Aquatics - Introduction

?

What will we be looking at?

  • fish husbandry and biology
  • tank set up, fish health, fish feeding
  • hardest husbandry field
1 of 11

Careers

  • Public Aquariums: Aquarist, education or presenting
  • Retail work: installing and maintaining aquariums/ponds
  • Aquaculture
  • Science/Photography
  • Marine mammal/photography
  • marine education/observer
  • rehabilitation 
2 of 11

What is a fish?

Most fish:

  • vertebrates
  • live in water
  • breathe primarily with gills
  • paired fins
  • exothermic

3 Classes:

  • Agnatha
  • Chondrichthyes
  • Osteichthyes
3 of 11

Osteichthyes: Introduction

  • 30,000 species 
    • e.g. Ocean Sunfish, Atlantic Blue Marlin, Fisher's Seahorse
  • Bony skeleton
    • 3 main units: skull, backbone, fin skeleton
  • paired fins
  • two sets of jaw (oral and pharyngeal)
  • scales
    • light, flexible cycloid or chenoid scales
    • mucous layer
      • repels parasites
      • reduce moisture loss
    • some have large protective scales or no scales at all
  • 4 pairs of gills covered by operculum (external bone and skin flap)
    • behind head, below cranium
    • lower gill chamber containing bony supports called branchiostegal rays
      • allow fish to open mouth and regulate intake
    • operculum controls outflow
    • respire while stationary
  • swim bladder for buoyancy 
4 of 11

Osteichthyes: Senses

  • keen senses of vision and hearing
    • used in communication and social interaction
    • helps with shoaling
  • eyes on side of head
    • wider field of view
    • rods and cones give good colour vision 
      • bright colouration helps attract mates and defend territory
  • produce sounds with swim bladder or by rubbing two parts of the body together
5 of 11

Chondrichthyes: Introduction

  • 1000 species
    • e.g. White Ghost Catshark, Mottled Eagle Ray, Great Hammerhead
  • cartilaginous fish
    • strengthened with mineral deposits
    • some = hard, bone-like dorsal spines
  • sharks rays and ratfish
  • 5-7 pairs of gills with no operculum
  • jawed
  • paired fins
  • dermal denticles
    • also called placoid scales, modified teeth that are covered in hard enamel
      • thousands cover the skin
      • skin has a sandpaper-like texture
      • some rays = thorn-like scales
      • Chimeras lack scales
    • Oily liver
      • cartilage skeletons and fins help buoyancy
      • do not have a swim bladder 
6 of 11

Chondrichthyes: Senses

  • Ampullae of Lorenzini (system of pores) that detect weak electrical signals
  • effective lateral-line systems responds to small vibrations
  • sense of smell detects odours even in the weakest solutions 
7 of 11

Chondrichthyes: Reproduction

  • internal fertilisation
  • male passes sperm into female's cloaca via modified pelvic fin
  • females of some species release leathery egg cases
    • young hatch within the body
  • other species have a placenta-like structure
    • direct nutritional connection
  • no larval stage
    • miniature versions of adults
8 of 11

Agnatha: Introduction

  • 120 species
    • e.g. Broadgilled Hagfish, Dwarf Hagfish
  • 'jawless'
    • lampreys have a round sucker-like mouth with rows of teeth made of keratin
    • hagfish have a slit-like mouth with teeth on their tongue
  • either pores for gills, either single or separate, or slits
    • hagfish: one to sixteen circular pores
    • lampreys: seven gills 
  • no or unpaired fins
  • cartilage skeleton 
    • lampreys: few rudimentary vertebrae
    • hagfish: tube-like notochord. Have been classed as invertebrates in the past
  • older species = thick bony plates, newer species = slimy skin
  • neutral buoyancy 
    • as dense as the water around them
9 of 11

Agnatha: Senses

  • lampreys have moderately good vision
  • hagfish: vestigial eyes but excellent sense of smell to detect carrion and small invertebrates
10 of 11

Agnatha: Reproduction

  • lampreys live and breed in freshwater
    • marine species only enter freshwater to spawn
    • swim up rivers to clean gravelly areas, where pairs excavate shallow nests, lay their eggs and then die
    • eggs hatch into ammocoetes larvae that drift downriver to muddy areas where they excavate burrows
    • young feed on filtered microscopic organisms from the water and by suckling detritus
11 of 11

Comments

No comments have yet been made

Similar Other resources:

See all Other resources »See all Animal Management resources »