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Definition
control of the concentration of dissolved solids in watet |
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Term
organs important for osmoregulation |
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Definition
kidneys more important for for osmoregulation than for excretion, gills release nitrogenous waste. |
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Term
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Definition
ex. hagfish, no regulation. often these species live in open ocean where the salt doesn't change. Use diffusion to put thier bodies in equilibrium with the environment |
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Definition
maintain internal salt concentration |
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Definition
tolerate narrow range or salinity |
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Definition
tolerate wide range of salinity, often estuary species. |
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Term
elasmobranchs - osmoregulation |
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Definition
sharks, skates, rays. jack up total concentrations in the water by releasing urea (converted from amonia) in high concentrations. blood salts 1/3 that of sea waterh. urea, Trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) with these two they can bring the concentrations of salt in their blood to that of around the body. |
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Definition
actively secrete salts. work with sodium potassuim pump |
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Definition
tissues are less salty than salt water and more salty than freshwater. 0.7-0.8% salt (SW - 3.5%, FW <.01%) |
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Term
In saltwater, __ in and ___ out. |
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Definition
In saltwater, water diffuses out of fish (across gill epithelia) and monovalent ions (Na+, Cl=, and K+) diffuse in. Fish deal with this by drinking seawater that replaces the water removed by osmosis. |
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Term
In saltwater, kidneys.... |
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Definition
Kidneys remove larger divalent ions (mg2+, SO4 2+) |
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Term
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Definition
found in saltwater fish. reduced glomerulus. decreased urine production - divalent ions secreted into digestive tract. water conservation is important, little is released with urea. does not take blood plasma or a high volume of water into tubule. |
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Term
Salt is excreted through.. |
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Definition
Alpha chloride cells in gills |
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Term
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Definition
SW FISH - pump cells out of the body. use active transport to set up Na gradient Cl ions enter cell with Na. found along gill filament. Sodium pumped in, but this increases chloride concentration. The chloride moves out into sea water and sodium follows. |
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In FW fish ___ diffuses... |
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Definition
water diffuses into fish (again across gill epithelia) monovalent ions (Na, Cl, K) diffuse out. Osmoregulation works opposite from SW fish. |
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Term
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Definition
produce copious dilute urine. More water is allowed in. here you do find glomerus leaking blood plasma into tubule. salt is pulled out and conserved. water is osmosing into gills and is released through excretory system. |
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Term
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Definition
FW fish, absorb salt in gills. Cells work similarly to alpha chloride cells but now extract ions from the water. Associated with CO2 from the body. doesn't require as much ATP. more passive. |
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Term
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Definition
spent part of life in salt water and part in fresh water. includes fish that migrate in both directions (anadromous - reproduce in FW, live in SW; catadromous - reproduce in SW, american eels) |
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Definition
live where freshwater and salt water meet |
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Definition
anadromous fish, experience physiological changes that start as young migrate downstream. these changes are triggered by cortizol which is a stress hormone. increases number of alpha chloride cells, which dump salt, also increases Na/K pumps. adults die and 'fertilize' the streams with the nutrients sequestered in salt water. |
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Term
Fish depend on ... more than other inverts. |
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Definition
protein. fish food has very little carbohydrates, but heavy on proteins. 10 essential amino acids are required in the diet and cannot be made by the fish's body. |
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Term
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Definition
Important mostly for energy storage and reproduction. Females put large amounts of energy into eggs and yolk for the eggs. |
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Term
Fish diets can be either... |
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Definition
specialist or generalist. Feeding parts can be specialized as well. Shifts can occur over life cycle. |
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Term
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Definition
shift in feeding strategies of fish as they grow. almost all fish begin by feeding by zooplankton. |
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Definition
used to crush food. located on pharyngeal jaws. can be canine or even molar like. ie - shell cracker fish has molar like teeth to crack shells. |
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Definition
found in chondrichthyans and primitive teleosts. membranes on inside of intestine moves the food around, increases SA, and keeps food well mixed. |
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Term
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Definition
come off anteriorly off arch, filter water. tooth like structures that filter out food. the finer the rakers the smaller the food. |
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Term
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Definition
depends on prey type. ram feeding or suction feeding. |
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Definition
open mouth while swimming, prey strained from water. usually for multiple items at once. often planktivorous, feeding on microscopic plant and animals. ex - shad and paddlefish |
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Term
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Definition
dominate mode of feeding, individual prey are carried into mouth by water current generated by increasing the buccal cavity. some copepods can detect pressure changes and will jump out of the water to escape bluegills which will in turn change to ram feeding! |
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Definition
prey size limited by mouth gape. Because of constant buucal volumeto suction feed you have to have a smaller tube shaped mouth which means you can't eat larger prey. |
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Definition
feed on decaying matter, suckers |
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Definition
feed on zoo or phytoplankton. often in larval fish and silversides |
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Definition
feed on insects and other invertebrates. minnows, young piscivores. |
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Definition
feeding on fish. bass, pike, salmon |
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Term
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Definition
use mouth parts to bite off food from animals or the substrate. reef fishes, scale eaters. |
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Term
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Definition
differ between carnivores (short <1 standard length), omnivores (1-3 SL), and herbivores (long > 3 SL). easier to break down tissue and muscle. |
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Term
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Definition
tip of head to end of hypural plate. |
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Term
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Definition
related to temperature. Passage rate is usually 6-8 hours during the summer and increases double or tripple with a 10˚C increase. also affected by food type digestibility. |
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Term
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Definition
Energy stored in protein and fat, must less glycogen than in other verts. Protein is stored in new tissue, can be utilized in periods of starvation. to know how much energy is in a fish you have to do to protien and lypid analysis |
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Chemical Composition - effect of food |
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Definition
Food habits control the chemical composition of fishes. 'you are what you eat' One ramification is bioaccumulation (biomagnification), another is color pigments from their diet. |
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Term
bioaccumulation/biomagnification |
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Definition
- some items in the diet have other items within their body. bluegill eats a daphnia with some mercury in it's body. the lipids and tissues of the daphnia are broken down but the mercury will just go into the fatty areas of the fish and stay there. |
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Definition
Important for aquaculture. [wt of food/wt gain] So how many pounds of food do you need to feed to a fish for it to grow a pound? You want a low conversion ratio so you'd feed fish on the lower end. Also affected by temp. |
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Term
Food Conversion efficiency |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
change in wt or length/change in time (g or m/d). no size consideration so you can't compare the growth of differently sized fish. theres a difference in a 1 gram growth in a 10 and 100 gram fish. |
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Term
Relative Growth Rate (Grel) |
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Definition
Ga/initial weight - % per day |
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Term
Specific Growth Rate (SGR) |
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Definition
= ae^gt. working formula = (log e Wf - log e Wi)/(tf - ti) X 100. won't be responsible for. |
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Term
Von Bertalanffy Growth Function |
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Definition
works for wt or length data. best estimator of growth curve based on initial and final lengths. tells how large you can expect a fish to be at any give age WITHIN a population. |
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Term
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Definition
scales, otoliths (require death of fish, but in YOY you can actually tell how many days old a fish is), length - frequency distributions. require validation and can use back calculation. Oxytetracycline. |
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Term
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Definition
refers to robustness using weight and length. tells you how heavy the fish is for it's length. |
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Term
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Definition
(wt x 100). length^3 (g/cm^3). usually around 1. one problem is that this is effected by the basic shape of the fish, because it assumes that the fish's basic body form does not change over time. not a health reference. |
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Term
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Definition
often used instead of Condition factor. uses equation specific to species which allows a comparison of fish of different size. (actual weight/standard weight). can be used to compare among species! |
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Term
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Definition
smell. nares - often a pit with a flap of skin. not connected to phalanx. water just flows into pit. connected by first cranial nerve. important for feeding, migration, and defense (schreckeoff- fish detect predators in environment) |
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Term
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Definition
structure rich in receptor cells and directly attached to the brain |
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Term
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Definition
chemoreception. taste buds found in mouth, parynx, exterior surfaces. detect salts, amino acids. more sensitive than humans. 9/10 for internal taste buds. 7th cranial nerve for external taste buds. Paired chemoreceptors used to find prey. Whiskers in catfish actually full of tastebuds |
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Term
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Definition
mechanoreceptor, send signal to brain when shape is changed in some cellular appendage such as hair. |
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Definition
detects movement of water or subtle movement of fluids. hair cells all around one cupula. if cupula moves the hair cells will send signals to the brain. |
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Term
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Definition
neuromasts in a canal under scales (CN 10 and 7 for facial area) signified by hole in scales. jelly filled canal runs underneath the scales, scales with pore allows information from surface to reach neuromasts along the line. animal can tell by sequence of neuromast stimulation the direction of movement. |
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Term
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Definition
located on skin surface, gives information about the fish's body movement. |
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Term
Acoustico-lateralis system |
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Definition
involved in orientation of body (relative to gravity and direction) and hearing (CN 7) |
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Term
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Definition
set of three semi-circular canals set in three planes, and three otoliths. allows movement detection. otoliths are attached to chamber by hair cells, so when it moves it stimulates hair cells. Hagfish have one semi-circular canal, Lampreys have two |
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Term
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Definition
semicircular canals and utriculus otolith. as body rotates endolymph rotates in canals and stimulates a neuromast in the ampullae. (pitch, yaw, roll) Orientation! |
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Term
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Definition
contains utricular otolith for gravity detection |
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Term
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Definition
sacculus and legena. contain otoliths used in sound detection which are supported by cilia in the chamber. Otoliths move at different frequencies when hit by sound waves than the tissue that surrounds it. |
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Term
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Definition
transmits sound vibrations from swim bladder to otoliths. |
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Term
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Definition
extensions of swim bladder near inner ear, bypass weberian apparatus |
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Term
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Definition
detection of electrical currents, mainly in primitive bony fishes. often found in murky waters. often generated in caudal peduncle. |
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Term
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Definition
sharks, skates, rays. organs of Lorenzini. Sensory cells at base of canal. Detects other organisms electrical impulses generated by muscle movement. |
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Term
Gymnotiformes and Mormyrifomes |
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Definition
two groups known for electroreception. generate weak electric fields - detect objects in water while maintaing straight body shape |
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Term
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Definition
located at top of brain, detects light/dark. very important for reproduction. lots of light gets through the fish skull. |
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Term
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Definition
typical vertebrate eye (CN 2). normally best vision is up close. focusing is better in predators. lens moves back and forth to focus. pigmented cells allow for adjusting of light let in. in low light then you want all of the light to reach the photosensitive cells so cones and rods are in front of pigments. in high light the rods migrate down into pigmented layer. |
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Term
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Definition
associated with depth. cones - color, rods - brightness. cone #s decrease with species depth. |
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Term
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Definition
same thing as corioid, reflective layer that bounces light back out for a second chance. |
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Term
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Definition
separate males and females. sexual dimorphic (intromittent organs, turbcles, kype), sexual dichromatism. |
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Term
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Definition
individuals can produce egg or sperm sequential hermaphrodites. generally these gametes will not be produced at the same time, rather during different life stages. protandrous/protogynous |
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Term
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Definition
sperm penetrates egg to stimulate division but no DNA is contributed to the young. eggs aren't truly gametes. Texas Silverside, often called sexual parasites. |
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Definition
sperm made first, then eggs at a later point in life. advantage is that sperm is inexpensive so more energy can go to growth rather than reproduction. |
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Term
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Definition
females then may switch to males later one. often found in territorial fish (reef fish) where only a few males get to reproduce. males protect harem of females. dominant females often make the switch. |
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Term
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Definition
vary in shape. released through the vent (milt) sperm is activated by water. |
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Term
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Definition
vary greatly in size (.5 mm - 8 cm) often inversely related to number produced. Energy stores - yolk and oil. Must sustain embryo until it can forage on it's own. |
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Term
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Definition
Process of producing the ova. arrested in prophase I advances to metaphase II at ovulation. |
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Term
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Definition
liver produces vitellogenin (protein, good source of energy in the egg) estrogen is another important hormone that deals with the timing of all of these processes (seasonal timing) |
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Term
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Definition
Zona radiata (non cellular layer), Transitional cells (individual cells from the female's body that surround the ova, usually remains at ovary during ovulation) |
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Term
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Definition
sturgeons and paddlefish - gymnovarian most bony fishes - cystovarian |
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Definition
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Definition
live bearing - egg maintained in body |
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Definition
Live bearing - young receive nutrients from mother |
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Term
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Definition
often in sturgeons and paddlefish, eggs are released from the ovary into the body cavity of the animal. must be a way for the eggs to reach the environment, so ovaduct will have opening in body cavity that leads to environment. |
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Term
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Definition
ovaduct is connect to ovaries, so eggs are funneled directly out the vent into the environment. |
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Term
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Definition
floating, less dense than water. sometimes in bubble nest. (cod, beta) adaptation for fish that live in open ocean, if the eggs were too dense they'd sink too deep and they would hatch too deep for nutrients to reach. buoyant eggs hatch in food rich environment. betas live in oxygen gradient waters so floating eggs are in water with higher DO levels. |
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Term
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Definition
need water flow. fish are often spawning in river systems and even gentle flow keeps the eggs off of the bottom. (striped and white bass) eggs must be laid far enough upstream from a reservoir for the young to develop and hatch. |
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Term
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Definition
heavy, often sticky and can be attached to the substrate. parents will often guard these eggs. |
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Term
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Definition
amonia through the gills. We use uria to conserve H20...obviously unnecessary for de fish. |
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Term
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Definition
Reproductive Strategy. Pelagic spawners, benthic spawners, spawners on plants, brood hiders. |
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Term
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Definition
Reproductive Strategies. protect eggs until the hatch. non nest builders, nest builders (sand froth hole) |
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Definition
viviparous or ovoviviparous. carry embryos while they develop (external or pouch) |
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