Newsflash

Receive your newsletter electronically!

To save on the cost of printing and postage, plus better manage our memberships, we need your e-mail addresses. Send them to: "Mary Hermansky." Starting November 2009 - we will start sending the newsletter to your email instead of regular US Mail.

Feed Display
Sea Notes
A Monterey Bay Aquarium forum to inspire conservation of the oceans.
  • The Wide World of Jellyfish
    It's been quite a week for jellyfish fans. These spineless, brainless beauties have been all over the news, all over the world. Locally, long-distance swimmer Bruckner Chase made it across Monterey Bay last week to raise awareness of the oceans...
  • Magellanic Magic
    “Tango gets a fish!” Mika Yoshida, aviculturist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, calls out each time a Magellanic penguin (Spheniscus magellanicus) takes a small fish from her hand. Tango—who came from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil—tips her head back and the...
  • Not Your Average 9-to-5: An Inside Look at the Life of an Aquarist
    Imagine if the first task of your day was to feed shrimp to an octopus, unload a truckload of live sardines, or don a wetsuit and swim with sharks. Welcome to the workaday world of our aquarists, whose lives are...
September 2010 October 2010
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30
Home Fish Anatomy Respiratory and Circulation
Killer tools to troubleshoot DNS and Email

Respiratory and Circulatory Systems

The respiratory system of trout and salmon differs greatly from land animals. Check out this diagram. What organs are unique to fish?

The circulatory system of trout and salmon, all bony fish, share characteristics common to many other animals. Some characteristics are unique. Check out this diagram. What organs are unique to fish? What organs and processes do fist share with other animals?

Click here for a close-up view of a fish's respiratory system

Most fish, including trout and salmon, breathe through gills located on either side of the pharynx. The gills are feathery filaments containing many capillaries and a large surface area for the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide. Trout and salmon breathe through the mouth, pumping water the gill filaments. They exhale through a single opening, the gill slits, which is protected by a gill cover.

Like most complex animals, fish have a closed circulatory system with a heart that pumps blood through the body. The heart consists to two muscular chambers that pump the blood: An atrium and a ventricle. Blood from the body gathers in the atrium, which is then pumped into the ventricle. The ventricle pumps the blood into a muscular vessel called the aorta. Blood goes directly from the aorta to the fine capillary network in the gills, where the exchange of gas takes place. From the gills, the blood travels throughout the body providing tissue and organs with life giving oxygen and removing carbon dioxide. Once the blood has completed its journey through the body, it gathers in a thin-walled sac called the sinus venosus before entering the atrium once again.

Excreation

Last Updated (Tuesday, 07 July 2009 16:45)

 
There are no upcoming events currently scheduled.
View full calendar
Picture Gallery
step 2009-5
Image Detail
Banner

Warning: file_get_contents(/home/joomla/mbstp/components/com_sh404sef/cache/shCacheContent.shlock) [function.file-get-contents]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/joomla/mbstp/components/com_sh404sef/shCache.php on line 138

Warning: file_get_contents(/home/joomla/mbstp/components/com_sh404sef/cache/shCacheContent.shlock) [function.file-get-contents]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/joomla/mbstp/components/com_sh404sef/shCache.php on line 138

Warning: file_get_contents(/home/joomla/mbstp/components/com_sh404sef/cache/shCacheContent.shlock) [function.file-get-contents]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/joomla/mbstp/components/com_sh404sef/shCache.php on line 138