phylum cordata introduction to the fish protochordates and jawless fishes

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Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordate s and Jawless Fishes

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Page 1: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Phylum CordataIntroduction to the Fish

Protochordates and Jawless

Fishes

Page 2: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Fish

• Fish origins date back 500 million years according to the fossil record.

• There are 20,000 different species of fish (both marine and freshwater).

• They have a very diverse array of colors, shapes and sizes.

Page 3: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Cordate Characteristics

• Phylum Cordata is the most diverse phylum in the Animal Kingdom.

• The presence of a…– Hollow, dorsal nerve cord– Notochord (supports the nerve cord)– Pharyngeal gill slits

…characterize something as a chordate

Page 4: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Primitive Vertebrates

• The primitive cordates like the protochordates and jawless fish lack advanced structures of other vertebrates (including the fish)

• Vertebrates all have a skeleton, backbone, skull or advanced brain (protochordates do not have these)

Page 5: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Evolutionary Interest

Protochordates are of interest to scientists because they are believed to be the link between invertebrates and vertebrates.

Page 6: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Tunicates

• Tunicates are often referred to as sea squirts because they squirt water when touched.

• Have incurrent and excurrent siphons through which water enters and exits

• Individuals are hermaphrodites, but do not fertilize themselves. Fertilization and development are external since gametes are shed into the water.

Page 7: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Tunicate

Page 8: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

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Page 10: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Lancelets

• Lives buried in the sand with its head sticking out filtering plankton out of the water.

• Separate sexes – fertilization and development are external.

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Page 12: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Lancelet

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Page 14: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Acorn Worm

• Burrow in the sand of the intertidal and subtidal zone where they feed on the organic materials in the sand.

Page 15: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Acorn Worm

Page 16: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Acorn Worm Cast

Page 17: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Jawless Fish

• First fish

• Adults retain their notochord for support of their body.

• Both Sea lamprey and hagfish live as parasites and use their circular rows of teeth to burrow into dead and dying animals.

Page 18: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Lamprey Mouth

Page 19: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Hagfish

Page 20: Phylum Cordata Introduction to the Fish Protochordates and Jawless Fishes

Hagfish Mouth