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Teleost

Teleostei (/ˌtɛliˈɒsti/; Greek teleios "complete" + osteon "bone"), members of which are known as teleosts (/ˈtɛliɒsts, ˈtli-/),[4] is, by far, the largest infraclass in the class Actinopterygii, the ray-finned fishes,[a] containing 96% of all extant species of fish. Teleosts are arranged into about 40 orders and 448 families. Over 26,000 species have been described. Teleosts range from giant oarfish measuring 7.6 m (25 ft) or more, and ocean sunfish weighing over 2 t (2.0 long tons; 2.2 short tons), to the minute male anglerfish Photocorynus spiniceps, just 6.2 mm (0.24 in) long. Including not only torpedo-shaped fish built for speed, teleosts can be flattened vertically or horizontally, be elongated cylinders or take specialised shapes as in anglerfish and seahorses.

Teleost
Temporal range: Early Triassic–Recent[1][2]
Teleosts of different orders, painted by Castelnau, 1856 (left to right, top to bottom): Fistularia tabacaria (Syngnathiformes), Mylossoma duriventre (Characiformes), Mesonauta acora (Cichliformes), Corydoras splendens and Pseudacanthicus spinosus (Siluriformes), Acanthurus coeruleus (Acanthuriformes), Stegastes pictus (Incertae sedis, Pomacentridae)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Subclass: Neopterygii
Infraclass: Teleostei
J. P. Müller, 1845[3]
Subdivisions

See text

The difference between teleosts and other bony fish lies mainly in their jaw bones; teleosts have a movable premaxilla and corresponding modifications in the jaw musculature which make it possible for them to protrude their jaws outwards from the mouth. This is of great advantage, enabling them to grab prey and draw it into the mouth. In more derived teleosts, the enlarged premaxilla is the main tooth-bearing bone, and the maxilla, which is attached to the lower jaw, acts as a lever, pushing and pulling the premaxilla as the mouth is opened and closed. Other bones further back in the mouth serve to grind and swallow food. Another difference is that the upper and lower lobes of the tail (caudal) fin are about equal in size. The spine ends at the caudal peduncle, distinguishing this group from other fish in which the spine extends into the upper lobe of the tail fin.

Teleosts have adopted a range of reproductive strategies. Most use external fertilisation: the female lays a batch of eggs, the male fertilises them and the larvae develop without any further parental involvement. A fair proportion of teleosts are sequential hermaphrodites, starting life as females and transitioning to males at some stage, with a few species reversing this process. A small percentage of teleosts are viviparous and some provide parental care with typically the male fish guarding a nest and fanning the eggs to keep them well-oxygenated.

Teleosts are economically important to humans, as is shown by their depiction in art over the centuries. The fishing industry harvests them for food, and anglers attempt to capture them for sport. Some species are farmed commercially, and this method of production is likely to be increasingly important in the future. Others are kept in aquariums or used in research, especially in the fields of genetics and developmental biology.

Anatomy

 
Skull and jaw anatomy

Distinguishing features of the teleosts are mobile premaxilla, elongated neural arches at the end of the caudal fin and unpaired basibranchial toothplates.[5] The premaxilla is unattached to the neurocranium (braincase); it plays a role in protruding the mouth and creating a circular opening. This lowers the pressure inside the mouth, sucking the prey inside. The lower jaw and maxilla are then pulled back to close the mouth, and the fish is able to grasp the prey. By contrast, mere closure of the jaws would risk pushing food out of the mouth. In more advanced teleosts, the premaxilla is enlarged and has teeth, while the maxilla is toothless. The maxilla functions to push both the premaxilla and the lower jaw forward. To open the mouth, an adductor muscle pulls back the top of the maxilla, pushing the lower jaw forward. In addition, the maxilla rotates slightly, which pushes forward a bony process that interlocks with the premaxilla.[6]

 
Caudal skeleton showing symmetrical (homocercal) tail

The pharyngeal jaws of teleosts, a second set of jaws contained within the throat, are composed of five branchial arches, loops of bone which support the gills. The first three arches include a single basibranchial surrounded by two hypobranchials, ceratobranchials, epibranchials and pharyngobranchials. The median basibranchial is covered by a toothplate. The fourth arch is composed of pairs of ceratobranchials and epibranchials, and sometimes additionally, some pharyngobranchials and a basibranchial. The base of the lower pharyngeal jaws is formed by the fifth ceratobranchials while the second, third and fourth pharyngobranchials create the base of the upper. In the more basal teleosts the pharyngeal jaws consist of well-separated thin parts that attach to the neurocranium, pectoral girdle, and hyoid bar. Their function is limited to merely transporting food, and they rely mostly on lower pharyngeal jaw activity. In more derived teleosts the jaws are more powerful, with left and right ceratobranchials fusing to become one lower jaw; the pharyngobranchials fuse to create a large upper jaw that articulates with the neurocranium. They have also developed a muscle that allows the pharyngeal jaws to have a role in grinding food in addition to transporting it.[7]

The caudal fin is homocercal, meaning the upper and lower lobes are about equal in size. The spine ends at the caudal peduncle, the base of the caudal fin, distinguishing this group from those in which the spine extends into the upper lobe of the caudal fin, such as most fish from the Paleozoic (541 to 252 million years ago). The neural arches are elongated to form uroneurals which provide support for this upper lobe.[6] In addition, the hypurals, bones that form a flattened plate at the posterior end of the vertebral column, are enlarged providing further support for the caudal fin.[8]

In general, teleosts tend to be quicker and more flexible than more basal bony fishes. Their skeletal structure has evolved towards greater lightness. While teleost bones are well calcified, they are constructed from a scaffolding of struts, rather than the dense cancellous bones of holostean fish. In addition, the lower jaw of the teleost is reduced to just three bones; the dentary, the angular bone and the articular bone.[9]

Evolution and phylogeny

External relationships

The teleosts were first recognised as a distinct group by the German ichthyologist Johannes Peter Müller in 1845.[10] The name is from Greek teleios, "complete" + osteon, "bone".[11] Müller based this classification on certain soft tissue characteristics, which would prove to be problematic, as it did not take into account the distinguishing features of fossil teleosts. In 1966, Greenwood et al. provided a more solid classification.[10][12] The oldest fossils of teleosteomorphs (the stem group from which teleosts later evolved) date back to the Triassic period (Prohalecites, Pholidophorus).[13][14] However, it has been suggested that teleosts probably first evolved already during the Paleozoic era.[15] During the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras they diversified widely, and as a result, 96% of all living fish species are teleosts.

The cladogram below shows the evolutionary relationships of the teleosts to other extant clades of bony fish,[15] and to the four-limbed vertebrates (tetrapods) that evolved from a related group of bony fish during the Devonian period.[16][17] Approximate divergence dates (in millions of years, mya) are from Near et al., 2012.[15]

Internal relationships

The phylogeny of the teleosts has been subject to long debate, without consensus on either their phylogeny or the timing of the emergence of the major groups before the application of modern DNA-based cladistic analysis. Near et al. (2012) explored the phylogeny and divergence times of every major lineage, analysing the DNA sequences of 9 unlinked genes in 232 species. They obtained well-resolved phylogenies with strong support for the nodes (so, the pattern of branching shown is likely to be correct). They calibrated (set actual values for) branching times in this tree from 36 reliable measurements of absolute time from the fossil record.[15] The teleosts are divided into the major clades shown on the cladogram,[18] with dates, following Near et al.[15]

Teleostei
Elopomorpha
Osteoglossocephala
Osteoglossomorpha
Clupeocephala
Otocephala
230 mya
Euteleostei
Lepidogalaxii

Lepidogalaxiiformes (salamanderfish)

Stomiati

Stomiiformes (dragonfish)  

Osmeriformes (smelt)  

Neoteleostei
Ateleopodia

Ateleopodidae (jellynoses) 

Eurypterygia
Aulopa

Aulopiformes (lizardfish)  

Ctenosquamata
Scopelomorpha

Myctophiformes (lanternfish) 

Acanthomorpha
Lampripterygii

Lampriformes (oarfish, opah, ribbonfish)  

Paracanthopterygii

Percopsiformes (troutperches) 

Zeiformes (dories)  

Stylephoriformes (tube-eyes/thread-fins)

Gadiformes (cods)  

Polymixiipterygii

Polymixiiformes (beardfish)  

Acanthopterygii
175 mya
240 mya
310 mya


The most diverse group of teleost fish today are the Percomorpha, which include, among others, the tuna, seahorses, gobies, cichlids, flatfish, wrasse, perches, anglerfish, and pufferfish. The cladogram below, which is based on Betancur-R et al., 2017,[19] shows the relationships between extant percomorphs. Teleosts, and percomorphs in particular, thrived during the Cenozoic era. Fossil evidence shows that there was a major increase in size and abundance of teleosts immediately after the mass extinction event at the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary ca. 66 mya.[20]

 
Evolution of ray-finned fishes, Actinopterygii, from the Devonian to the present as a spindle diagram. The width of the spindles are proportional to the number of families as a rough estimate of diversity. The diagram is based on Benton, M. J. (2005) Vertebrate Palaeontology, Blackwell, 3rd edition, Fig 7.13 on page 185.


Percomorpha
Batrachoidaria

Batrachoididae (toadfishes)  

Pelagiaria

Scombriformes (tunas, mackerel, etc.) 

Syngnatharia

Syngnathiformes (seahorses, goatfishes, pipefishes, etc.) 

Anabantaria
Carangaria

Polynemidae (threadfins)  

Lactariidae (false trevally) 

Menidae (moonfish) 

Part of "Carangiformes"

Nematistiidae (roosterfish) 

Echeneidae (remoras) 

Coryphaenidae (dolphinfish) 

Rachycentridae (cobia) 

Sphyraenidae (barracudas) 

Centropomidae (snooks)  

Pleuronectiformes (flatfish)  

Part of "Carangiformes"

Carangidae (e.g. jacks) 

Istiophoriformes (billfish) 

Leptobramidae (beachsalmons)

Toxotidae (archerfish) 

Ovalentaria
Cichlomorphae

Cichliformes (cichlids, convict blennies) 

Polycentridae (leaffish) 

Atherinomorphae

Beloniformes (needlefish, flying fish, halfbeaks) 

Atheriniformes (silversides, rainbowfish, etc.) 

Cyprinodontiformes (toothcarps) 

Ambassidae (Asiatic glassfishes)  

Congrogadidae (eel blenny)  

Pomacentridae (damselfishes)  

Embiotocidae (surfperches) 

Mugilomorphae

Mugiliformes (mullets) 

Lipogramma 

Plesiopidae (roundheads) 

Pseudochromidae (dottybacks)  

Grammatidae (basslets) 

Opistognathidae (jawfishes) 

Blenniimorphae

Blenniiformes (blennies, clinids, sand stargazers) 

Gobiesociformes (clingfishes) 

Eupercaria

Gerreiformes (mojarras) 

Uranoscopiformes (stargazers) 

Centrogenyidae (false scorpionfish) 

Labriformes (wrasses, cales, parrotfish) 

Moronidae (temperate basses) 

Sillaginidae (smelt-whitings) 

Ephippiformes (spadefishes, batfishes) 

Chaetodontiformes (butterflyfishes) 

Sciaenidae (drums, croakers) 

Acanthuriformes (surgeonfishes, ponyfishes)  

Monodactylidae (moonyfishes, fingerfishes) 

Emmelichthyidae (rovers) 

Pomacanthidae (angelfishes) 

Lutjaniformes (snappers) 

Callanthiidae (splendid perches) 

Malacanthidae (tilefishes) 

Lobotiformes (tripletails) 

Spariformes (sea breams) 

Siganidae (rabbitfishes) 

Evolutionary trends

 

The first fossils assignable to this diverse group appear in the Early Triassic,[21] after which teleosts accumulated novel body shapes predominantly gradually for the first 150 million years of their evolution[21] (Early Triassic through early Cretaceous).

The most basal of the living teleosts are the Elopomorpha (eels and allies) and the Osteoglossomorpha (elephantfishes and allies). There are 800 species of elopomorphs. They have thin leaf-shaped larvae known as leptocephali, specialised for a marine environment. Among the elopomorphs, eels have elongated bodies with lost pelvic girdles and ribs and fused elements in the upper jaw. The 200 species of osteoglossomorphs are defined by a bony element in the tongue. This element has a basibranchial behind it, and both structures have large teeth which are paired with the teeth on the parasphenoid in the roof of the mouth. The clade Otocephala includes the Clupeiformes (herrings) and Ostariophysi (carps, catfishes and allies). Clupeiformes consists of 350 living species of herring and herring-like fishes. This group is characterised by an unusual abdominal scute and a different arrangement of the hypurals. In most species, the swim bladder extends to the braincase and plays a role in hearing. Ostariophysi, which includes most freshwater fishes, includes species that have developed some unique adaptations.[6] One is the Weberian apparatus, an arrangement of bones (Weberian ossicles) connecting the swim bladder to the inner ear. This enhances their hearing, as sound waves make the bladder vibrate, and the bones transport the vibrations to the inner ear. They also have a chemical alarm system; when a fish is injured, the warning substance gets in the water, alarming nearby fish.[22]

The majority of teleost species belong to the clade Euteleostei, which consists of 17,419 species classified in 2,935 genera and 346 families. Shared traits of the euteleosts include similarities in the embryonic development of the bony or cartilaginous structures located between the head and dorsal fin (supraneural bones), an outgrowth on the stegural bone (a bone located near the neural arches of the tail), and caudal median cartilages located between hypurals of the caudal base. The majority of euteleosts are in the clade Neoteleostei. A derived trait of neoteleosts is a muscle that controls the pharyngeal jaws, giving them a role in grinding food. Within neoteleosts, members of the Acanthopterygii have a spiny dorsal fin which is in front of the soft-rayed dorsal fin.[23] This fin helps provide thrust in locomotion[24] and may also play a role in defense. Acanthomorphs have developed spiny ctenoid scales (as opposed to the cycloid scales of other groups), tooth-bearing premaxilla and greater adaptations to high speed swimming.[6]

The adipose fin, which is present in over 6,000 teleost species, is often thought to have evolved once in the lineage and to have been lost multiple times due to its limited function. A 2014 study challenges this idea and suggests that the adipose fin is an example of convergent evolution. In Characiformes, the adipose fin develops from an outgrowth after the reduction of the larval fin fold, while in Salmoniformes, the fin appears to be a remnant of the fold.[25]

Diversity

 
Predatory teleost: the flesh-cutting teeth of a piranha (Serrasalmidae)

There are over 26,000 species of teleosts, in about 40 orders and 448 families,[26] making up 96% of all extant species of fish.[27] Approximately 12,000 of the total 26,000 species are found in freshwater habitats.[28] Teleosts are found in almost every aquatic environment and have developed specializations to feed in a variety of ways as carnivores, herbivores, filter feeders and parasites.[29] The longest teleost is the giant oarfish, reported at 7.6 m (25 ft) and more,[30] but this is dwarfed by the extinct Leedsichthys, one individual of which has been estimated to have a length of 27.6 m (91 ft).[31] The heaviest teleost is believed to be the ocean sunfish, with a specimen landed in 2003 having an estimated weight of 2.3 t (2.3 long tons; 2.5 short tons),[32] while the smallest fully mature adult is the male anglerfish Photocorynus spiniceps which can measure just 6.2 mm (0.24 in), though the female at 50 mm (2 in) is much larger.[30] The stout infantfish is the smallest and lightest adult fish and is in fact the smallest vertebrate in the world; the females measures 8.4 mm (0.33 in) and the male just 7 mm (0.28 in).[33]

 
A rare giant oarfish (Regalecus glesne), 7-metre (23 ft) long, captured in 1996

Open water fish are usually streamlined like torpedoes to minimize turbulence as they move through the water. Reef fish live in a complex, relatively confined underwater landscape and for them, manoeuvrability is more important than speed, and many of them have developed bodies which optimize their ability to dart and change direction. Many have laterally compressed bodies (flattened from side to side) allowing them to fit into fissures and swim through narrow gaps; some use their pectoral fins for locomotion and others undulate their dorsal and anal fins.[34] Some fish have grown dermal (skin) appendages for camouflage; the prickly leather-jacket is almost invisible among the seaweed it resembles and the tasselled scorpionfish invisibly lurks on the seabed ready to ambush prey. Some like the foureye butterflyfish have eyespots to startle or deceive, while others such as lionfish have aposematic coloration to warn that they are toxic or have venomous spines.[35]

Flatfish are demersal fish (bottom-feeding fish) that show a greater degree of asymmetry than any other vertebrates. The larvae are at first bilaterally symmetrical but they undergo metamorphosis during the course of their development, with one eye migrating to the other side of the head, and they simultaneously start swimming on their side. This has the advantage that, when they lie on the seabed, both eyes are on top, giving them a broad field of view. The upper side is usually speckled and mottled for camouflage, while the underside is pale.[36]

 
The winter flounder is asymmetrical, with both eyes lying on the same side of the head.
 
Commensal fish: a remora holds on to its host with a sucker-like organ (detail inset)

Some teleosts are parasites. Remoras have their front dorsal fins modified into large suckers with which they cling onto a host animal such as a whale, sea turtle, shark or ray, but this is probably a commensal rather than parasitic arrangement because both remora and host benefit from the removal of ectoparasites and loose flakes of skin.[37] More harmful are the catfish that enter the gill chambers of fish and feed on their blood and tissues.[38] The snubnosed eel, though usually a scavenger, sometimes bores into the flesh of a fish, and has been found inside the heart of a shortfin mako shark.[39]

 
The knifefish Gymnarchus niloticus generates weak electric fields enabling it to detect and locate prey in turbid water.

Some species, such as electric eels, can produce powerful electric currents, strong enough to stun prey. Other fish, such as knifefish, generate and sense weak electric fields to detect their prey; they swim with straight backs to avoid distorting their electric fields. These currents are produced by modified muscle or nerve cells.[22]

Distribution

Teleosts are found worldwide and in most aquatic environments, including warm and cold seas, flowing and still freshwater, and even, in the case of the desert pupfish, isolated and sometimes hot and saline bodies of water in deserts.[40][41] Teleost diversity becomes low at extremely high latitudes; at Franz Josef Land, up to 82°N, ice cover and water temperatures below 0 °C (32 °F) for a large part of the year limit the number of species; 75 percent of the species found there are endemic to the Arctic.[42]

 
Fish in a hot desert: the desert pupfish

Of the major groups of teleosts, the Elopomorpha, Clupeomorpha and Percomorpha (perches, tunas and many others) all have a worldwide distribution and are mainly marine; the Ostariophysi and Osteoglossomorpha are worldwide but mainly freshwater, the latter mainly in the tropics; the Atherinomorpha (guppies, etc.) have a worldwide distribution, both fresh and salt, but are surface-dwellers. In contrast, the Esociformes (pikes) are limited to freshwater in the Northern Hemisphere, while the Salmoniformes (salmon, trout) are found in both Northern and Southern temperate zones in freshwater, some species migrating to and from the sea. The Paracanthopterygii (cods, etc.) are Northern Hemisphere fish, with both salt and freshwater species.[41]

Some teleosts are migratory; certain freshwater species move within river systems on an annual basis; other species are anadromous, spending their lives at sea and moving inland to spawn, salmon and striped bass being examples. Others, exemplified by the eel, are catadromous, doing the reverse.[43] The fresh water European eel migrates across the Atlantic Ocean as an adult to breed in floating seaweed in the Sargasso Sea. The adults spawn here and then die, but the developing young are swept by the Gulf Stream towards Europe. By the time they arrive, they are small fish and enter estuaries and ascend rivers, overcoming obstacles in their path to reach the streams and ponds where they spend their adult lives.[44]

Teleosts including the brown trout and the scaly osman are found in mountain lakes in Kashmir at altitudes as high as 3,819 m (12,530 ft).[45] Teleosts are found at extreme depths in the oceans; the hadal snailfish has been seen at a depth of 7,700 m (25,300 ft), and a related (unnamed) species has been seen at 8,145 m (26,720 ft).[46][47]

Physiology

Respiration

 
Gills

The major means of respiration in teleosts, as in most other fish, is the transfer of gases over the surface of the gills as water is drawn in through the mouth and pumped out through the gills. Apart from the swim bladder, which contains a small amount of air, the body does not have oxygen reserves, and respiration needs to be continuous over the fish's life. Some teleosts exploit habitats where the oxygen availability is low, such as stagnant water or wet mud; they have developed accessory tissues and organs to support gas exchange in these habitats.[48]

Several genera of teleosts have independently developed air-breathing capabilities, and some have become amphibious. Some combtooth blennies emerge to feed on land, and freshwater eels are able to absorb oxygen through damp skin. Mudskippers can remain out of water for considerable periods, exchanging gases through skin and mucous membranes in the mouth and pharynx. Swamp eels have similar well-vascularised mouth-linings, and can remain out of water for days and go into a resting state (aestivation) in mud.[49] The anabantoids have developed an accessory breathing structure known as the labyrinth organ on the first gill arch and this is used for respiration in air, and airbreathing catfish have a similar suprabranchial organ. Certain other catfish, such as the Loricariidae, are able to respire through air held in their digestive tracts.[50]

Sensory systems

 
A stickleback stained to show the lateral line elements (neuromasts)

Teleosts possess highly developed sensory organs. Nearly all daylight fish have colour vision at least as good as a normal human's. Many fish also have chemoreceptors responsible for acute senses of taste and smell. 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.[51] Fish sense sounds in a variety of ways, using the lateral line, the swim bladder, and in some species the Weberian apparatus. Fish orient themselves using landmarks, and may use mental maps based on multiple landmarks or symbols. Experiments with mazes show that fish possess the spatial memory needed to make such a mental map.[52]

Osmoregulation

 
Osmotic challenge: American eels spawn in the sea but spend most of their adult life in freshwater, returning only to spawn.

The skin of a teleost is largely impermeable to water, and the main interface between the fish's body and its surroundings is the gills. In freshwater, teleost fish gain water across their gills by osmosis, while in seawater they lose it. Similarly, salts diffuse outwards across the gills in freshwater and inwards in salt water. The European flounder spends most of its life in the sea but often migrates into estuaries and rivers. In the sea in one hour, it can gain Na+ ions equivalent to forty percent of its total free sodium content, with 75 percent of this entering through the gills and the remainder through drinking. By contrast, in rivers there is an exchange of just two percent of the body Na+ content per hour. As well as being able to selectively limit salt and water exchanged by diffusion, there is an active mechanism across the gills for the elimination of salt in sea water and its uptake in fresh water.[53]

Thermoregulation

Fish are cold-blooded, and in general their body temperature is the same as that of their surroundings. They gain and lose heat through their skin, and regulate their circulation in response to changes in water temperature by increasing or reducing the blood flow to the gills. Metabolic heat generated in the muscles or gut is quickly dissipated through the gills, with blood being diverted away from the gills during exposure to cold.[54] Because of their relative inability to control their blood temperature, most teleosts can only survive in a small range of water temperatures.[55]

Teleost species that inhabit colder waters have a higher proportion of unsaturated fatty acids in brain cell membranes compared to fish from warmer waters, which allows them to maintain appropriate membrane fluidity in the environments in which they live.[56] When cold acclimated, teleost fish show physiological changes in skeletal muscle that include increased mitochondrial and capillary density.[57] This reduces diffusion distances and aids in the production of aerobic ATP, which helps to compensate for the drop in metabolic rate associated with colder temperatures.

Tuna and other fast-swimming ocean-going fish maintain their muscles at higher temperatures than their environment for efficient locomotion.[58] Tuna achieve muscle temperatures 11 °C (19 °F) or even higher above the surroundings by having a counterflow system in which the metabolic heat produced by the muscles and present in the venous blood, pre-warms the arterial blood before it reaches the muscles. Other adaptations of tuna for speed include a streamlined, spindle-shaped body, fins designed to reduce drag,[58] and muscles with a raised myoglobin content, which gives these a reddish colour and makes for a more efficient use of oxygen.[59] In polar regions and in the deep ocean, where the temperature is a few degrees above freezing point, some large fish, such as the swordfish, marlin and tuna, have a heating mechanism which raises the temperature of the brain and eye, allowing them significantly better vision than their cold-blooded prey.[60]

Buoyancy

 
A teleost swim bladder

The body of a teleost is denser than water, so fish must compensate for the difference, or they will sink. Many teleosts have a swim bladder that adjusts their buoyancy through manipulation of gases to allow them to stay at the current water depth, or ascend or descend without having to waste energy in swimming. In the more primitive groups like some minnows, the swim bladder is open to the esophagus and doubles as a lung. It is often absent in fast-swimming fishes such as the tuna and mackerel. In fish where the swim bladder is closed, the gas content is controlled through the rete mirabilis, a network of blood vessels serving as a countercurrent gas exchanger between the swim bladder and the blood.[61] The Chondrostei such as sturgeons also have a swim bladder, but this appears to have evolved separately: other Actinopterygii such as the bowfin and the bichir do not have one, so swim bladders appear to have arisen twice, and the teleost swim bladder is not homologous with the chondrostean one.[62]

Locomotion

 
Flying fish combine swimming movements with the ability to glide in air using their long pectoral fins.

A typical teleost fish has a streamlined body for rapid swimming, and locomotion is generally provided by a lateral undulation of the hindmost part of the trunk and the tail, propelling the fish through the water.[63] There are many exceptions to this method of locomotion, especially where speed is not the main objective; among rocks and on coral reefs, slow swimming with great manoeuvrability may be a desirable attribute.[64] Eels locomote by wiggling their entire bodies. Living among seagrasses and algae, the seahorse adopts an upright posture and moves by fluttering its pectoral fins, and the closely related pipefish moves by rippling its elongated dorsal fin. Gobies "hop" along the substrate, propping themselves up and propelling themselves with their pectoral fins.[65] Mudskippers move in much the same way on terrestrial ground.[66] In some species, a pelvic sucker allows them to climb, and the Hawaiian freshwater goby climbs waterfalls while migrating.[65] Gurnards have three pairs of free rays on their pectoral fins which have a sensory function but on which they can walk along the substrate.[67] Flying fish launch themselves into the air and can glide on their enlarged pectoral fins for hundreds of metres.[68]

Sound production

To attract mates, some teleosts produce sounds, either by stridulation or by vibrating the swim bladder. In the Sciaenidae, the muscles that attach to the swim bladder cause it to oscillate rapidly, creating drumming sounds. Marine catfishes, sea horses and grunts stridulate by rubbing together skeletal parts, teeth or spines. In these fish, the swim bladder may act as a resonator. Stridulation sounds are predominantly from 1000–4000 Hz, though sounds modified by the swim bladder have frequencies lower than 1000 Hz.[69][70]

Reproduction and lifecycle

Sockeye salmon spawns, which breed only once and then die soon afterwards

Most teleost species are oviparous, having external fertilisation with both eggs and sperm being released into the water for fertilisation. Internal fertilisation occurs in 500 to 600 species of teleosts but is more typical for Chondrichthyes and many tetrapods. This involves the male inseminating the female with an intromittent organ.[71] Fewer than one in a million of externally fertilised eggs survives to develop into a mature fish, but there is a much better chance of survival among the offspring of members of about a dozen families which are viviparous. In these, the eggs are fertilised internally and retained in the female during development. Some of these species, like the live-bearing aquarium fish in the family Poeciliidae, are ovoviviparous; each egg has a yolk sac which nourishes the developing embryo, and when this is exhausted, the egg hatches and the larva is expelled into the water column. Other species, like the splitfins in the family Goodeidae, are fully viviparous, with the developing embryo nurtured from the maternal blood supply via a placenta-like structure that develops in the uterus. Oophagy is practised by a few species, such as Nomorhamphus ebrardtii; the mother lays unfertilised eggs on which the developing larvae feed in the uterus, and intrauterine cannibalism has been reported in some halfbeaks.[72]

There are two major reproductive strategies of teleosts; semelparity and iteroparity. In the former, an individual breeds once after reaching maturity and then dies. This is because the physiological changes that come with reproduction eventually lead to death.[73] Salmon of the genus Oncorhynchus are well known for this feature; they hatch in fresh water and then migrate to the sea for up to four years before travelling back to their place of birth where they spawn and die. Semelparity is also known to occur in some eels and smelts. The majority of teleost species have iteroparity, where mature individuals can breed multiple times during their lives.[74]

Sex identity and determination

 
Clownfish are protandrous hermaphrodites; when the female of a breeding pair dies, the male changes sex and a subordinate male takes his place as the breeding male.

88 percent of teleost species are gonochoristic, having individuals that remain either male or female throughout their adult lives. The sex of an individual can be determined genetically as in birds and mammals, or environmentally as in reptiles. In some teleosts, both genetics and the environment play a role in determining sex.[75] For species whose sex is determined by genetics, it can come in three forms. In monofactorial sex determination, a single-locus determines sex inheritance. Both the XY sex-determination system and ZW sex-determination system exist in teleost species. Some species, such as the southern platyfish, have both systems and a male can be determined by XY or ZZ depending on the population.[76]

Multifactorial sex determination occurs in numerous Neotropical species and involves both XY and ZW systems. Multifactorial systems involve rearrangements of sex chromosomes and autosomes. For example, the darter characine has a ZW multifactorial system where the female is determined by ZW1W2 and the male by ZZ. The wolf fish has a XY multifactorial system where females are determined by X1X1X2X2 and the male by X1X2Y.[77] Some teleosts, such as zebrafish, have a polyfactorial system, where there are several genes which play a role in determining sex.[78] Environment-dependent sex determination has been documented in at least 70 species of teleost. Temperature is the main factor, but pH levels, growth rate, density and social environment may also play a role. For the Atlantic silverside, spawning in colder waters creates more females, while warmer waters create more males.[79]

Hermaphroditism

Some teleost species are hermaphroditic, which can come in two forms: simultaneous and sequential. In the former, both spermatozoa and eggs are present in the gonads. Simultaneous hermaphroditism typically occurs in species that live in the ocean depths, where potential mates are sparsely dispersed.[80][81] Self-fertilisation is rare and has only been recorded in two species, Kryptolebias marmoratus and Kryptolebias hermaphroditus.[81] With sequential hermaphroditism, individuals may function as one sex early in their adult life and switch later in life. Species with this condition include parrotfish, wrasses, sea basses, flatheads, sea breams and lightfishes.[80]

Protandry is when an individual starts out male and becomes female while the reverse condition is known as protogyny, the latter being more common. Changing sex can occur in various contexts. In the bluestreak cleaner wrasse, where males have harems of up to ten females, if the male is removed the largest and most dominant female develops male-like behaviour and eventually testes. If she is removed, the next ranking female takes her place. In the species Anthias squamipinnis, where individuals gather into large groups and females greatly outnumber males, if a certain number of males are removed from a group, the same number of females change sex and replace them. In clownfish, individuals live in groups and only the two largest in a group breed: the largest female and the largest male. If the female dies, the male switches sexes and the next largest male takes his place.[82]

In deep-sea anglerfish (sub-order Ceratioidei), the much smaller male becomes permanently attached to the female and degenerates into a sperm-producing attachment. The female and their attached male become a "semi-hermaphroditic unit".[83]

Mating tactics

 
Male desert goby courting a female

There are several different mating systems among teleosts. Some species are promiscuous, where both males and females breed with multiple partners and there are no obvious mate choices. This has been recorded in Baltic herring, guppies, Nassau groupers, humbug damselfish, cichlids and creole wrasses. Polygamy, where one sex has multiple partners can come in many forms. Polyandry consists of one adult female breeding with multiple males, which only breed with that female. This is rare among teleosts, and fish in general, but is found in the clownfish. In addition, it may also exist to an extent among anglerfish, where some females have more than one male attached to them. Polygyny, where one male breeds with multiple females, is much more common. This is recorded in sculpins, sunfish, darters, damselfish and cichlids where multiple females may visit a territorial male that guards and takes care of eggs and young. Polygyny may also involve a male guarding a harem of several females. This occurs in coral reef species, such as damselfishes, wrasses, parrotfishes, surgeonfishes, triggerfishes and tilefishes.[74]

Lek breeding, where males congregate to display to females, has been recorded in at least one species Cyrtocara eucinostomus. Lek-like breeding systems have also been recorded in several other species. In monogamous species, males and females may form pair bonds and breed exclusively with their partners. This occurs in North American freshwater catfishes, many butterflyfishes, sea horses and several other species.[74] Courtship in teleosts plays a role in species recognition, strengthening pair bonds, spawning site position and gamete release synchronisation. This includes colour changes, sound production and visual displays (fin erection, rapid swimming, breaching), which is often done by the male. Courtship may be done by a female to overcome a territorial male that would otherwise drive her away.[84]

 
Male (top) and female humphead parrotfish, showing sexual dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism exists in some species. Individuals of one sex, usually males develop secondary sexual characteristics that increase their chances of reproductive success. In dolphinfish, males have larger and blunter heads than females. In several minnow species, males develop swollen heads and small bumps known as breeding tubercles during the breeding season.[85] The male green humphead parrotfish has a more well-developed forehead with an "ossified ridge" which plays a role in ritualised headbutting.[86] Dimorphism can also take the form of differences in coloration. Again, it is usually the males that are brightly coloured; in killifishes, rainbowfishes and wrasses the colours are permanent while in species like minnows, sticklebacks, darters and sunfishes, the colour changes with seasons. Such coloration can be very conspicuous to predators, showing that the drive to reproduce can be stronger than that to avoid predation.[85]

Males that have been unable to court a female successfully may try to achieve reproductive success in other ways. In sunfish species, like the bluegill, larger, older males known as parental males, which have successfully courted a female, construct nests for the eggs they fertilise. Smaller satellite males mimic female behaviour and coloration to access a nest and fertilise the eggs. Other males, known as sneaker males, lurk nearby and then quickly dash to the nest, fertilising on the run. These males are smaller than satellite males. Sneaker males also exist in Oncorhynchus salmon, where small males that were unable to establish a position near a female dash in while the large dominant male is spawning with the female.[87]

Spawning sites and parental care

 
Three-spined stickleback males (red belly) build nests and compete to attract females to lay eggs in them. Males then defend and fan the eggs. Painting by Alexander Francis Lydon, 1879

Teleosts may spawn in the water column or, more commonly, on the substrate. Water column spawners are mostly limited to coral reefs; the fish will rush towards the surface and release their gametes. This appears to protect the eggs from some predators and allow them to disperse widely via currents. They receive no parental care. Water column spawners are more likely than substrate spawners to spawn in groups. Substrate spawning commonly occurs in nests, rock crevices or even burrows. Some eggs can stick to various surfaces like rocks, plants, wood or shells.[88]

 
"Pregnant" male seahorse

Of the oviparous teleosts, most (79 percent) do not provide parental care.[89] Male care is far more common than female care.[89][90] Male territoriality "preadapts" a species to evolve male parental care.[91][92] One unusual example of female parental care is in discuses, which provide nutrients for their developing young in the form of mucus.[93] Some teleost species have their eggs or young attached to or carried in their bodies. For sea catfishes, cardinalfishes, jawfishes and some others, the egg may be incubated or carried in the mouth, a practice known as mouthbrooding. In some African cichlids, the eggs may be fertilised there. In species like the banded acara, young are brooded after they hatch and this may be done by both parents. The timing of the release of young varies between species; some mouthbrooders release new-hatched young while other may keep then until they are juveniles. In addition to mouthbrooding, some teleost have also developed structures to carry young. Male nurseryfish have a bony hook on their foreheads to carry fertilised eggs; they remain on the hook until they hatch. For seahorses, the male has a brooding pouch where the female deposits the fertilised eggs and they remain there until they become free-swimming juveniles. Female banjo catfishes have structures on their belly to which the eggs attach.[94]

In some parenting species, young from a previous spawning batch may stay with their parents and help care for the new young. This is known to occur in around 19 species of cichlids in Lake Tanganyika. These helpers take part in cleaning and fanning eggs and larvae, cleaning the breeding hole and protecting the territory. They have reduced growth rate but gain protection from predators. Brood parasitism also exists among teleosts; minnows may spawn in sunfish nests as well as nests of other minnow species. The cuckoo catfish is known for laying eggs on the substrate as mouthbrooding cichclids collect theirs and the young catfish will eat the cichlid larvae. Filial cannibalism occurs in some teleost families and may have evolved to combat starvation.[95]

Growth and development

 
Newly hatched Atlantic salmon with yolk sac

Teleosts have four major life stages: the egg, the larva, the juvenile and the adult. Species may begin life in a pelagic environment or a demersal environment (near the seabed). Most marine teleosts have pelagic eggs, which are light, transparent and buoyant with thin envelopes. Pelagic eggs rely on the ocean currents to disperse and receive no parental care. When they hatch, the larvae are planktonic and unable to swim. They have a yolk sac attached to them which provides nutrients. Most freshwater species produce demersal eggs which are thick, pigmented, relatively heavy and able to stick to substrates. Parental care is much more common among freshwater fish. Unlike their pelagic counterparts, demersal larvae are able to swim and feed as soon as they hatch.[80] Larval teleosts often look very different from adults, particularly in marine species. Some larvae were even considered different species from the adults. Larvae have high mortality rates, most die from starvation or predation within their first week. As they grow, survival rates increase and there is greater physiological tolerance and sensitivity, ecological and behavioural competence.[96]

At the juvenile stage, a teleost looks more like its adult form. At this stage, its axial skeleton, internal organs, scales, pigmentation and fins are fully developed. The transition from larvae to juvenile can be short and fairly simple, lasting minutes or hours as in some damselfish, while in other species, like salmon, squirrelfish, gobies and flatfishes, the transition is more complex and takes several weeks to complete.[97] At the adult stage, a teleost is able to produce viable gametes for reproduction. Like many fish, teleosts continue to grow throughout their lives. Longevity depends on the species with some gamefish like European perch and largemouth bass living up to 25 years. Rockfish appear to be the longest living teleosts with some species living over 100 years.[98]

Shoaling and schooling

 
Schooling predatory bluefin trevally sizing up schooling anchovies

Many teleosts form shoals, which serve multiple purposes in different species. Schooling is sometimes an antipredator adaptation, offering improved vigilance against predators. It is often more efficient to gather food by working as a group, and individual fish optimise their strategies by choosing to join or leave a shoal. When a predator has been noticed, prey fish respond defensively, resulting in collective shoal behaviours such as synchronised movements. Responses do not consist only of attempting to hide or flee; antipredator tactics include for example scattering and reassembling. Fish also aggregate in shoals to spawn.[99]

Relationship with humans

Economic importance

 
Fish farming in the sea off Scotland

Teleosts are economically important in different ways. They are captured for food around the world. A small number of species such as herring, cod, pollock, anchovy, tuna and mackerel provide people with millions of tons of food per year, while many other species are fished in smaller amounts.[100] They provide a large proportion of the fish caught for sport.[101] Commercial and recreational fishing together provide millions of people with employment.[102]

A small number of productive species including carp, salmon,[103] tilapia and catfish are farmed commercially, producing millions of tons of protein-rich food per year. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization expects production to increase sharply so that by 2030, perhaps sixty-two percent of food fish will be farmed.[104]

Fish are consumed fresh, or may be preserved by traditional methods, which include combinations of drying, smoking, and salting, or fermentation.[105] Modern methods of preservation include freezing, freeze-drying, and heat processing (as in canning). Frozen fish products include breaded or battered fillets, fish fingers and fishcakes. Fish meal is used as a food supplement for farmed fish and for livestock. Fish oils are made either from fish liver, especially rich in vitamins A and D, or from the bodies of oily fish such as sardine and herring, and used as food supplements and to treat vitamin deficiencies.[106]

Some smaller and more colourful species serve as aquarium specimens and pets. Sea wolves are used in the leather industry. Isinglass is made from thread fish and drum fish.[101]

Impact on stocks

 
Capture of Atlantic Cod 1950-2005 (FAO)

Human activities have affected stocks of many species of teleost, through overfishing,[107] pollution and global warming. Among many recorded instances, overfishing caused the complete collapse of the Atlantic cod population off Newfoundland in 1992, leading to Canada's indefinite closure of the fishery.[108] Pollution, especially in rivers and along coasts, has harmed teleosts as sewage, pesticides and herbicides have entered the water. Many pollutants, such as heavy metals, organochlorines, and carbamates interfere with teleost reproduction, often by disrupting their endocrine systems. In the roach, river pollution has caused the intersex condition, in which an individual's gonads contain both cells that can make male gametes (such as spermatogonia) and cells that can make female gametes (such as oogonia). Since endocrine disruption also affects humans, teleosts are used to indicate the presence of such chemicals in water. Water pollution caused local extinction of teleost populations in many northern European lakes in the second half of the twentieth century.[109]

The effects of climate change on teleosts could be powerful but are complex. For example, increased winter precipitation (rain and snow) could harm populations of freshwater fish in Norway, whereas warmer summers could increase growth of adult fish.[110] In the oceans, teleosts may be able to cope with warming, as it is simply an extension of natural variation in climate.[111] It is uncertain how ocean acidification, caused by rising carbon dioxide levels, might affect teleosts.[112]

Other interactions

 
Service to science: zebrafish being bred in a research institute

A few teleosts are dangerous. Some, like eeltail catfish (Plotosidae), scorpionfish (Scorpaenidae) or stonefish (Synanceiidae) have venomous spines that can seriously injure or kill humans. Some, like the electric eel and the electric catfish, can give a severe electric shock. Others, such as the piranha and barracuda, have a powerful bite and have sometimes attacked human bathers.[101] Reports indicate that some of the catfish family can be large enough to prey on human bathers.

Medaka and zebrafish are used as research models for studies in genetics and developmental biology. The zebrafish is the most commonly used laboratory vertebrate,[101] offering the advantages of genetic similarity to mammals, small size, simple environmental needs, transparent larvae permitting non-invasive imaging, plentiful offspring, rapid growth, and the ability to absorb mutagens added to their water.[113]

In art

Teleost fishes have been frequent subjects in art, reflecting their economic importance, for at least 14,000 years. They were commonly worked into patterns in Ancient Egypt, acquiring mythological significance in Ancient Greece and Rome, and from there into Christianity as a religious symbol; artists in China and Japan similarly use fish images symbolically. Teleosts became common in Renaissance art, with still life paintings reaching a peak of popularity in the Netherlands in the 17th century. In the 20th century, different artists such as Klee, Magritte, Matisse and Picasso used representations of teleosts to express radically different themes, from attractive to violent.[114] The zoologist and artist Ernst Haeckel painted teleosts and other animals in his 1904 Kunstformen der Natur. Haeckel had become convinced by Goethe and Alexander von Humboldt that by making accurate depictions of unfamiliar natural forms, such as from the deep oceans, he could not only discover "the laws of their origin and evolution but also to press into the secret parts of their beauty by sketching and painting".[115]

Notes

  1. ^ The other two infraclasses are the Holostei (bowfins and garfish) and the paraphyletic Chondrostei (sturgeons and reedfish).

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Bibliography

  • Helfman, G.; Collette, B. B.; Facey, D. E.; Bowen, B. W. (2009). The Diversity of Fishes: Biology, Evolution, and Ecology (PDF) (2nd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-2494-2.
  • Wootton, Robert J.; Smith, Carl (2014). Reproductive Biology of Teleost Fishes. Wiley. ISBN 978-1-118-89139-1.

External links

  •   Media related to Teleostei at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Teleostei at Wikispecies

teleost, greek, teleios, complete, osteon, bone, members, which, known, teleosts, largest, infraclass, class, actinopterygii, finned, fishes, containing, extant, species, fish, arranged, into, about, orders, families, over, species, have, been, described, rang. Teleostei ˌ t ɛ l i ˈ ɒ s t i aɪ Greek teleios complete osteon bone members of which are known as teleosts ˈ t ɛ l i ɒ s t s ˈ t iː l i 4 is by far the largest infraclass in the class Actinopterygii the ray finned fishes a containing 96 of all extant species of fish Teleosts are arranged into about 40 orders and 448 families Over 26 000 species have been described Teleosts range from giant oarfish measuring 7 6 m 25 ft or more and ocean sunfish weighing over 2 t 2 0 long tons 2 2 short tons to the minute male anglerfish Photocorynus spiniceps just 6 2 mm 0 24 in long Including not only torpedo shaped fish built for speed teleosts can be flattened vertically or horizontally be elongated cylinders or take specialised shapes as in anglerfish and seahorses TeleostTemporal range Early Triassic Recent 1 2 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NTeleosts of different orders painted by Castelnau 1856 left to right top to bottom Fistularia tabacaria Syngnathiformes Mylossoma duriventre Characiformes Mesonauta acora Cichliformes Corydoras splendens and Pseudacanthicus spinosus Siluriformes Acanthurus coeruleus Acanthuriformes Stegastes pictus Incertae sedis Pomacentridae Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiSubclass NeopterygiiInfraclass TeleosteiJ P Muller 1845 3 SubdivisionsSee textThe difference between teleosts and other bony fish lies mainly in their jaw bones teleosts have a movable premaxilla and corresponding modifications in the jaw musculature which make it possible for them to protrude their jaws outwards from the mouth This is of great advantage enabling them to grab prey and draw it into the mouth In more derived teleosts the enlarged premaxilla is the main tooth bearing bone and the maxilla which is attached to the lower jaw acts as a lever pushing and pulling the premaxilla as the mouth is opened and closed Other bones further back in the mouth serve to grind and swallow food Another difference is that the upper and lower lobes of the tail caudal fin are about equal in size The spine ends at the caudal peduncle distinguishing this group from other fish in which the spine extends into the upper lobe of the tail fin Teleosts have adopted a range of reproductive strategies Most use external fertilisation the female lays a batch of eggs the male fertilises them and the larvae develop without any further parental involvement A fair proportion of teleosts are sequential hermaphrodites starting life as females and transitioning to males at some stage with a few species reversing this process A small percentage of teleosts are viviparous and some provide parental care with typically the male fish guarding a nest and fanning the eggs to keep them well oxygenated Teleosts are economically important to humans as is shown by their depiction in art over the centuries The fishing industry harvests them for food and anglers attempt to capture them for sport Some species are farmed commercially and this method of production is likely to be increasingly important in the future Others are kept in aquariums or used in research especially in the fields of genetics and developmental biology Contents 1 Anatomy 2 Evolution and phylogeny 2 1 External relationships 2 2 Internal relationships 2 3 Evolutionary trends 2 4 Diversity 3 Distribution 4 Physiology 4 1 Respiration 4 2 Sensory systems 4 3 Osmoregulation 4 4 Thermoregulation 4 5 Buoyancy 4 6 Locomotion 4 7 Sound production 5 Reproduction and lifecycle 5 1 Sex identity and determination 5 1 1 Hermaphroditism 5 2 Mating tactics 5 3 Spawning sites and parental care 5 4 Growth and development 6 Shoaling and schooling 7 Relationship with humans 7 1 Economic importance 7 2 Impact on stocks 7 3 Other interactions 7 4 In art 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksAnatomy EditMain articles Fish anatomy and Fish jaw Skull and jaw anatomy Distinguishing features of the teleosts are mobile premaxilla elongated neural arches at the end of the caudal fin and unpaired basibranchial toothplates 5 The premaxilla is unattached to the neurocranium braincase it plays a role in protruding the mouth and creating a circular opening This lowers the pressure inside the mouth sucking the prey inside The lower jaw and maxilla are then pulled back to close the mouth and the fish is able to grasp the prey By contrast mere closure of the jaws would risk pushing food out of the mouth In more advanced teleosts the premaxilla is enlarged and has teeth while the maxilla is toothless The maxilla functions to push both the premaxilla and the lower jaw forward To open the mouth an adductor muscle pulls back the top of the maxilla pushing the lower jaw forward In addition the maxilla rotates slightly which pushes forward a bony process that interlocks with the premaxilla 6 Caudal skeleton showing symmetrical homocercal tail The pharyngeal jaws of teleosts a second set of jaws contained within the throat are composed of five branchial arches loops of bone which support the gills The first three arches include a single basibranchial surrounded by two hypobranchials ceratobranchials epibranchials and pharyngobranchials The median basibranchial is covered by a toothplate The fourth arch is composed of pairs of ceratobranchials and epibranchials and sometimes additionally some pharyngobranchials and a basibranchial The base of the lower pharyngeal jaws is formed by the fifth ceratobranchials while the second third and fourth pharyngobranchials create the base of the upper In the more basal teleosts the pharyngeal jaws consist of well separated thin parts that attach to the neurocranium pectoral girdle and hyoid bar Their function is limited to merely transporting food and they rely mostly on lower pharyngeal jaw activity In more derived teleosts the jaws are more powerful with left and right ceratobranchials fusing to become one lower jaw the pharyngobranchials fuse to create a large upper jaw that articulates with the neurocranium They have also developed a muscle that allows the pharyngeal jaws to have a role in grinding food in addition to transporting it 7 The caudal fin is homocercal meaning the upper and lower lobes are about equal in size The spine ends at the caudal peduncle the base of the caudal fin distinguishing this group from those in which the spine extends into the upper lobe of the caudal fin such as most fish from the Paleozoic 541 to 252 million years ago The neural arches are elongated to form uroneurals which provide support for this upper lobe 6 In addition the hypurals bones that form a flattened plate at the posterior end of the vertebral column are enlarged providing further support for the caudal fin 8 In general teleosts tend to be quicker and more flexible than more basal bony fishes Their skeletal structure has evolved towards greater lightness While teleost bones are well calcified they are constructed from a scaffolding of struts rather than the dense cancellous bones of holostean fish In addition the lower jaw of the teleost is reduced to just three bones the dentary the angular bone and the articular bone 9 Evolution and phylogeny EditMain article Evolution of fish External relationships Edit The teleosts were first recognised as a distinct group by the German ichthyologist Johannes Peter Muller in 1845 10 The name is from Greek teleios complete osteon bone 11 Muller based this classification on certain soft tissue characteristics which would prove to be problematic as it did not take into account the distinguishing features of fossil teleosts In 1966 Greenwood et al provided a more solid classification 10 12 The oldest fossils of teleosteomorphs the stem group from which teleosts later evolved date back to the Triassic period Prohalecites Pholidophorus 13 14 However it has been suggested that teleosts probably first evolved already during the Paleozoic era 15 During the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras they diversified widely and as a result 96 of all living fish species are teleosts The cladogram below shows the evolutionary relationships of the teleosts to other extant clades of bony fish 15 and to the four limbed vertebrates tetrapods that evolved from a related group of bony fish during the Devonian period 16 17 Approximate divergence dates in millions of years mya are from Near et al 2012 15 Euteleostomi Sarcopterygii lobe fins Rhipidistia Tetrapoda Amniota Mammals Sauropsida reptiles birds Amphibia Lissamphibia Lungfish Actinistia Coelacanths Actinopterygii ray fins Cladistia Polypteriformes bichirs reedfishes Actinopteri Chondrostei Acipenseriformes sturgeons paddlefishes Neopterygii Holostei Ginglymodi Lepisosteiformes Gars Halecomorphi Amiiformes bowfin 275 myaTeleostei 310 mya360 mya400 myaOsteichthyesInternal relationships Edit The phylogeny of the teleosts has been subject to long debate without consensus on either their phylogeny or the timing of the emergence of the major groups before the application of modern DNA based cladistic analysis Near et al 2012 explored the phylogeny and divergence times of every major lineage analysing the DNA sequences of 9 unlinked genes in 232 species They obtained well resolved phylogenies with strong support for the nodes so the pattern of branching shown is likely to be correct They calibrated set actual values for branching times in this tree from 36 reliable measurements of absolute time from the fossil record 15 The teleosts are divided into the major clades shown on the cladogram 18 with dates following Near et al 15 Teleostei Elopomorpha Elopiformes tenpounders tarpons Albuliformes Japanese gissus and bonefishes Notacanthiformes deep sea spiny eels Anguilliformes true eels Osteoglossocephala Osteoglossomorpha Hiodontiformes mooneyes Osteoglossiformes bonytongues elephantfishes 250 myaClupeocephala Otocephala Clupei Clupeiformes herrings Alepocephali Alepocephaliformes slickheads Ostariophysi Anotophysa Gonorynchiformes milkfish Otophysa Cypriniformes minnows carps loaches Characiformes tetras piranhas Gymnotiformes knifefish and electric eels Siluriformes catfish 230 myaEuteleostei Lepidogalaxii Lepidogalaxiiformes salamanderfish Protacanthopterygii Argentiniformes marine smelts Galaxiiformes whitebait mudfishes Esociformes pike Salmoniformes salmon trout 225 myaStomiati Stomiiformes dragonfish Osmeriformes smelt Neoteleostei Ateleopodia Ateleopodidae jellynoses Eurypterygia Aulopa Aulopiformes lizardfish Ctenosquamata Scopelomorpha Myctophiformes lanternfish Acanthomorpha Lampripterygii Lampriformes oarfish opah ribbonfish Paracanthopterygii Percopsiformes troutperches Zeiformes dories Stylephoriformes tube eyes thread fins Gadiformes cods Polymixiipterygii Polymixiiformes beardfish Acanthopterygii Berycimorphaceae Beryciformes alfonsinos whalefishes Trachichthyiformes pinecone fishes slimeheads Holocentrimorphaceae Holocentriformes squirrelfish soldier fishes Percomorpha see below 175 mya240 mya310 myaThe most diverse group of teleost fish today are the Percomorpha which include among others the tuna seahorses gobies cichlids flatfish wrasse perches anglerfish and pufferfish The cladogram below which is based on Betancur R et al 2017 19 shows the relationships between extant percomorphs Teleosts and percomorphs in particular thrived during the Cenozoic era Fossil evidence shows that there was a major increase in size and abundance of teleosts immediately after the mass extinction event at the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary ca 66 mya 20 Evolution of ray finned fishes Actinopterygii from the Devonian to the present as a spindle diagram The width of the spindles are proportional to the number of families as a rough estimate of diversity The diagram is based on Benton M J 2005 Vertebrate Palaeontology Blackwell 3rd edition Fig 7 13 on page 185 Percomorpha Ophidiaria Ophidiiformes cusk eels pearlfishes Batrachoidaria Batrachoididae toadfishes Pelagiaria Scombriformes tunas mackerel etc Syngnatharia Syngnathiformes seahorses goatfishes pipefishes etc Gobiaria Gobiiformes gobies Kurtiformes nurseryfishes cardinalfishes Anabantaria Anabantiformes e g snakeheads Siamese fighting fish gouramies Synbranchiformes swamp eels Carangaria Polynemidae threadfins Lactariidae false trevally Menidae moonfish Part of Carangiformes Nematistiidae roosterfish Echeneidae remoras Coryphaenidae dolphinfish Rachycentridae cobia Sphyraenidae barracudas Centropomidae snooks Pleuronectiformes flatfish Part of Carangiformes Carangidae e g jacks Istiophoriformes billfish Leptobramidae beachsalmons Toxotidae archerfish Ovalentaria Cichlomorphae Cichliformes cichlids convict blennies Polycentridae leaffish Atherinomorphae Beloniformes needlefish flying fish halfbeaks Atheriniformes silversides rainbowfish etc Cyprinodontiformes toothcarps Ambassidae Asiatic glassfishes Congrogadidae eel blenny Pomacentridae damselfishes Embiotocidae surfperches Mugilomorphae Mugiliformes mullets Lipogramma Plesiopidae roundheads Pseudochromidae dottybacks Grammatidae basslets Opistognathidae jawfishes Blenniimorphae Blenniiformes blennies clinids sand stargazers Gobiesociformes clingfishes Eupercaria Gerreiformes mojarras Uranoscopiformes stargazers Centrogenyidae false scorpionfish Labriformes wrasses cales parrotfish Perciformes perches sticklebacks scorpionfishes etc Centrarchiformes black basses temperate perches etc Pempheriformes sweepers Moronidae temperate basses Sillaginidae smelt whitings Ephippiformes spadefishes batfishes Chaetodontiformes butterflyfishes Sciaenidae drums croakers Acanthuriformes surgeonfishes ponyfishes Monodactylidae moonyfishes fingerfishes Emmelichthyidae rovers Pomacanthidae angelfishes Lutjaniformes snappers Callanthiidae splendid perches Malacanthidae tilefishes Lobotiformes tripletails Spariformes sea breams Siganidae rabbitfishes Priacanthiformes bigeyes bandfishes Scatophagidae scats Caproiformes boarfishes Lophiiformes anglerfishes Tetraodontiformes pufferfishes triggerfishes etc Evolutionary trends Edit Aspidorhynchus acustirostris an early teleost from the Middle Jurassic The first fossils assignable to this diverse group appear in the Early Triassic 21 after which teleosts accumulated novel body shapes predominantly gradually for the first 150 million years of their evolution 21 Early Triassic through early Cretaceous The most basal of the living teleosts are the Elopomorpha eels and allies and the Osteoglossomorpha elephantfishes and allies There are 800 species of elopomorphs They have thin leaf shaped larvae known as leptocephali specialised for a marine environment Among the elopomorphs eels have elongated bodies with lost pelvic girdles and ribs and fused elements in the upper jaw The 200 species of osteoglossomorphs are defined by a bony element in the tongue This element has a basibranchial behind it and both structures have large teeth which are paired with the teeth on the parasphenoid in the roof of the mouth The clade Otocephala includes the Clupeiformes herrings and Ostariophysi carps catfishes and allies Clupeiformes consists of 350 living species of herring and herring like fishes This group is characterised by an unusual abdominal scute and a different arrangement of the hypurals In most species the swim bladder extends to the braincase and plays a role in hearing Ostariophysi which includes most freshwater fishes includes species that have developed some unique adaptations 6 One is the Weberian apparatus an arrangement of bones Weberian ossicles connecting the swim bladder to the inner ear This enhances their hearing as sound waves make the bladder vibrate and the bones transport the vibrations to the inner ear They also have a chemical alarm system when a fish is injured the warning substance gets in the water alarming nearby fish 22 The majority of teleost species belong to the clade Euteleostei which consists of 17 419 species classified in 2 935 genera and 346 families Shared traits of the euteleosts include similarities in the embryonic development of the bony or cartilaginous structures located between the head and dorsal fin supraneural bones an outgrowth on the stegural bone a bone located near the neural arches of the tail and caudal median cartilages located between hypurals of the caudal base The majority of euteleosts are in the clade Neoteleostei A derived trait of neoteleosts is a muscle that controls the pharyngeal jaws giving them a role in grinding food Within neoteleosts members of the Acanthopterygii have a spiny dorsal fin which is in front of the soft rayed dorsal fin 23 This fin helps provide thrust in locomotion 24 and may also play a role in defense Acanthomorphs have developed spiny ctenoid scales as opposed to the cycloid scales of other groups tooth bearing premaxilla and greater adaptations to high speed swimming 6 The adipose fin which is present in over 6 000 teleost species is often thought to have evolved once in the lineage and to have been lost multiple times due to its limited function A 2014 study challenges this idea and suggests that the adipose fin is an example of convergent evolution In Characiformes the adipose fin develops from an outgrowth after the reduction of the larval fin fold while in Salmoniformes the fin appears to be a remnant of the fold 25 Diversity Edit Further information Diversity of fish Predatory teleost the flesh cutting teeth of a piranha Serrasalmidae There are over 26 000 species of teleosts in about 40 orders and 448 families 26 making up 96 of all extant species of fish 27 Approximately 12 000 of the total 26 000 species are found in freshwater habitats 28 Teleosts are found in almost every aquatic environment and have developed specializations to feed in a variety of ways as carnivores herbivores filter feeders and parasites 29 The longest teleost is the giant oarfish reported at 7 6 m 25 ft and more 30 but this is dwarfed by the extinct Leedsichthys one individual of which has been estimated to have a length of 27 6 m 91 ft 31 The heaviest teleost is believed to be the ocean sunfish with a specimen landed in 2003 having an estimated weight of 2 3 t 2 3 long tons 2 5 short tons 32 while the smallest fully mature adult is the male anglerfish Photocorynus spiniceps which can measure just 6 2 mm 0 24 in though the female at 50 mm 2 in is much larger 30 The stout infantfish is the smallest and lightest adult fish and is in fact the smallest vertebrate in the world the females measures 8 4 mm 0 33 in and the male just 7 mm 0 28 in 33 A rare giant oarfish Regalecus glesne 7 metre 23 ft long captured in 1996 Open water fish are usually streamlined like torpedoes to minimize turbulence as they move through the water Reef fish live in a complex relatively confined underwater landscape and for them manoeuvrability is more important than speed and many of them have developed bodies which optimize their ability to dart and change direction Many have laterally compressed bodies flattened from side to side allowing them to fit into fissures and swim through narrow gaps some use their pectoral fins for locomotion and others undulate their dorsal and anal fins 34 Some fish have grown dermal skin appendages for camouflage the prickly leather jacket is almost invisible among the seaweed it resembles and the tasselled scorpionfish invisibly lurks on the seabed ready to ambush prey Some like the foureye butterflyfish have eyespots to startle or deceive while others such as lionfish have aposematic coloration to warn that they are toxic or have venomous spines 35 Flatfish are demersal fish bottom feeding fish that show a greater degree of asymmetry than any other vertebrates The larvae are at first bilaterally symmetrical but they undergo metamorphosis during the course of their development with one eye migrating to the other side of the head and they simultaneously start swimming on their side This has the advantage that when they lie on the seabed both eyes are on top giving them a broad field of view The upper side is usually speckled and mottled for camouflage while the underside is pale 36 The winter flounder is asymmetrical with both eyes lying on the same side of the head Commensal fish a remora holds on to its host with a sucker like organ detail inset Some teleosts are parasites Remoras have their front dorsal fins modified into large suckers with which they cling onto a host animal such as a whale sea turtle shark or ray but this is probably a commensal rather than parasitic arrangement because both remora and host benefit from the removal of ectoparasites and loose flakes of skin 37 More harmful are the catfish that enter the gill chambers of fish and feed on their blood and tissues 38 The snubnosed eel though usually a scavenger sometimes bores into the flesh of a fish and has been found inside the heart of a shortfin mako shark 39 The knifefish Gymnarchus niloticus generates weak electric fields enabling it to detect and locate prey in turbid water Some species such as electric eels can produce powerful electric currents strong enough to stun prey Other fish such as knifefish generate and sense weak electric fields to detect their prey they swim with straight backs to avoid distorting their electric fields These currents are produced by modified muscle or nerve cells 22 Distribution EditTeleosts are found worldwide and in most aquatic environments including warm and cold seas flowing and still freshwater and even in the case of the desert pupfish isolated and sometimes hot and saline bodies of water in deserts 40 41 Teleost diversity becomes low at extremely high latitudes at Franz Josef Land up to 82 N ice cover and water temperatures below 0 C 32 F for a large part of the year limit the number of species 75 percent of the species found there are endemic to the Arctic 42 Fish in a hot desert the desert pupfish Of the major groups of teleosts the Elopomorpha Clupeomorpha and Percomorpha perches tunas and many others all have a worldwide distribution and are mainly marine the Ostariophysi and Osteoglossomorpha are worldwide but mainly freshwater the latter mainly in the tropics the Atherinomorpha guppies etc have a worldwide distribution both fresh and salt but are surface dwellers In contrast the Esociformes pikes are limited to freshwater in the Northern Hemisphere while the Salmoniformes salmon trout are found in both Northern and Southern temperate zones in freshwater some species migrating to and from the sea The Paracanthopterygii cods etc are Northern Hemisphere fish with both salt and freshwater species 41 Some teleosts are migratory certain freshwater species move within river systems on an annual basis other species are anadromous spending their lives at sea and moving inland to spawn salmon and striped bass being examples Others exemplified by the eel are catadromous doing the reverse 43 The fresh water European eel migrates across the Atlantic Ocean as an adult to breed in floating seaweed in the Sargasso Sea The adults spawn here and then die but the developing young are swept by the Gulf Stream towards Europe By the time they arrive they are small fish and enter estuaries and ascend rivers overcoming obstacles in their path to reach the streams and ponds where they spend their adult lives 44 Teleosts including the brown trout and the scaly osman are found in mountain lakes in Kashmir at altitudes as high as 3 819 m 12 530 ft 45 Teleosts are found at extreme depths in the oceans the hadal snailfish has been seen at a depth of 7 700 m 25 300 ft and a related unnamed species has been seen at 8 145 m 26 720 ft 46 47 Physiology EditFurther information Fish physiology Respiration Edit Gills Further information Fish respiration and Fish gill The major means of respiration in teleosts as in most other fish is the transfer of gases over the surface of the gills as water is drawn in through the mouth and pumped out through the gills Apart from the swim bladder which contains a small amount of air the body does not have oxygen reserves and respiration needs to be continuous over the fish s life Some teleosts exploit habitats where the oxygen availability is low such as stagnant water or wet mud they have developed accessory tissues and organs to support gas exchange in these habitats 48 Several genera of teleosts have independently developed air breathing capabilities and some have become amphibious Some combtooth blennies emerge to feed on land and freshwater eels are able to absorb oxygen through damp skin Mudskippers can remain out of water for considerable periods exchanging gases through skin and mucous membranes in the mouth and pharynx Swamp eels have similar well vascularised mouth linings and can remain out of water for days and go into a resting state aestivation in mud 49 The anabantoids have developed an accessory breathing structure known as the labyrinth organ on the first gill arch and this is used for respiration in air and airbreathing catfish have a similar suprabranchial organ Certain other catfish such as the Loricariidae are able to respire through air held in their digestive tracts 50 Sensory systems Edit A stickleback stained to show the lateral line elements neuromasts Further information Sensory systems in fish Electroreception and Magnetoreception Teleosts possess highly developed sensory organs Nearly all daylight fish have colour vision at least as good as a normal human s Many fish also have chemoreceptors responsible for acute senses of taste and smell 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 51 Fish sense sounds in a variety of ways using the lateral line the swim bladder and in some species the Weberian apparatus Fish orient themselves using landmarks and may use mental maps based on multiple landmarks or symbols Experiments with mazes show that fish possess the spatial memory needed to make such a mental map 52 Osmoregulation Edit Osmotic challenge American eels spawn in the sea but spend most of their adult life in freshwater returning only to spawn The skin of a teleost is largely impermeable to water and the main interface between the fish s body and its surroundings is the gills In freshwater teleost fish gain water across their gills by osmosis while in seawater they lose it Similarly salts diffuse outwards across the gills in freshwater and inwards in salt water The European flounder spends most of its life in the sea but often migrates into estuaries and rivers In the sea in one hour it can gain Na ions equivalent to forty percent of its total free sodium content with 75 percent of this entering through the gills and the remainder through drinking By contrast in rivers there is an exchange of just two percent of the body Na content per hour As well as being able to selectively limit salt and water exchanged by diffusion there is an active mechanism across the gills for the elimination of salt in sea water and its uptake in fresh water 53 Thermoregulation Edit Fish are cold blooded and in general their body temperature is the same as that of their surroundings They gain and lose heat through their skin and regulate their circulation in response to changes in water temperature by increasing or reducing the blood flow to the gills Metabolic heat generated in the muscles or gut is quickly dissipated through the gills with blood being diverted away from the gills during exposure to cold 54 Because of their relative inability to control their blood temperature most teleosts can only survive in a small range of water temperatures 55 Teleost species that inhabit colder waters have a higher proportion of unsaturated fatty acids in brain cell membranes compared to fish from warmer waters which allows them to maintain appropriate membrane fluidity in the environments in which they live 56 When cold acclimated teleost fish show physiological changes in skeletal muscle that include increased mitochondrial and capillary density 57 This reduces diffusion distances and aids in the production of aerobic ATP which helps to compensate for the drop in metabolic rate associated with colder temperatures Tuna and other fast swimming ocean going fish maintain their muscles at higher temperatures than their environment for efficient locomotion 58 Tuna achieve muscle temperatures 11 C 19 F or even higher above the surroundings by having a counterflow system in which the metabolic heat produced by the muscles and present in the venous blood pre warms the arterial blood before it reaches the muscles Other adaptations of tuna for speed include a streamlined spindle shaped body fins designed to reduce drag 58 and muscles with a raised myoglobin content which gives these a reddish colour and makes for a more efficient use of oxygen 59 In polar regions and in the deep ocean where the temperature is a few degrees above freezing point some large fish such as the swordfish marlin and tuna have a heating mechanism which raises the temperature of the brain and eye allowing them significantly better vision than their cold blooded prey 60 Buoyancy Edit A teleost swim bladder The body of a teleost is denser than water so fish must compensate for the difference or they will sink Many teleosts have a swim bladder that adjusts their buoyancy through manipulation of gases to allow them to stay at the current water depth or ascend or descend without having to waste energy in swimming In the more primitive groups like some minnows the swim bladder is open to the esophagus and doubles as a lung It is often absent in fast swimming fishes such as the tuna and mackerel In fish where the swim bladder is closed the gas content is controlled through the rete mirabilis a network of blood vessels serving as a countercurrent gas exchanger between the swim bladder and the blood 61 The Chondrostei such as sturgeons also have a swim bladder but this appears to have evolved separately other Actinopterygii such as the bowfin and the bichir do not have one so swim bladders appear to have arisen twice and the teleost swim bladder is not homologous with the chondrostean one 62 Locomotion Edit Flying fish combine swimming movements with the ability to glide in air using their long pectoral fins Main article Fish locomotion A typical teleost fish has a streamlined body for rapid swimming and locomotion is generally provided by a lateral undulation of the hindmost part of the trunk and the tail propelling the fish through the water 63 There are many exceptions to this method of locomotion especially where speed is not the main objective among rocks and on coral reefs slow swimming with great manoeuvrability may be a desirable attribute 64 Eels locomote by wiggling their entire bodies Living among seagrasses and algae the seahorse adopts an upright posture and moves by fluttering its pectoral fins and the closely related pipefish moves by rippling its elongated dorsal fin Gobies hop along the substrate propping themselves up and propelling themselves with their pectoral fins 65 Mudskippers move in much the same way on terrestrial ground 66 In some species a pelvic sucker allows them to climb and the Hawaiian freshwater goby climbs waterfalls while migrating 65 Gurnards have three pairs of free rays on their pectoral fins which have a sensory function but on which they can walk along the substrate 67 Flying fish launch themselves into the air and can glide on their enlarged pectoral fins for hundreds of metres 68 Sound production Edit To attract mates some teleosts produce sounds either by stridulation or by vibrating the swim bladder In the Sciaenidae the muscles that attach to the swim bladder cause it to oscillate rapidly creating drumming sounds Marine catfishes sea horses and grunts stridulate by rubbing together skeletal parts teeth or spines In these fish the swim bladder may act as a resonator Stridulation sounds are predominantly from 1000 4000 Hz though sounds modified by the swim bladder have frequencies lower than 1000 Hz 69 70 Reproduction and lifecycle Edit source source source source source source Sockeye salmon spawns which breed only once and then die soon afterwards Further information Fish reproduction Most teleost species are oviparous having external fertilisation with both eggs and sperm being released into the water for fertilisation Internal fertilisation occurs in 500 to 600 species of teleosts but is more typical for Chondrichthyes and many tetrapods This involves the male inseminating the female with an intromittent organ 71 Fewer than one in a million of externally fertilised eggs survives to develop into a mature fish but there is a much better chance of survival among the offspring of members of about a dozen families which are viviparous In these the eggs are fertilised internally and retained in the female during development Some of these species like the live bearing aquarium fish in the family Poeciliidae are ovoviviparous each egg has a yolk sac which nourishes the developing embryo and when this is exhausted the egg hatches and the larva is expelled into the water column Other species like the splitfins in the family Goodeidae are fully viviparous with the developing embryo nurtured from the maternal blood supply via a placenta like structure that develops in the uterus Oophagy is practised by a few species such as Nomorhamphus ebrardtii the mother lays unfertilised eggs on which the developing larvae feed in the uterus and intrauterine cannibalism has been reported in some halfbeaks 72 There are two major reproductive strategies of teleosts semelparity and iteroparity In the former an individual breeds once after reaching maturity and then dies This is because the physiological changes that come with reproduction eventually lead to death 73 Salmon of the genus Oncorhynchus are well known for this feature they hatch in fresh water and then migrate to the sea for up to four years before travelling back to their place of birth where they spawn and die Semelparity is also known to occur in some eels and smelts The majority of teleost species have iteroparity where mature individuals can breed multiple times during their lives 74 Sex identity and determination Edit Clownfish are protandrous hermaphrodites when the female of a breeding pair dies the male changes sex and a subordinate male takes his place as the breeding male 88 percent of teleost species are gonochoristic having individuals that remain either male or female throughout their adult lives The sex of an individual can be determined genetically as in birds and mammals or environmentally as in reptiles In some teleosts both genetics and the environment play a role in determining sex 75 For species whose sex is determined by genetics it can come in three forms In monofactorial sex determination a single locus determines sex inheritance Both the XY sex determination system and ZW sex determination system exist in teleost species Some species such as the southern platyfish have both systems and a male can be determined by XY or ZZ depending on the population 76 Multifactorial sex determination occurs in numerous Neotropical species and involves both XY and ZW systems Multifactorial systems involve rearrangements of sex chromosomes and autosomes For example the darter characine has a ZW multifactorial system where the female is determined by ZW1W2 and the male by ZZ The wolf fish has a XY multifactorial system where females are determined by X1X1X2X2 and the male by X1X2Y 77 Some teleosts such as zebrafish have a polyfactorial system where there are several genes which play a role in determining sex 78 Environment dependent sex determination has been documented in at least 70 species of teleost Temperature is the main factor but pH levels growth rate density and social environment may also play a role For the Atlantic silverside spawning in colder waters creates more females while warmer waters create more males 79 Hermaphroditism Edit Some teleost species are hermaphroditic which can come in two forms simultaneous and sequential In the former both spermatozoa and eggs are present in the gonads Simultaneous hermaphroditism typically occurs in species that live in the ocean depths where potential mates are sparsely dispersed 80 81 Self fertilisation is rare and has only been recorded in two species Kryptolebias marmoratus and Kryptolebias hermaphroditus 81 With sequential hermaphroditism individuals may function as one sex early in their adult life and switch later in life Species with this condition include parrotfish wrasses sea basses flatheads sea breams and lightfishes 80 Protandry is when an individual starts out male and becomes female while the reverse condition is known as protogyny the latter being more common Changing sex can occur in various contexts In the bluestreak cleaner wrasse where males have harems of up to ten females if the male is removed the largest and most dominant female develops male like behaviour and eventually testes If she is removed the next ranking female takes her place In the species Anthias squamipinnis where individuals gather into large groups and females greatly outnumber males if a certain number of males are removed from a group the same number of females change sex and replace them In clownfish individuals live in groups and only the two largest in a group breed the largest female and the largest male If the female dies the male switches sexes and the next largest male takes his place 82 In deep sea anglerfish sub order Ceratioidei the much smaller male becomes permanently attached to the female and degenerates into a sperm producing attachment The female and their attached male become a semi hermaphroditic unit 83 Mating tactics Edit Male desert goby courting a female There are several different mating systems among teleosts Some species are promiscuous where both males and females breed with multiple partners and there are no obvious mate choices This has been recorded in Baltic herring guppies Nassau groupers humbug damselfish cichlids and creole wrasses Polygamy where one sex has multiple partners can come in many forms Polyandry consists of one adult female breeding with multiple males which only breed with that female This is rare among teleosts and fish in general but is found in the clownfish In addition it may also exist to an extent among anglerfish where some females have more than one male attached to them Polygyny where one male breeds with multiple females is much more common This is recorded in sculpins sunfish darters damselfish and cichlids where multiple females may visit a territorial male that guards and takes care of eggs and young Polygyny may also involve a male guarding a harem of several females This occurs in coral reef species such as damselfishes wrasses parrotfishes surgeonfishes triggerfishes and tilefishes 74 Lek breeding where males congregate to display to females has been recorded in at least one species Cyrtocara eucinostomus Lek like breeding systems have also been recorded in several other species In monogamous species males and females may form pair bonds and breed exclusively with their partners This occurs in North American freshwater catfishes many butterflyfishes sea horses and several other species 74 Courtship in teleosts plays a role in species recognition strengthening pair bonds spawning site position and gamete release synchronisation This includes colour changes sound production and visual displays fin erection rapid swimming breaching which is often done by the male Courtship may be done by a female to overcome a territorial male that would otherwise drive her away 84 Male top and female humphead parrotfish showing sexual dimorphism Sexual dimorphism exists in some species Individuals of one sex usually males develop secondary sexual characteristics that increase their chances of reproductive success In dolphinfish males have larger and blunter heads than females In several minnow species males develop swollen heads and small bumps known as breeding tubercles during the breeding season 85 The male green humphead parrotfish has a more well developed forehead with an ossified ridge which plays a role in ritualised headbutting 86 Dimorphism can also take the form of differences in coloration Again it is usually the males that are brightly coloured in killifishes rainbowfishes and wrasses the colours are permanent while in species like minnows sticklebacks darters and sunfishes the colour changes with seasons Such coloration can be very conspicuous to predators showing that the drive to reproduce can be stronger than that to avoid predation 85 Males that have been unable to court a female successfully may try to achieve reproductive success in other ways In sunfish species like the bluegill larger older males known as parental males which have successfully courted a female construct nests for the eggs they fertilise Smaller satellite males mimic female behaviour and coloration to access a nest and fertilise the eggs Other males known as sneaker males lurk nearby and then quickly dash to the nest fertilising on the run These males are smaller than satellite males Sneaker males also exist in Oncorhynchus salmon where small males that were unable to establish a position near a female dash in while the large dominant male is spawning with the female 87 Spawning sites and parental care Edit Three spined stickleback males red belly build nests and compete to attract females to lay eggs in them Males then defend and fan the eggs Painting by Alexander Francis Lydon 1879 Further information Parental care Teleosts may spawn in the water column or more commonly on the substrate Water column spawners are mostly limited to coral reefs the fish will rush towards the surface and release their gametes This appears to protect the eggs from some predators and allow them to disperse widely via currents They receive no parental care Water column spawners are more likely than substrate spawners to spawn in groups Substrate spawning commonly occurs in nests rock crevices or even burrows Some eggs can stick to various surfaces like rocks plants wood or shells 88 Pregnant male seahorse Of the oviparous teleosts most 79 percent do not provide parental care 89 Male care is far more common than female care 89 90 Male territoriality preadapts a species to evolve male parental care 91 92 One unusual example of female parental care is in discuses which provide nutrients for their developing young in the form of mucus 93 Some teleost species have their eggs or young attached to or carried in their bodies For sea catfishes cardinalfishes jawfishes and some others the egg may be incubated or carried in the mouth a practice known as mouthbrooding In some African cichlids the eggs may be fertilised there In species like the banded acara young are brooded after they hatch and this may be done by both parents The timing of the release of young varies between species some mouthbrooders release new hatched young while other may keep then until they are juveniles In addition to mouthbrooding some teleost have also developed structures to carry young Male nurseryfish have a bony hook on their foreheads to carry fertilised eggs they remain on the hook until they hatch For seahorses the male has a brooding pouch where the female deposits the fertilised eggs and they remain there until they become free swimming juveniles Female banjo catfishes have structures on their belly to which the eggs attach 94 In some parenting species young from a previous spawning batch may stay with their parents and help care for the new young This is known to occur in around 19 species of cichlids in Lake Tanganyika These helpers take part in cleaning and fanning eggs and larvae cleaning the breeding hole and protecting the territory They have reduced growth rate but gain protection from predators Brood parasitism also exists among teleosts minnows may spawn in sunfish nests as well as nests of other minnow species The cuckoo catfish is known for laying eggs on the substrate as mouthbrooding cichclids collect theirs and the young catfish will eat the cichlid larvae Filial cannibalism occurs in some teleost families and may have evolved to combat starvation 95 Growth and development Edit Newly hatched Atlantic salmon with yolk sac Teleosts have four major life stages the egg the larva the juvenile and the adult Species may begin life in a pelagic environment or a demersal environment near the seabed Most marine teleosts have pelagic eggs which are light transparent and buoyant with thin envelopes Pelagic eggs rely on the ocean currents to disperse and receive no parental care When they hatch the larvae are planktonic and unable to swim They have a yolk sac attached to them which provides nutrients Most freshwater species produce demersal eggs which are thick pigmented relatively heavy and able to stick to substrates Parental care is much more common among freshwater fish Unlike their pelagic counterparts demersal larvae are able to swim and feed as soon as they hatch 80 Larval teleosts often look very different from adults particularly in marine species Some larvae were even considered different species from the adults Larvae have high mortality rates most die from starvation or predation within their first week As they grow survival rates increase and there is greater physiological tolerance and sensitivity ecological and behavioural competence 96 At the juvenile stage a teleost looks more like its adult form At this stage its axial skeleton internal organs scales pigmentation and fins are fully developed The transition from larvae to juvenile can be short and fairly simple lasting minutes or hours as in some damselfish while in other species like salmon squirrelfish gobies and flatfishes the transition is more complex and takes several weeks to complete 97 At the adult stage a teleost is able to produce viable gametes for reproduction Like many fish teleosts continue to grow throughout their lives Longevity depends on the species with some gamefish like European perch and largemouth bass living up to 25 years Rockfish appear to be the longest living teleosts with some species living over 100 years 98 Shoaling and schooling Edit Schooling predatory bluefin trevally sizing up schooling anchovies Main article Shoaling and schooling Many teleosts form shoals which serve multiple purposes in different species Schooling is sometimes an antipredator adaptation offering improved vigilance against predators It is often more efficient to gather food by working as a group and individual fish optimise their strategies by choosing to join or leave a shoal When a predator has been noticed prey fish respond defensively resulting in collective shoal behaviours such as synchronised movements Responses do not consist only of attempting to hide or flee antipredator tactics include for example scattering and reassembling Fish also aggregate in shoals to spawn 99 Relationship with humans EditMain article Fish in culture Economic importance Edit Fish farming in the sea off Scotland Main article Fishing Teleosts are economically important in different ways They are captured for food around the world A small number of species such as herring cod pollock anchovy tuna and mackerel provide people with millions of tons of food per year while many other species are fished in smaller amounts 100 They provide a large proportion of the fish caught for sport 101 Commercial and recreational fishing together provide millions of people with employment 102 A small number of productive species including carp salmon 103 tilapia and catfish are farmed commercially producing millions of tons of protein rich food per year The UN s Food and Agriculture Organization expects production to increase sharply so that by 2030 perhaps sixty two percent of food fish will be farmed 104 Fish are consumed fresh or may be preserved by traditional methods which include combinations of drying smoking and salting or fermentation 105 Modern methods of preservation include freezing freeze drying and heat processing as in canning Frozen fish products include breaded or battered fillets fish fingers and fishcakes Fish meal is used as a food supplement for farmed fish and for livestock Fish oils are made either from fish liver especially rich in vitamins A and D or from the bodies of oily fish such as sardine and herring and used as food supplements and to treat vitamin deficiencies 106 Some smaller and more colourful species serve as aquarium specimens and pets Sea wolves are used in the leather industry Isinglass is made from thread fish and drum fish 101 Impact on stocks Edit Capture of Atlantic Cod 1950 2005 FAO Human activities have affected stocks of many species of teleost through overfishing 107 pollution and global warming Among many recorded instances overfishing caused the complete collapse of the Atlantic cod population off Newfoundland in 1992 leading to Canada s indefinite closure of the fishery 108 Pollution especially in rivers and along coasts has harmed teleosts as sewage pesticides and herbicides have entered the water Many pollutants such as heavy metals organochlorines and carbamates interfere with teleost reproduction often by disrupting their endocrine systems In the roach river pollution has caused the intersex condition in which an individual s gonads contain both cells that can make male gametes such as spermatogonia and cells that can make female gametes such as oogonia Since endocrine disruption also affects humans teleosts are used to indicate the presence of such chemicals in water Water pollution caused local extinction of teleost populations in many northern European lakes in the second half of the twentieth century 109 The effects of climate change on teleosts could be powerful but are complex For example increased winter precipitation rain and snow could harm populations of freshwater fish in Norway whereas warmer summers could increase growth of adult fish 110 In the oceans teleosts may be able to cope with warming as it is simply an extension of natural variation in climate 111 It is uncertain how ocean acidification caused by rising carbon dioxide levels might affect teleosts 112 Other interactions Edit Service to science zebrafish being bred in a research institute A few teleosts are dangerous Some like eeltail catfish Plotosidae scorpionfish Scorpaenidae or stonefish Synanceiidae have venomous spines that can seriously injure or kill humans Some like the electric eel and the electric catfish can give a severe electric shock Others such as the piranha and barracuda have a powerful bite and have sometimes attacked human bathers 101 Reports indicate that some of the catfish family can be large enough to prey on human bathers Medaka and zebrafish are used as research models for studies in genetics and developmental biology The zebrafish is the most commonly used laboratory vertebrate 101 offering the advantages of genetic similarity to mammals small size simple environmental needs transparent larvae permitting non invasive imaging plentiful offspring rapid growth and the ability to absorb mutagens added to their water 113 In art Edit Teleost fishes have been frequent subjects in art reflecting their economic importance for at least 14 000 years They were commonly worked into patterns in Ancient Egypt acquiring mythological significance in Ancient Greece and Rome and from there into Christianity as a religious symbol artists in China and Japan similarly use fish images symbolically Teleosts became common in Renaissance art with still life paintings reaching a peak of popularity in the Netherlands in the 17th century In the 20th century different artists such as Klee Magritte Matisse and Picasso used representations of teleosts to express radically different themes from attractive to violent 114 The zoologist and artist Ernst Haeckel painted teleosts and other animals in his 1904 Kunstformen der Natur Haeckel had become convinced by Goethe and Alexander von Humboldt that by making accurate depictions of unfamiliar natural forms such as from the deep oceans he could not only discover the laws of their origin and evolution but also to press into the secret parts of their beauty by sketching and painting 115 Wall painting of fishing Tomb of Menna the scribe Thebes Ancient Egypt c 1422 1411 BC Italian Renaissance Fish Antonio Tanari c 1610 1630 in the Medici Villa Poggio a Caiano Dutch Golden Age painting Fish Still Life with Stormy Seas Willem Ormea and Abraham Willaerts 1636 Mandarin Fish by Bian Shoumin Qing dynasty 18th century Saito Oniwakamaru fights a giant carp at the Bishimon waterfall by Utagawa Kuniyoshi 19th century Still Life with Mackerel Lemons and Tomato Vincent van Gogh 1886 Teleostei by Ernst Haeckel 1904 Four species surrounded by scales Ostraciontes by Ernst Haeckel 1904 Ten teleosts with Lactoria cornuta in centre Fish Magic Paul Klee oil and watercolour varnished 1925Notes Edit The other two infraclasses are the Holostei bowfins and garfish and the paraphyletic Chondrostei sturgeons and reedfish References Edit Palmer Douglas 1999 The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs amp Prehistoric Animals Marshall Editions Developments ISBN 978 1 84028 152 1 The Paleobiology Database The Paleobiology Database 14 June 2013 Muller Johannes 1845 Uber den Bau und die Grenzen der Ganoiden und uber das naturliche System der Fische Archiv fur Naturgeschichte 11 1 129 teleost Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Patterson C Rosen D E 1977 Review of ichthyodectiform and other Mesozoic teleost fishes and the theory and practice of classifying fossils Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 158 2 81 172 hdl 2246 1224 a b c d Benton 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and Life Studies National Research Council 2013 Review of the Federal Ocean Acidification Research and Monitoring Plan National Academies Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 309 30152 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Five reasons why zebrafish make excellent research models NC3RS 10 April 2014 Retrieved 15 February 2016 Moyle Peter B Moyle Marilyn A May 1991 Introduction to fish imagery in art Environmental Biology of Fishes 31 1 5 23 doi 10 1007 bf00002153 S2CID 33458630 Richards Robert J The Tragic Sense of Ernst Haeckel His Scientific and Artistic Struggles PDF University of Chicago Retrieved 30 April 2016 Bibliography Edit Helfman G Collette B B Facey D E Bowen B W 2009 The Diversity of Fishes Biology Evolution and Ecology PDF 2nd ed Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 2494 2 Wootton Robert J Smith Carl 2014 Reproductive Biology of Teleost Fishes Wiley ISBN 978 1 118 89139 1 External links Edit Media related to Teleostei 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