Marine vertebrates
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Marine vertebrates are
vertebrate Vertebrates () comprise all animal taxa within the subphylum Vertebrata () ( chordates with backbones), including all mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. Vertebrates represent the overwhelming majority of the phylum Chordata, with ...
s that live in marine environments. These are the marine
fish Fish are aquatic, craniate, gill-bearing animals that lack limbs with digits. Included in this definition are the living hagfish, lampreys, and cartilaginous and bony fish as well as various extinct related groups. Approximately 95% of ...
and the marine
tetrapod Tetrapods (; ) are four-limbed vertebrate animals constituting the superclass Tetrapoda (). It includes extant and extinct amphibians, sauropsids ( reptiles, including dinosaurs and therefore birds) and synapsids ( pelycosaurs, extinct t ...
s (primarily
seabird Seabirds (also known as marine birds) are birds that are adapted to life within the marine environment. While seabirds vary greatly in lifestyle, behaviour and physiology, they often exhibit striking convergent evolution, as the same enviro ...
s,
marine reptiles Marine reptiles are reptiles which have become secondarily adapted for an aquatic or semiaquatic life in a marine environment. The earliest marine reptile mesosaurus (not to be confused with mosasaurus), arose in the Permian period during the ...
, and
marine mammal Marine mammals are aquatic mammals that rely on the ocean and other marine ecosystems for their existence. They include animals such as seals, whales, manatees, sea otters and polar bears. They are an informal group, unified only by their ...
s). Vertebrates are a
subphylum In zoological nomenclature, a subphylum is a taxonomic rank below the rank of phylum. The taxonomic rank of " subdivision" in fungi and plant taxonomy is equivalent to "subphylum" in zoological taxonomy. Some plant taxonomists have also used th ...
of
chordate A chordate () is an animal of the phylum Chordata (). All chordates possess, at some point during their larval or adult stages, five synapomorphies, or primary physical characteristics, that distinguish them from all the other taxa. These fi ...
s that have a vertebral column (backbone). The vertebral column provides the central support structure for an Endoskeleton, internal skeleton. The internal skeleton gives shape, support, and protection to the body and can provide a means of anchoring fins or limbs to the body. The vertebral column also serves to house and protect the spinal cord that lies within the column. Marine vertebrates can be divided into two groups, marine
fish Fish are aquatic, craniate, gill-bearing animals that lack limbs with digits. Included in this definition are the living hagfish, lampreys, and cartilaginous and bony fish as well as various extinct related groups. Approximately 95% of ...
and marine
tetrapod Tetrapods (; ) are four-limbed vertebrate animals constituting the superclass Tetrapoda (). It includes extant and extinct amphibians, sauropsids ( reptiles, including dinosaurs and therefore birds) and synapsids ( pelycosaurs, extinct t ...
s.


Marine fish

Fish fall into two main groups: Bony fish, fish with bony internal skeletons and cartilaginous fish, fish with cartilaginous internal skeletons. Fish anatomy and Fish physiology, physiology generally includes a Fish heart, two-chambered heart, Fish vision, eyes adapted to seeing underwater, and a skin protected by Fish scale, scales and mucus, mucous. They typically breathe by extracting oxygen from water through Fish gill, gills. Fish use Fish fin, fins to propel and stabilise themselves in the water. Over 33,000 species of fish have been described as of 2017, of which about 20,000 are marine fish.


Jawless fish

Hagfish form a class of about 20 species of eel-shaped, Mucus, slime-producing marine fish. They are the only known living animals that have a skull but no vertebral column. Lampreys form a superclass containing 38 known extant species of Agnatha, jawless fish. The adult lamprey is characterized by a toothed, funnel-like sucking mouth. Although they are well known for boring into the flesh of other fish to hematophagy, suck their blood, only 18 species of lampreys are actually parasitic. Together hagfish and lampreys are the sister group to vertebrates. Living hagfish remain similar to hagfish from around 300 million years ago. The lampreys are a very ancient lineage of vertebrates, though their exact relationship to hagfishes and Gnathostomata, jawed vertebrates is still a matter of dispute. Molecular analysis since 1992 has suggested that hagfish are most closely related to lampreys, and so also are vertebrates in a monophyletic sense. Others consider them a sister group of vertebrates in the common taxon of craniata. File:Eptatretus polytrema.jpg, Hagfish are the only known living animals with a skull but no vertebral column. File:Eudontomyzon mariae Dunai ingola.jpg, Lampreys are often parasitic and have a toothed, funnel-like sucking mouth File:Pteraspidomorphi.gif, The extinct Pteraspidomorphi, ancestral to jawed vertebrates Pteraspidomorphi is an extinct class (biology), class of early jawless fish ancestral to jawed vertebrates. The few characteristics they share with the latter are now considered as primitive for all vertebrates.


Cartilaginous fish

Cartilaginous fish, such as sharks and Batoidea, rays, have Fish jaw, jaws and skeletons made of cartilage rather than bone. Megalodon is an extinct species of shark that lived about 28 to 1.5 Ma. It looked much like a stocky version of the great white shark, but was much larger with fossil lengths reaching . Found in all oceans it was one of the largest and most powerful predators in vertebrate history, and probably had a profound impact on marine life. The Greenland shark has the longest known lifespan of all vertebrates, about 400 years. * File:Acanthodes BW spaced.jpg, Cartilaginous fishes may have evolved from spiny sharks File:Myliobatis aquila sasrája.jpg, Stingray File:Manta ray - Chura-umi Aquarium.jpg, The manta ray, largest ray in the world, has been targeted by fisheries and is now List of threatened rays, vulnerable. File:Pristis clavata 2.jpg, Sawfish are rays with long rostrum (anatomy), rostrums resembling a saw. All are now endangered or critically endangered File:Megalodon_size_chart.png, The extinct megalodon resembled a giant great white shark File:Somniosus microcephalus1.jpg, The Greenland shark lives longer than any other vertebrate File:Rhincodon typus (recropped).jpg, The largest Extant taxon, extant fish, the whale shark, is now a vulnerable species


Bony fish

Bony fish have Fish jaw, jaws and skeletons made of bone rather than cartilage. About 90% of the world's fish species are bony fish. Bony fish also have hard, bony plates called operculum (fish), operculum which help them respire and protect their gills, and they often possess a swim bladder which they use for better control of their buoyancy. Bony fish can be further divided into those with lobe fins and those with ray fins. Lobe fins have the form of fleshy wiktionary:lobe, lobes supported by bony stalks which extend from the body. Lobe fins evolved into the legs of the first tetrapod land vertebrates, so by extension an early ancestor of humans was a lobe-finned fish. Apart from the coelacanths and the lungfishes, lobe-finned fishes are now extinct. The rest of the modern fish have ray fins. These are made of webs of skin supported by bony or horny spines (rays) which can be erected to control the fin stiffness. File:Carassius wild golden fish 2013 G1 (2).jpg, Ray-finned fish (Prussian carp) File:Coelacanth-bgiu.png, Lobe-finned fish
(coelacanth) File:Istiophorus platypterus.jpg, Sailfish File:Anguilla japonica 1856.jpg, Eel File:Seepferdlein.jpg, Seahorse, Sea-
horse
File:Sunfish.jpg, Ocean sunfish File:Humpback anglerfish.png, Anglerfish File:Tetraodon-hispidus.jpg, Pufferfish File:Särkänniemi - fish.png, Clown triggerfish File:Synchiropus splendidus 2 Luc Viatour cropped.png, Mandarin dragonet


Marine tetrapods

A
tetrapod Tetrapods (; ) are four-limbed vertebrate animals constituting the superclass Tetrapoda (). It includes extant and extinct amphibians, sauropsids ( reptiles, including dinosaurs and therefore birds) and synapsids ( pelycosaurs, extinct t ...
(Greek for ''four feet'') is a vertebrate with Limb (anatomy), limbs (feet). Tetrapods evolved from ancient lobe-finned fishes about 400 million years ago during the Devonian Period when their earliest ancestors emerged from the sea and adapted to Vertebrate land invasion, living on land. This change from a body plan for breathing and navigating in gravity-neutral water to a body plan with mechanisms enabling the animal to breath in air without dehydrating and move on land is one of the most profound evolutionary changes known.as PDF
/ref> Tetrapods can be divided into four classes: amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. Marine tetrapods are tetrapods that returned from land back to the sea again. The first returns to the ocean may have occurred as early as the Carboniferous Period whereas other returns occurred as recently as the Cenozoic, as in cetaceans, pinnipeds, and several Lissamphibia, modern amphibians.


Amphibians

Amphibians (Greek for ''both kinds of life'') live part of their life in water and part on land. They mostly require fresh water to reproduce. A few inhabit brackish water, but there are no true marine amphibians. There have been reports, however, of amphibians invading marine waters, such as a Black Sea invasion by the natural hybrid ''Pelophylax esculentus'' reported in 2010.


Reptiles

Reptiles (Late Latin for ''creeping'' or ''crawling'') do not have an aquatic larval stage, and in this way are unlike amphibians. Most reptiles are oviparous, although several species of squamates are viviparity, viviparous, as were some extinct aquatic clades — the fetus develops within the mother, contained in a placenta rather than an eggshell. As amniotes, reptile eggs are surrounded by membranes for protection and transport, which adapt them to reproduction on dry land. Many of the viviparous species feed their fetuses through various forms of placenta analogous to those of mammals, with some providing initial care for their hatchlings. Some reptiles are more closely related to birds than other reptiles, and many scientists prefer to make Reptilia a monophyletic group which includes the birds. Extant taxon, Extant non-avian reptiles which inhabit or frequent the sea include sea turtles, sea snakes, terrapins, the marine iguana, and the saltwater crocodile. Currently, of the approximately 12,000 extant reptile species and sub-species, only about 100 of are classed as marine reptiles. Except for some sea snakes, most extant marine reptiles are oviparity, oviparous and need to return to land to lay their eggs. Apart from sea turtles, the species usually spend most of their lives on or near land rather than in the ocean. Sea snakes generally prefer shallow waters nearby land, around islands, especially waters that are somewhat sheltered, as well as near estuaries.Stidworthy J. 1974. Snakes of the World. Grosset & Dunlap Inc. 160 pp. .[ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/009/y0870e/y0870e65.pdf Sea snakes] a
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Accessed 7 August 2007.
Unlike land snakes, sea snakes have evolved flattened tails which help them swim. File:Marine-Iguana-Espanola.jpg, Marine iguana File:Leatherback sea turtle Tinglar, USVI (5839996547).jpg, Leatherback sea turtle File:SaltwaterCrocodile('Maximo').jpg, Saltwater crocodile File:Micrurus fulviusHolbrookV3P10AA.jpg, Marine snakes have flattened tails File:Ichthyosaurus BW.jpg, The ancient ''Ichthyosaurus communis'' independently evolved flippers similar to dolphins Some extinction, extinct marine reptiles, such as ichthyosaurs, evolved to be viviparity, viviparous and had no requirement to return to land. Ichthyosaurs resembled dolphins. They first appeared about 245 million years ago and disappeared about 90 million years ago. The terrestrial ancestor of the ichthyosaur had no features already on its back or tail that might have helped along the evolutionary process. Yet the ichthyosaur developed a dorsal fin, dorsal and Caudal fin, tail fin which improved its ability to swim.Martill D.M. (1993). "Soupy Substrates: A Medium for the Exceptional Preservation of Ichthyosaurs of the Posidonia Shale (Lower Jurassic) of Germany". ''Kaupia - Darmstädter Beiträge zur Naturgeschichte'', 2 : 77-97. The biologist Stephen Jay Gould said the ichthyosaur was his favourite example of convergent evolution. The earliest marine reptiles arose in the Permian. During the Mesozoic many groups of reptiles became adapted to life in the seas, including ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, mosasaurs, nothosaurs, placodonts, sea turtles, thalattosaurs and thalattosuchians. Marine reptiles were less numerous after mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous.


Birds

Seabirds, Marine birds are adaptation, adapted to life within the marine (ocean), marine environment. They are often called ''seabirds''. While marine birds vary greatly in lifestyle, behaviour and physiology, they often exhibit striking convergent evolution, as the same environmental problems and feeding ecological niche, niches have resulted in similar adaptations. Examples include albatross, penguins, gannets, and auks. In general, marine birds live longer, mating, breed later and have fewer young than terrestrial birds do, but they invest a great deal of time in their young. Most species nest in Bird colony, colonies, which can vary in size from a few dozen birds to millions. Many species are famous for undertaking long annual bird migration, migrations, crossing the equator or circumnavigating the Earth in some cases. They feed both at the ocean's surface and below it, and even feed on each other. Marine birds can be highly pelagic, coastal, or in some cases spend a part of the year away from the sea entirely. Some marine birds plummet from heights, plunging through the water leaving vapour-like trails, similar to that of fighter planes. Gannets plunge into the water at up to 100 kilometres per hour (60 mph). They have air sacs under their skin in their face and chest which act like bubble-wrap, cushioning the impact with the water. File:Goéland argenté - Julien Salmon.jpg, European herring gull attack herring schools from above File:Pygoscelis papua -Nagasaki Penguin Aquarium -swimming underwater-8a.jpg, Gentoo penguin swimming underwater File:Morus serrator.jpg, Gannets "divebomb" at high speed File:Diomedea exulans in flight - SE Tasmania.jpg, Albatrosses range over huge areas of ocean and regularly circle the globe. The first marine birds evolved in the Cretaceous geological period, period, and modern marine bird families emerged in the Paleogene.


Mammals

Mammals (from Latin for ''breast'') are characterised by the presence of mammary glands which in Female#Mammalian female, females produce milk for feeding (nursing) their young. There are about 130 living and recently extinct marine mammal species such as Pinniped, seals, dolphins, whales, manatees, sea otters and polar bears. They do not represent a distinct taxon or systematic grouping, but are instead unified by their reliance on the marine environment for feeding. Both cetaceans and sirenians are fully aquatic and therefore are obligate water dwellers. Seals and sea-lions are semiaquatic; they spend the majority of their time in the water, but need to return to land for important activities such as mating, breeding in the wild, breeding and molting. In contrast, both otters and the polar bear are much less adapted to aquatic living. Their diet varies considerably as well: some may eat zooplankton; others may eat fish, squid, shellfish, and sea-grass; and a few may eat other mammals. In a process of convergent evolution, marine mammals such as dolphins and whales redeveloped their body plan to parallel the streamlined wiktionary:fusiform, fusiform body plan of pelagic fish. Front legs became flipper (anatomy), flippers and back legs disappeared, a dorsal fin reappeared and the tail morphed into a powerful horizontal Fluke (tail), fluke. This body plan is an adaptation to being an active predator in a high drag (physics), drag environment. A parallel convergence occurred with the now extinct ichthyosaur. File:Anim1754 - Flickr - NOAA Photo Library.jpg, Endangered blue whale, largest animal ever File:Humpback whale NOAA.jpg, Humpback whale straining krill File:Tursiops truncatus 01.jpg, Bottlenose dolphin, highest encephalization of any animal after humans File:Dugong Marsa Alam.jpg, Dugong grazing on seagrass File:Walrus.jpg, Walrus coming up for air File:Adult Male Elephant Seals Battling.jpg, Battling sea elephants File:Polar Bear - Alaska (cropped).jpg, Polar bear


See also

*Marine habitat *Marine invertebrate *Marine life


References

{{aquatic ecosystem topics, expanded=marine Marine vertebrates, Marine biology Biological oceanography