater- primary (33.1%)
Secondary ( 8.1%)
4 out of 10 live in freshwater
Formation of new species is higher in freshwater habitats than in
seawater
Lake Titicaca (South America) –3812 m. world’s
highest lake
Marianas Trench- 11 km
Desert springs
Caves
Thermal vents
Under antartic ice
Jaws present or absent
Size
◦ Paedocypris progenitica(Cyprinidae)
Indonesia- 7.6 mm adult size
◦ Trimmatom nanus (Gobidae), Australia– 8
mm adult size
◦ Pandaka pygmaea (Gobidae), Philippines-
10 mm adult size
◦ Rhincodon typus (Rhicodontidae) whale
shark- 12.65m
Change in ontogeny ( history and
development of the individual
organism)
Blue fin tuna hatches from 5mm
egg to 14 ft adult size