A fish is any member of a paraphyletic
group of organisms that consist of all gill-bearing aquatic
craniate
animals that lack limbs with digits.
Included in this definition are the living hagfish, lampreys, and cartilaginous
and bony
fish, as well as various extinct related groups. Most fish are ectothermic
("cold-blooded"), allowing their body temperatures to vary as ambient
temperatures change, though some of the large active swimmers like white shark
and tuna can hold a
higher core temperature.Fish are abundant in most bodies of water. They can be
found in nearly all aquatic environments, from high mountain streams (e.g., char and gudgeon)
to the abyssal
and even hadal
depths of the deepest oceans (e.g., gulpers and anglerfish).
At 32,000 species, fish exhibit greater species diversity than any other group
of vertebrates
Fish are an
important resource worldwide, especially as food.
Commercial and subsistence fishers hunt fish in wild
fisheries (see fishing) or farm them in ponds or in cages in the ocean (see aquaculture).
They are also caught by recreational fishers, kept as pets, raised by fishkeepers,
and exhibited in public aquaria. Fish have had a role in culture through the ages,
serving as deities,
religious symbols, and as the subjects of art, books and movies.
Because the
term "fish" is defined negatively, and excludes the tetrapods
(i.e., the amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals) which descend from within
the same ancestry, it is paraphyletic, and is not considered a proper grouping in
systematic
biology. The traditional term pisces
(also ichthyes) is considered a
typological, but not a phylogenetic classification.
The earliest
organisms that can be classified as fish were soft-bodied chordates that
first appeared during the Cambrian period. Although they lacked a true spine,
they possessed notochords which allowed them to be more agile than their
invertebrate counterparts. Fish would continue to evolve through the Paleozoic
era, diversifying into a wide variety of forms. Many fish of the Paleozoic
developed external
armor that protected them from predators. The first fish with jaws appeared in the Silurian
period, after which many (such as sharks) became formidable marine predators rather than just the
prey of arthropods.
Evolution
Outdated
evolutionary view of continual gradation (animation)
Dunkleosteus was a
gigantic, 10 meter (33 feet) long prehistoric
fish.
Fish do not
represent a monophyletic group, and therefore the "evolution of
fish" is not studied as a single event]
Proliferation
of fish was apparently due to the hinged jaw, because jawless
fish left very few descendants]Lampreys may
approximate pre-jawed fish. The first jaws are found in Placodermi
fossils. It is unclear if the advantage of a hinged jaw is greater biting
force, improved respiration, or a combination of factors.
Fish may have
evolved from a creature similar to a coral-like Sea squirt,
whose larvae resemble primitive fish in important ways. The first ancestors of
fish may have kept
the larval form into adulthood (as some sea squirts do today), although perhaps
the reverse is the case.
Taxonomy
Fish are a paraphyletic
group: that is, any clade
containing all fish also contains the tetrapods,
which are not fish. For this reason, groups such as the "Class
Pisces" seen in older reference works are no longer used in formal
classifications.
Traditional
classification divide fish into three extant
classes,
and with extinct forms sometimes classified within the tree, sometimes as their
own classe
- Class Agnatha
(jawless fish)
- Subclass Cyclostomata
(hagfish
and lampreys)
- Subclass Ostracodermi
(armoured jawless fish) †
- Class Chondrichthyes
(cartilaginous fish)
- Subclass Elasmobranchii
(sharks and rays)
- Subclass Holocephali
(chimaeras
and extinct relatives)
- Class Placodermi
(armoured fish) †
- Class Acanthodii
("spiny sharks", sometimes classified under bony fishes)†
- Class Osteichthyes
(bony fish)
- Subclass Actinopterygii
(ray finned fishes)
- Subclass Sarcopterygii
(fleshy finned fishes, ancestors of tetrapods)
The above
scheme is the one most commonly encountered in non-specialist and general
works. Many of the above groups are paraphyletic, in that they have given rise
to successive groups: Agnathans are ancestral to Chondrichthyes, who again have
given rise to Acanthodiians, the ancestors of Osteichthyes. With the arrival of
phylogenetic nomenclature, the fishes has
been split up into a more detailed scheme, with the following major groups:
- Class
Myxini (hagfish)
- Class Pteraspidomorphi † (early jawless fish)
- Class Thelodonti
†
- Class Anaspida †
- Class Petromyzontida
or Hyperoartia
- Petromyzontidae
(lampreys)
- Class Conodonta
(conodonts) †
- Class Cephalaspidomorphi † (early jawless fish)
- (unranked)
Galeaspida
†
- (unranked)
Pituriaspida
†
- (unranked)
Osteostraci
†
- Infraphylum
Gnathostomata
(jawed vertebrates)
- Class Placodermi
† (armoured fish)
- Class Chondrichthyes
(cartilaginous fish)
- Class Acanthodii
† (spiny sharks)
- Superclass
Osteichthyes
(bony fish)
- Class Actinopterygii
(ray-finned fish)
- Subclass
Chondrostei
- Order Acipenseriformes (sturgeons
and paddlefishes)
- Order Polypteriformes (reedfishes
and bichirs).
- Subclass
Neopterygii
- Infraclass
Holostei
(gars and bowfins)
- Infraclass
Teleostei
(many orders of common fish)
- Class Sarcopterygii
(lobe-finned fish)
- Subclass
Actinistia
(coelacanths)
- Subclass
Dipnoi (lungfish)
† – indicates
extinct taxon
Some palaeontologists contend that because Conodonta are chordates, they are primitive fish. For a fuller treatment of this taxonomy, see the vertebrate article.
Some palaeontologists contend that because Conodonta are chordates, they are primitive fish. For a fuller treatment of this taxonomy, see the vertebrate article.
The position of
hagfish in the
phylum chordata is not settled. Phylogenetic research in 1998 and 1999
supported the idea that the hagfish and the lampreys form a natural group, the Cyclostomata,
that is a sister group of the Gnathostomata
The various
fish groups account for more than half of vertebrate species. There are almost
28,000 known extant species, of which almost 27,000 are bony fish,
with 970 sharks, rays, and chimeras and about 108 hagfish and
lamprey. A third of these
species fall within the nine largest families; from largest to smallest, these
families are Cyprinidae, Gobiidae, Cichlidae, Characidae, Loricariidae,
Balitoridae,
Serranidae,
Labridae,
and Scorpaenidae.
About 64 families are monotypic, containing only one species. The final total of
extant species may grow to exceed 32,50
Diversity of
fish
Fish come in
many shapes and sizes. This is a sea
dragon, a close relative of the seahorse. Their
leaf-like appendages enable them to blend in with floating seaweed.
Main article: Diversity
of fish
The term
"fish" most precisely describes any non-tetrapod craniate (i.e.
an animal with a skull and in most cases a backbone) that has gills throughout life
and whose limbs, if any, are in the shape of fin.Unlike groupings such as birds or mammals, fish are
not a single clade
but a paraphyletic
collection of taxa,
including hagfishes,
lampreys, sharks
and rays, ray-finned fish, coelacanths,
and lungfish.[14][15]
Indeed, lungfish and coelacanths are closer relatives of tetrapods (such
as mammals,
birds, amphibians,
etc.) than of other fish such as ray-finned
fish or sharks, so the last common ancestor of all fish is also an
ancestor to tetrapods. As paraphyletic groups are no longer recognised in
modern systematic
biology, the use of the term "fish" as a biological group must be
avoided.
Many types of aquatic
animals commonly referred to as "fish" are not fish in the sense
given above; examples include shellfish, cuttlefish, starfish, crayfish and jellyfish. In earlier times, even biologists did not make a
distinction – sixteenth century natural historians classified also seals, whales, amphibians, crocodiles,
even hippopotamuses,
as well as a host of aquatic invertebrates, as fish.However, according the definition above,
all mammals, including cetaceans like whales and dolphins, are not fish. In some
contexts, especially in aquaculture, the true fish are referred to as finfish (or fin fish) to distinguish them from these other animals.
A typical fish
is ectothermic,
has a streamlined body for rapid
swimming, extracts oxygen from water using gills or uses an accessory breathing
organ to breathe atmospheric oxygen, has two sets of paired fins, usually one
or two (rarely three) dorsal fins, an anal fin, and a tail fin, has jaws, has
skin that is usually covered with scales,
and lays eggs.
Each criterion
has exceptions. Tuna,
swordfish,
and some species of sharks
show some warm-blooded adaptations—they can heat their bodies
significantly above ambient water temperature.[14]
Streamlining and swimming performance varies from fish such as tuna, salmon, and jacks that
can cover 10–20 body-lengths per second to species such as eels and rays that swim
no more than 0.5 body-lengths per seconMany groups of freshwater fish extract
oxygen from the air as well as from the water using a variety of different
structures. Lungfish
have paired lungs similar to those of tetrapods, gouramis have a
structure called the labyrinth organ that performs a similar function,
while many catfish, such as Corydoras
extract oxygen via the intestine or stomach.Body
shape and the arrangement of the fins is highly variable, covering such
seemingly un-fishlike forms as seahorses, pufferfish, anglerfish,
and gulpers. Similarly, the surface of the skin may
be naked (as in moray eels), or covered with scales of a variety of
different types usually defined as placoid
(typical of sharks and rays), cosmoid (fossil lungfish and coelacanths), ganoid (various
fossil fish but also living gars and bichirs), cycloid, and ctenoid (these last two are found on most bony fish.There are even fish that live mostly on
land. Mudskippers
feed and interact with one another on mudflats and go underwater to hide in
their burrows.The catfish Phreatobius cisternarum lives in
underground, phreatic
habitats, and a relative lives in waterlogged leaf litter
Fish range in
size from the huge 16-metre (52 ft) whale shark
to the tiny 8-millimetre (0.3 in) stout
infantfish.
Fish species diversity
is roughly divided equally between marine (oceanic) and freshwater
ecosystems. Coral
reefs in the Indo-Pacific constitute the center of diversity for
marine fishes, whereas continental freshwater fishes are most diverse in large river
basins of tropical rainforests, especially the Amazon,
Congo,
and Mekong
basins. More than 5,600 fish species inhabit Neotropical
freshwaters alone, such that Neotropical fishes represent about 10% of all vertebrate
species on the Earth.
Anatomy
Main article: Fish
anatomy
The anatomy of Lampanyctodes hectoris
(1) – operculum (gill cover), (2) – lateral line, (3) – dorsal fin, (4) – fat fin, (5) – caudal peduncle, (6) – caudal fin, (7) – anal fin, (8) – photophores, (9) – pelvic fins (paired), (10) – pectoral fins (paired)
(1) – operculum (gill cover), (2) – lateral line, (3) – dorsal fin, (4) – fat fin, (5) – caudal peduncle, (6) – caudal fin, (7) – anal fin, (8) – photophores, (9) – pelvic fins (paired), (10) – pectoral fins (paired)
Respiration
Most fish
exchange gases using gills
on either side of the pharynx. Gills consist of threadlike structures called filaments.
Each filament contains a capillary network that provides a large surface
area for exchanging oxygen and carbon
dioxide. Fish exchange gases by pulling oxygen-rich water through their
mouths and pumping it over their gills. In some fish, capillary blood flows in
the opposite direction to the water, causing countercurrent exchange. The gills push the
oxygen-poor water out through openings in the sides of the pharynx. Some fish,
like sharks and lampreys, possess
multiple gill openings. However, bony fish
have a single gill opening on each side. This opening is hidden beneath a
protective bony cover called an operculum.
Juvenile bichirs have
external gills, a very primitive feature that they share with larval amphibians.
Fish from
multiple groups can live out of the water for extended time periods. Amphibious
fish such as the mudskipper can live and move about on land for up to
several days, or live in stagnant or otherwise oxygen depleted water. Many such
fish can breathe air via a variety of mechanisms. The skin of anguillid
eels may absorb oxygen directly. The buccal
cavity of the electric eel may breathe air. Catfish of the families Loricariidae,
Callichthyidae,
and Scoloplacidae
absorb air through their digestive tracts.[22]
Lungfish,
with the exception of the Australian lungfish, and bichirs have paired
lungs similar to those of tetrapods and must surface to gulp fresh air through the
mouth and pass spent air out through the gills. Gar and bowfin have a
vascularized swim bladder that functions in the same way. Loaches,
trahiras,
and many catfish
breathe by passing air through the gut. Mudskippers breathe by absorbing oxygen
across the skin (similar to frogs). A number of fish have evolved so-called accessory breathing organs that
extract oxygen from the air. Labyrinth fish (such as gouramis and bettas) have a labyrinth
organ above the gills that performs this function. A few other fish have
structures resembling labyrinth organs in form and function, most notably snakeheads,
pikeheads,
and the Clariidae
catfish family.
Breathing air
is primarily of use to fish that inhabit shallow, seasonally variable waters
where the water's oxygen concentration may seasonally decline. Fish dependent
solely on dissolved oxygen, such as perch and cichlids, quickly
suffocate, while air-breathers survive for much longer, in some cases in water
that is little more than wet mud. At the most extreme, some air-breathing fish
are able to survive in damp burrows for weeks without water, entering a state
of aestivation
(summertime hibernation) until water returns.
Tuna gills inside of
the head. The fish head is oriented snout-downwards, with the view looking
towards the mouth.
Air breathing
fish can be divided into obligate air
breathers and facultative air
breathers. Obligate air breathers, such as the African
lungfish, must breathe air
periodically or they suffocate. Facultative air breathers, such as the catfish Hypostomus plecostomus, only breathe
air if they need to and will otherwise rely on their gills for oxygen. Most air
breathing fish are facultative air breathers that avoid the energetic cost of
rising to the surface and the fitness cost of exposure to surface predators.
Circulation
Fish have a closed-loop circulatory system. The heart pumps the blood
in a single loop throughout the body. In most fish, the heart consists of four
parts, including two chambers and an entrance and exit.The first part is the sinus
venosus, a thin-walled sac that collects blood from the fish's veins before allowing
it to flow to the second part, the atrium,
which is a large muscular chamber. The atrium serves as a one-way antechamber,
sends blood to the third part, ventricle.
The ventricle is another thick-walled, muscular chamber and it pumps the blood,
first to the fourth part, bulbus
arteriosus, a large tube, and then out of the heart. The bulbus arteriosus
connects to the aorta,
through which blood flows to the gills for oxygenation.
Digestion
Jaws allow fish
to eat a wide variety of food, including plants and other organisms. Fish
ingest food through the mouth and break it down in the esophagus. In
the stomach, food is further digested and, in many fish, processed in finger-shaped
pouches called pyloric caeca, which secrete digestive enzymes and
absorb nutrients. Organs such as the liver and pancreas add
enzymes and various chemicals as the food moves through the digestive tract.
The intestine completes the process of digestion and nutrient absorption.
Excretion
As with many
aquatic animals, most fish release their nitrogenous wastes as ammonia. Some of
the wastes diffuse
through the gills. Blood wastes are filtered by the kidneys.
Saltwater fish
tend to lose water because of osmosis. Their kidneys return water to the body. The reverse
happens in freshwater fish: they tend to gain water
osmotically. Their kidneys produce dilute urine for excretion. Some fish have
specially adapted kidneys that vary in function, allowing them to move from
freshwater to saltwater.
Scales
Main article: Scale (zoology)#Fish scales
The scales of
fish originate from the mesoderm (skin); they may be similar in structure to
teeth.
Sensory and
nervous system
Dorsal view of
the brain of the rainbow trout
Central nervous
system
Fish typically
have quite small brains relative to body size compared with other vertebrates,
typically one-fifteenth the brain mass of a similarly sized bird or mammal. However, some fish have relatively large
brains, most notably mormyrids and sharks, which have brains about as massive relative to body
weight as birds and marsupials
Fish brains are
divided into several regions. At the front are the olfactory
lobes, a pair of structures that receive and process signals from the nostrils via the
two olfactory nerves.[24]
The olfactory lobes are very large in fish that hunt primarily by smell, such
as hagfish, sharks, and catfish. Behind the olfactory lobes is the two-lobed telencephalon,
the structural equivalent to the cerebrum in higher vertebrates. In fish the telencephalon is
concerned mostly with olfaction.Together these structures form the forebrain.
Connecting the
forebrain to the midbrain is the
diencephalon
(in the diagram, this structure is below the optic lobes and consequently not
visible). The diencephalon performs functions associated with hormones and homeostasis. The pineal body
lies just above the diencephalon. This structure detects light, maintains circadian
rhythms, and controls color changes.
The midbrain or
mesencephalon contains the two optic lobes. These are very large in species that hunt
by sight, such as rainbow trout and cichlids.
The hindbrain or metencephalon
is particularly involved in swimming and balance.The cerebellum is a
single-lobed structure that is typically the biggest part of the brain. Hagfish and lampreys have
relatively small cerebellae, while the mormyrid
cerebellum is massive and apparently involved in their electrical
sense.
The brain stem or myelencephalon
is the brain's posterior.As well as controlling some muscles and body organs,
in bony fish at least, the brain stem governs respiration and osmoregulation
Sense organs
Most fish
possess highly developed sense organs. Nearly all daylight fish have color
vision that is at least as good as a human's (see vision
in fishes). Many fish also have chemoreceptors that are responsible for
extraordinary senses of taste and smell. Although they have ears, many fish may
not hear very well. Most fish have sensitive receptors that form the lateral line system, which detects gentle
currents and vibrations, and senses the motion of nearby fish and prey. Some fish, such as catfish and sharks,
have organs that detect weak electric currents on the order of millivolt. Other fish, like the South American
electric fishes Gymnotiformes, can produce weak electric currents,
which they use in navigation and social communication.
Fish orient
themselves using landmarks and may use mental maps based on multiple landmarks
or symbols. Fish behavior in mazes reveals that they possess spatial memory and
visual discrimination
Vision
Main article: Vision
in fishes
Vision
is an important sensory system for most species of fish. Fish eyes
are similar to those of terrestrial vertebrates
like birds
and mammals, but have a more spherical lens.
Their retinas
generally have both rod cells and cone cells
(for scotopic and photopic
vision), and most species have colour
vision. Some fish can see ultraviolet and some can see polarized
light. Amongst jawless fish, the lamprey has
well-developed eyes, while the hagfish has only primitive eyespots[disambiguation
needed].[29] Fish
vision shows adaptation to their visual environment, for example deep
sea fishes have eyes suited to the dark environment.
Hearing
Main article: Hearing in fishes
Hearing
is an important sensory system for most species of fish. Fish sense sound using
their lateral
lines and their ears.
Capacity for
pain
Further information: Pain in
fish
Experiments
done by William Tavolga provide evidence that fish have pain and fear
responses. For instance, in Tavolga’s experiments, toadfish
grunted when electrically shocked and over time they came to grunt at the mere
sight of an electrode.[30]
In 2003,
Scottish scientists at the University of Edinburgh and the Roslin
Institute concluded that rainbow trout exhibit behaviors often associated with pain in other animals. Bee venom and acetic acid
injected into the lips resulted in fish rocking their bodies and rubbing their
lips along the sides and floors of their tanks, which the researchers concluded
were attempts to relieve pain, similar to what mammals would do Neurons fired in a patternresembling human
neuronal patterns.
Professor James
D. Rose of the University of Wyoming claimed the study was
flawed since it did not provide proof that fish possess "conscious
awareness, particularly a kind of awareness that is meaningfully like
ours"Rose argues that since fish brains are so different from human
brains, fish are probably not conscious in the manner humans are, so that
reactions similar to human reactions to pain instead have other causes. Rose
had published a study a year earlier arguing that fish cannot feel pain because
their brains lack a neocortex.However, animal behaviorist Temple
Grandin argues that fish could still have consciousness without a neocortex
because "different species can use different brain structures and systems
to handle the same functions.
Animal welfare
advocates raise concerns about the possible suffering of
fish caused by angling. Some countries, such as Germany have banned specific
types of fishing, and the British RSPCA now formally prosecutes individuals who
are cruel to fish.
Muscular system
Main article: Fish
locomotion
Swim bladder of
a Rudd (Scardinius erythrophthalmus)
Most fish move
by alternately contracting paired sets of muscles on either side of the
backbone. These contractions form S-shaped curves that move down the body. As
each curve reaches the back fin, backward force is applied to the water, and in
conjunction with the fins, moves the fish forward. The fish's fins function
like an airplane's flaps. Fins also increase the tail's surface area,
increasing speed. The streamlined body of the fish decreases the amount of
friction from the water. Since body tissue is denser than water, fish must
compensate for the difference or they will sink. Many bony fish have an
internal organ called a swim bladder that adjusts their buoyancy through manipulation
of gases.
A 3-tonne
(3.0-long-ton; 3.3-short-ton) great
white shark off Isla Guadalupe
Homeothermy
Although most
fish are exclusively ectothermic, there are exceptions.
Certain species
of fish maintain elevated body temperatures. Endothermic
teleosts (bony
fish) are all in the suborder Scombroidei and include the billfishes,
tunas, and one species of "primitive" mackerel (Gasterochisma melampus). All sharks
in the family Lamnidae
– shortfin mako, long fin mako, white, porbeagle, and salmon shark – are
endothermic, and evidence suggests the trait exists in family Alopiidae (thresher
sharks). The degree of endothermy varies from the billfish, which
warm only their eyes and brain, to bluefin
tuna and porbeagle sharks who maintain body temperatures
elevated in excess of 20 °C above ambient water temperatures.Endothermy, though
metabolically costly, is thought to provide advantages such as increased muscle
strength, higher rates of central nervous
system processing, and higher rates of digestion.
Reproductive
system
Further information: Spawn
(biology)
Organs
Organs:
1. Liver, 2. Gas bladder,
3. Roe, 4. Pyloric
caeca, 5. Stomach,
6. Intestine
Fish
reproductive organs include testes and ovaries. In most species, gonads are paired organs of similar
size, which can be partially or totally fused.
There may also be a range of secondary organs that increase
reproductive fitness.
In terms of spermatogonia
distribution, the structure of teleosts testes has two types: in the most common, spermatogonia occur
all along the seminiferous tubules, while in Atherinomorph
fish they are confined to the distal portion of these structures. Fish can present cystic or
semi-cystic spermatogenesis in relation to the release phase of
germ cells in cysts to the seminiferous tubules lumen
Fish ovaries
may be of three types: gymnovarian, secondary gymnovarian or cystovarian. In
the first type, the oocytes
are released directly into the coelomic cavity and then enter the ostium, then through the oviduct and are
eliminated. Secondary gymnovarian ovaries shed ova into the coelom from which
they go directly into the oviduct. In the third type, the oocytes are conveyed
to the exterior through the oviduct Gymnovaries are the primitive condition found
in lungfish,
sturgeon,
and bowfin.
Cystovaries characterize most teleosts, where the ovary lumen has continuity
with the oviduct. Secondary
gymnovaries are found in salmonids and a few other teleosts.
Oogonia development
in teleosts fish varies according to the group, and the determination of
oogenesis dynamics allows the understanding of maturation and fertilization
processes. Changes in the nucleus, ooplasm, and the surrounding layers
characterize the oocyte maturation process
Postovulatory follicles
are structures formed after oocyte release; they do not have endocrine
function, present a wide irregular lumen, and are rapidly reabsorbed in a
process involving the apoptosis of follicular cells. A degenerative process
called follicular atresia reabsorbs vitellogenic
oocytes not spawned. This process can also occur, but less frequently, in
oocytes in other development stages.
Some fish are hermaphrodites,
having both testes and ovaries either at different phases in their life cycle
or, as in hamlets, have them simultaneously.
Reproductive
method
Over 97% of all
known fish are oviparous,[40] that
is, the eggs develop outside the mother's body. Examples of oviparous fish
include salmon, goldfish, cichlids, tuna, and eels. In the majority of
these species, fertilisation takes place outside the mother's body, with the
male and female fish shedding their gametes into the
surrounding water. However, a few oviparous fish practice internal
fertilization, with the male using some sort of intromittent organ to deliver sperm into the
genital opening of the female, most notably the oviparous sharks, such as the horn shark,
and oviparous rays, such as skates. In these cases, the male is equipped with a pair of
modified pelvic
fins known as claspers.
Marine fish can
produce high numbers of eggs which are often released into the open water
column. The eggs have an average diameter of 1 millimetre (0.039 in).
An example of zooplankton
The newly
hatched young of oviparous fish are called larvae. They are
usually poorly formed, carry a large yolk sac (for
nourishment) and are very different in appearance from juvenile and adult
specimens. The larval period in oviparous fish is relatively short (usually
only several weeks), and larvae rapidly grow and change appearance and
structure (a process termed metamorphosis) to become juveniles. During this
transition larvae must switch from their yolk sac to feeding on zooplankton
prey, a process which depends on typically inadequate zooplankton density,
starving many larvae.
In ovoviviparous
fish the eggs develop inside the mother's body after internal fertilization but
receive little or no nourishment directly from the mother, depending instead on
the yolk. Each
embryo develops in its own egg. Familiar examples of ovoviviparous fish include
guppies, angel
sharks, and coelacanths.
Some species of
fish are viviparous.
In such species the mother retains the eggs and nourishes the embryos.
Typically, viviparous fish have a structure analogous to the placenta seen
in mammals connecting the mother's blood supply with
that of the embryo. Examples of viviparous fish include the surf-perches,
splitfins,
and lemon
shark. Some viviparous fish exhibit oophagy, in which
the developing embryos eat other eggs produced by the mother. This has been
observed primarily among sharks, such as the shortfin
mako and porbeagle,
but is known for a few bony fish as well, such as the halfbeak Nomorhamphus ebrardtii.[41] Intrauterine cannibalism is an even more
unusual mode of vivipary, in which the largest embryos eat weaker and smaller
siblings. This behavior is also most commonly found among sharks, such as the grey
nurse shark, but has also been reported for Nomorhamphus ebrardtii.
Aquarists
commonly refer to ovoviviparous and viviparous fish as livebearers.
Immune system
Immune organs
vary by type of fish.In the jawless fish (lampreys and hagfish), true lymphoid organs are
absent. These fish rely on regions of lymphoid
tissue within other organs to produce immune cells. For example, erythrocytes,
macrophages
and plasma
cells are produced in the anterior kidney (or pronephros)
and some areas of the gut (where granulocytes
mature.) They resemble primitive bone marrow
in hagfish. Cartilaginous fish (sharks and rays) have a more
advanced immune system. They have three specialized organs that are unique to chondrichthyes;
the epigonal organs (lymphoid tissue similar to mammalian bone) that surround
the gonads, the Leydig's organ within the walls of their esophagus,
and a spiral
valve in their intestine. These organs house typical immune cells
(granulocytes, lymphocytes and plasma cells). They also possess an identifiable
thymus and a
well-developed spleen
(their most important immune organ) where various lymphocytes,
plasma cells and macrophages develop and are stored. Chondrostean
fish (sturgeons, paddlefish and bichirs) possess a major site for the production of
granulocytes within a mass that is associated with the meninges
(membranes surrounding the central nervous system.) Their heart is frequently
covered with tissue that contains lymphocytes, reticular
cells and a small number of macrophages.
The chondrostean kidney is an important hemopoietic
organ; where erythrocytes, granulocytes, lymphocytes and macrophages develop.
Like
chondrostean fish, the major immune tissues of bony fish (or teleostei)
include the kidney (especially the anterior kidney), which houses many different
immune cells. In addition,
teleost fish possess a thymus, spleen and scattered immune areas within mucosal
tissues (e.g. in the skin, gills, gut and gonads). Much like the mammalian
immune system, teleost erythrocytes, neutrophils and granulocytes are believed
to reside in the spleen whereas lymphocytes are the major cell type found in
the thymus In 2006, a
lymphatic system similar to that in mammals was described in one species of
teleost fish, the zebrafish. Although not confirmed as yet, this system
presumably will be where naive (unstimulated) T cells
accumulate while waiting to encounter an antigen.
Diseases
Like other animals,
fish suffer from diseases and parasites. To prevent disease they have a variety
of defenses. Non-specific
defenses include the skin and scales, as well as the mucus layer secreted by
the epidermis that traps and inhibits the growth of microorganisms.
If pathogens
breach these defenses, fish can develop an inflammatory
response that increases blood flow to the infected region and delivers white
blood cells that attempt to destroy pathogens. Specific defenses respond to
particular pathogens recognised by the fish's body, i.e., an immune
response. In recent
years, vaccines
have become widely used in aquaculture and also with ornamental fish, for example
furunculosis
vaccines in farmed salmon
and koi herpes virus in koi.
Some species use
cleaner
fish to remove external parasites. The best known of these are the Bluestreak cleaner wrasses of the genus Labroides found on coral reefs
in the Indian
and Pacific Oceans. These small fish maintain so-called "cleaning
stations" where other fish congregate and perform specific movements to
attract the attention of the cleaners. Cleaning
behaviors have been observed in a number of fish groups, including an
interesting case between two cichlids of the same genus, Etroplus maculatus, the cleaner, and
the much larger Etroplus suratensis.
Conservation
The 2006 IUCN Red
List names 1,173 fish species that are threatened with extinction Included are species such as Atlantic
cod Devil's Hole
pupfish coelcanths, and
great white sharks. Because fish live underwater
they are more difficult to study than terrestrial animals and plants, and
information about fish populations is often lacking. However, freshwater fish
seem particularly threatened because they often live in relatively small water bodies.
For example, the Devil's Hole pupfish occupies only a single 3
by 6 metres (10 by 20 ft) pool
Overfishing
Overfishing is
a major threat to edible fish such as cod and tuna. Overfishing eventually causes population (known as stock)
collapse because the survivors cannot produce enough young to replace those
removed. Such commercial extinction
does not mean that the species is extinct, merely that it can no longer sustain
a fishery.
One
well-studied example of fishery collapse is the Pacific
sardine Sadinops sagax caerulues
fishery off the California coast. From a 1937 peak of 790,000 long tons
(800,000 t) the catch steadily declined to only 24,000 long tons (24,000 t) in
1968, after which the fishery was no longer economically viable
The main
tension between fisheries science and the fishing
industry is that the two groups have different views on the resiliency of
fisheries to intensive fishing. In places such as Scotland, Newfoundland, and
Alaska the fishing industry is a major employer, so
governments are predisposed to support it. On the other hand, scientists and
conservationists push for stringent protection, warning that many stocks could
be wiped out within fifty years.
Habitat
destruction
See also: Environmental effects of fishing
A key stress on
both freshwater and marine ecosystems is habitat degradation including water
pollution, the building of dams, removal of water for use by humans, and
the introduction of exotic species An
example of a fish that has become endangered because of habitat change is the pallid
sturgeon, a North American freshwater fish that lives in rivers damaged by
human activity.
Exotic species
Introduction of
non-native
species has occurred in many habitats. One of the best studied examples is the
introduction of Nile perch into Lake
Victoria in the 1960s. Nile perch gradually exterminated the lake's 500 endemic cichlid species.
Some of them survive now in captive breeding programmes, but others are
probably extinct. Carp, snakeheads, tilapia, European perch, brown trout,
rainbow
trout, and sea lampreys are other examples of fish that have
caused problems by being introduced into alien environments.
Importance to
humansCulture
In the Book of
Jonah a "great fish" swallowed Jonah the Prophet. Legends
of half-human, half-fish mermaids have featured in stories like those of Hans Christian Andersen and movies like Splash
(See Merman, Mermaid).
Among the
deities said to take the form of a fish are Ika-Roa of the Polynesians,
Dagon
of various ancient Semitic peoples, the shark-gods of Hawaiʻi and Matsya of the
Hindus. The astrological
symbol Pisces is based on a constellation of the same name, but there is also a second fish
constellation in the night sky, Piscis
Austrinus.
Fish have been
used figuratively in many different ways, for example the ichthys used by
early Christians to identify themselves, through to the fish as a symbol of
fertility among Bengalis]
Fish feature
prominently in art and literature, in movies such as Finding
Nemo and books such as The Old Man and the Sea. Large fish,
particularly sharks, have frequently been the subject of horror
movies and thrillers, most notably the novel Jaws,
which spawned a series of films of the same name
that in turn inspired similar films or parodies such as Shark
Tale, Snakehead
Terror, and Piranha.
In the semiotic of Ashtamangala
(buddhist
symbolism) the golden fish (Sanskrit: Matsya), represents the state of fearless
suspension in samsara,
perceived as the harmless ocean, referred to as 'buddha-eyes' or 'rigpa-sight'.
The fish symbolizes the auspiciousness of all living beings in a state of
fearlessness without danger of drowning in the Samsaric Ocean of Suffering, and
migrating from teaching to teaching freely and spontaneously just as fish swim.
They have religious significance in Hindu, Jain and Buddhist traditions but also in Christianity who is first signified by the sign of the fish, and especially referring to feeding the multitude in the desert. In the dhamma of Buddha the fish symbolize happiness as they have complete freedom of movement in the water. They represent fertility and abundance. Often drawn in the form of carp which are regarded in the Orient as sacred on account of their elegant beauty, size and life-span.
The name of the
Canadian city of Coquitlam, British Columbia is derived from Kwikwetlem, which is said to be
derived from a Coast Salish term meaning "little red fish"