Fishes: An Introduction to IchthyologyFor junior/senior-level courses in Fish Biology/Ecology, Ichthyology, and Fish Physiology. One of the most comprehensive and current general sources of information on fishes, this text covers a broad number of topics such as including the structure and physiology, evolution, otaxanomy, zoogeography, ecology, and conservation of fishes. While providing the basic background of fish biology, the conservation approach and up-to-date coverage conveys the excitement being generated by recent research on fishes. |
From inside the book
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Page 18
... fins are the eel - like fish . Their fins frequently run most of the length of the body and may unite with the caudal fin ; such a configuration is necessary for the anguilliform locomotion discussed later in this chap- ter . In eel ...
... fins are the eel - like fish . Their fins frequently run most of the length of the body and may unite with the caudal fin ; such a configuration is necessary for the anguilliform locomotion discussed later in this chap- ter . In eel ...
Page 31
... caudal fin also is in keeping with their low swimming velocities . Swimming with fins alone is characteristic of a surprising number of teleosts , in- cluding forms that use their body musculature for swimming when high - speed or sus ...
... caudal fin also is in keeping with their low swimming velocities . Swimming with fins alone is characteristic of a surprising number of teleosts , in- cluding forms that use their body musculature for swimming when high - speed or sus ...
Page 31
... caudal fin also is in keeping with their low swimming velocities . Swimming with fins alone is characteristic of a surprising number of teleosts , in- cluding forms that use their body musculature for swimming when high - speed or sus ...
... caudal fin also is in keeping with their low swimming velocities . Swimming with fins alone is characteristic of a surprising number of teleosts , in- cluding forms that use their body musculature for swimming when high - speed or sus ...
Common terms and phrases
acid active adult anal fins areas artery Atlantic behavior benthic blackfish blood body bone bony fishes branchial breeding tubercles carp catfishes caudal fin cavity Cech cells Chapter characteristic Chondrichthyes color common carp concentrations cyprinids decreases diffusion digest dorsal fin eels elasmobranchs embryos energy environment Esociformes evolutionary excreted factors feeding females FIFTH EDITION PETER FIGURE Fishes AN INTRODUCTION fresh water freshwater gill rakers groups growth hagfish HCO3 hemoglobin hormones ICHTHYOLOGY FIFTH EDITION increase intestine INTRODUCTION TO ICHTHYOLOGY juvenile lakes lampreys larvae length lungfish males marine metabolic mouth MOYLE muscle organs oxygen pectoral fins pelagic pelagic spawners pelvic fins pharyngeal pikes plasma PO₂ predators prey protein rainbow trout rays RBCs reproductive salmon salmonids scales season sharks spawning species spines strategies streams striped bass structure Superorder Supplemental Readings surface swimbladder swimming teeth teleosts temperature thereby tissue tropical typically ventilatory vertebrates young