elasmo-research/education/shark_profiles/hammerhead_faq.htm

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http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/shark_profiles/hammerhead_faq.htm Hammerhead sharks (8 species known) Sea of Cortez has the scalloped hammerhead (Sphryrna lewini) School around seamounts Slow reproductive rate: females mature at 15 yrs, 12 month gestation, 1 year off between pregnancies

description

http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/shark_profiles/hammerhead_faq.htm. Hammerhead sharks ( 8 species known) Sea of Cortez has the scalloped hammerhead ( Sphryrna lewini) School around seamounts Slow reproductive rate: females mature at 15 yrs, 12 month - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of elasmo-research/education/shark_profiles/hammerhead_faq.htm

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http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/shark_profiles/hammerhead_faq.htm

Hammerhead sharks (8 species known)Sea of Cortez has the scalloped hammerhead (Sphryrna lewini)School around seamountsSlow reproductive rate: females mature at 15 yrs, 12 month

gestation, 1 year off between pregnanciesFished for food and sport

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http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/shark_profiles/hammerhead_faq.htm

Why the hammerhead shape?- spreads out sensory ability (electric, olfactory) (disadvantages: prevents jaw protusion & 3D vision)-use the hammer to pin down stingrays and eat them

(stingray spines often found in heads)

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Figure 8.1

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http://www.germantown.k12.il.us/html/Fishy.html

Three groups of fishes

Jawless fish (Agnatha)

Cartilagenous fish (Chondricthyes)

Bony Fish (Osteichthyes)

lamprey

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Class Osteichthyes (Bony Fish)

- Dominant vertebrate in the sea - 26,000 species (96% of all fish, 50% of all

vertebrates)

http://www.germantown.k12.il.us/html/Fishy.html

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Figure 8.8

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Figure 8.14

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Sharks (blood = seawater)- concentrate urea- excrete salt in urine,feces, rectal gland

How to cope with salt in seawater (tend to lose water)

Bony fish (blood<seawater)-kidneys conserve water-excrete salts in urine, feces,gills, skin

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Figure 8.16

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Figure 8.9Streamlined(fusiform)Fast-open water

Flattened topto bottom -Bottom dweller

Flattenedside to side-bottom orcoral reef

Slow -reef

Live invegetation/coral

Trunklike orround - slowmoving, reef

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Figure 8.13

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Maintaining buoyancy

Large oily live, light skeleton,pectoral fins for stability

Gas-filled swimBladder, pectoralfins freed for other uses-great diversity of forms

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modes of swimming

Undulation flex caudal region move fins tail fin( eels) (tuna) surgeonfish boxfish

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Figure 8.22

Skipjack tunaTropical speciesthat travels to temperate water tofeed. Halfway acrossglobe each year.

SalmonAnadromous =Spend lives atsea feeding, returnto rivers to breed:Magnetic field and smellof home rivers

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Figure 8.22Conservation threatsPolluted rivers, damsWater harvestedIntroduced species offarmed salmon

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Catadromous - breed at sea, migrate into rivers to grow (16 spp freshwater eels)

adults spawn and die in Sargasso Sea / larvae in plankton 1 yr+/ metamorphose into juveniles / grow and mature in rivers

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Why do fish school?

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“selfish herd theory”(middle is safest place to be)

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Buoyancy - how to regulate

Cartilagenous fish (sharks, rays, chimaeras)-large oily liver, light skeleton- pectoral fins needed for stability/steering

Advantages: rapid changes in depth possibleBony fish– Swim bladder (gas-filled sac above intestine)Advantages: freed up pectoral fins for other uses

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Strange reproductive practices of fish

• Hermaphrodites• Sex change (born one sex, become the other)

Large fish in harems are often sex-change malesLarge fish in non-harem species are often sex-change females

• Parasitic males• “Sneaker” males that look like females• Sex-role reversal (male pregnancy in seahorses)• Males often do parental care in fish

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http://www.geocities.com/thesciencefiles/angler/fish.html

Anglerfish adaptations for deep water habitat:

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http://www.geocities.com/thesciencefiles/angler/fish.html

Anglerfish adaptations for deep sea (food and mates scarce)sit and wait predatory behaviorbioluminescent lure parasitic males

- once males encounter female, they don’t leave

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http://www.oceanoasis.org/fieldguide/thal-luc.html

Rainbow wrasseThalassoma lucasanum

Two types of malesTwo types of reproduction.

1) Females(yellow/red lateral stripes)2) Primary males(look like females)3) Terminal males(blueheads) - born female, turninto males

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http://www.oceanoasis.org/fieldguide/thal-luc.html

Rainbow wrasseT. lucasanum

Two types of reproduction

1) Broadcast spawning Many males and females rush

to surface and release gametes

2) Harems: one terminal maleguards group of females and mates with them individually.

Death of secondary male-large female turns into newterminal male

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Mass spawning of the rainbow wrasseThalassoma lucasanum

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Barred serranoSerranus psitticinusSea of Cortez

Simultaneoushermaphrodite(can act as male orfemale at any time)-dominant male in harem mates with “females”.

Serranus annularis CaribbeanOrange back basslet

http://www.qualitymarineusa.com/fish/basslets.html#top

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Lecture ended here.

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http://www.cnn.com/TECH/science/9812/11/seahorses.yoto/

Male pregnancy in seahorses-Placenta- Long-term pair bond-Daily dance of pair

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http://www.cnn.com/TECH/science/9812/11/seahorses.yoto/

Conservation of Sea Horses20 million caught each year

- 95% chinese medicine- 5% aquarium trade

32 species (threatened status)

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Coelocanth (lobe-finned fish)