FISH
ON LINE
A draft guide
to learning and teaching ichthyology
using the
FishBase information system[1]
by
Daniel Pauly[2]
Rainer Froese[3]
and
Maria Lourdes
Palomaresc
Abstract:
This guide provides a structure and case study material for a
computer-based course in ichthyology for upper undergraduate and graduates
students in biology or environmental science.
The key resource made accessible through this guide is FishBase, a large
database on the biology of fish, available on CD-ROM (for the Windows operating
system) and on the Internet (www.fishbase.org/search.cfm).
Following brief introductions to ichthyology and to FishBase, and to the
use of the latter to teach the former, the key aspects of ichthyology are
presented in five chapters covering Evolution and classification; Morphology and
biodiversity; Reproduction; Physiology; and Fishes as part of ecosystems.
For each of these chapters, one or several ‘Exercises’ are presented
describing how the relevant topics are covered in FishBase and describing how to
access that information. ‘Tasks for the Student’ are provided, along with
Internet links to relevant sources other than FishBase.
It is anticipated that this guide will improve as our experience with
FishBase as a teaching tool improves. Thus, a final chapter describes how users
(both students and teachers) may contribute to the frequent updates that are
anticipated for this guide, and to completing the coverage by FishBase of the
biology of fishes.
2.
Introduction
2.1.
What is
ichthyology?
2.2.
What
is FishBase?
2.3.
Why
use one to teach the other?
3.
Evolution
and Classification
3.1.
Phylogeny
and classification
3.2.
Darwin and
natural selection
3.3.
The species
concept
3.3.1.
What’s
in a name?
3.3.2.
Subspecies vs.
populations
3.3.3.
Within-species
diversity
3.3.4.
Common
names
3.3.5.
Exercise
1
4.
Morphology
and Biodiversity
4.1.
Diversity of
Indo-Pacific shore fishes
4.2.
Diversity of
shapes and sizes
4.2.1.
Exercise 2
4.3.1.
Exercise 3
4.4.
Diversity
of growth and mortality
4.4.1.
Exercise 4
4.5.
Diversity of habitats: inferences from occurrence records
4.5.1.
Exercise 5
4.6.
Diversity
of colors and sexual selection
4.6.1.
Exercise 6
4.7.
Diversity of food
and feeding habits
4.7.1.
Table
1
4.7.2.
Exercise 7
5.
Reproduction
5.1.
The reproductive
load concept
5.2.
Small eggs
and no worries
5.2.1.
Exercise 8
5.3.
Large eggs
and parental investment
5.3.1.
Exercise 9
5.4.
Variation
on the basic themes
5.4.1.
Exercise 10
6.
Physiology
6.1.
Metabolism, gills
and size
6.1.1.
Table
2
6.1.2.
Exercise 11
6.2.
Food
consumption
6.2.1.
Exercise 12
6.3.
Estimating
food consumption from empirical models
6.3.1.
Exercise 13
7.
Fish
as Part of Exploited Ecosystems
7.1.
Food webs
and trophic levels
7.2.
Trophic levels and sizes of fish
7.3.
Formal
description of food webs
7.3.1.
Exercise 14
11. Appendices
11.1.
Appendix
A: Ichthyology resources on the net
11.2.
Appendix B: fish-related web resources for UBC
students
Ichthyology, commonly defined as “the study of fish” or “that branch of zoology dealing with fish” has a long documented history, dating thousands of years back to the ancient Egyptians, Indians, Chinese, Greeks and Romans (Cuvier 1828).
This long, sustained interest in fish is due
to their double role as highly speciose denizens of a fascinating, yet alien
world, and as human food. It has generated, over the centuries, highly
heterogeneous information—mainly taxonomic, but also referring to
zoogeography, behavior, food, predators, environmental tolerances, etc.
This huge amount of information, embodied in a
widely scattered literature, has gradually forced ichthyologists to specialize,
and thus accounts on fish are now either global, but highly specialized (e.g.
Eschmeyer’s Catalog of fishes (1998)
or Pietsch and Grobecker’s Frogfishes of the world (1987) to name two outstanding
representatives), or local and deep (e.g. Fryer and Iles’ Cichlid Fishes of the Great Lakes of Africa (1972) or Groot and
Margolis’ Pacific Salmon Life Histories
(1991).
Thus, with a few exceptions such as the
massive Diversity of fishes (Helfman
et al. 1997), texts are lacking which bring together, on a global basis, all
aspects of ichthyology, such that they can be used for a specialized course,
and/or independent learning.
FishBase is an information system available in
the form of CD-ROMS and on-line, at www.fishbase.org/search.cfm,
covering all fishes of the world in a fashion that is both global and deep.
FishBase 99, whose accompanying book is available both in English and French,
covers over 23,000 species of fish, i.e. most of the 25,000 extant species, and
addresses the needs of a vast array of potential users, ranging from fisheries
managers to biology teachers. The features of FishBase that enable it to meet
such a wide range of needs reside in its architecture, which makes extensive use
of modern relational database techniques.
Other features of FishBase are:
·
all
information on a given species in the database is accessible through a unique
scientific or common name;
·
the wide
use of multiple choice field structures standardized qualitative information;
·
numeric
fields record quantitative information that has been previously standardized;
·
numerous
cross-relationships between data tables enable previously unknown relationships
to be discovered; and
·
complementary
databases provided by colleagues and linked to FishBase proper, contribute to
making the combined package the most comprehensive data source of its kind.
For teachers of aquatic biology, or of specialized ichthyology courses, the uses of FishBase will range from practical solutions to theoretical issues:
·
FishBase
is directly useable as data source (i.e., as an electronic encyclopedia on
fish), thus complementing classical sources of information on fish, e.g., the Zoological
Record or Aquatic
Science and Fisheries Abstracts,
and helping overcome the lack of scientific literature, especially in developing
countries;
·
the many
pictures in FishBase can be used, just as those in taxonomic books, to provide
students with a visual impression of the morphological and color diversity of
fish, and/or of specific features of various groups;
·
students
will be able to assess the state of knowledge on various groups of fish, and
thus obtain some guidance in identifying worthwhile projects; and
·
the
synoptical view that FishBase produces by assembling and structuring all
available information on one species will help students to obtain material for
study (see above) and, perhaps more importantly, to develop a sense of how
scattered bits of knowledge can be used to ‘reconstruct’ species, and to
show how these fit into their environments, thus encouraging a ‘holistic
view’, as now required for most of what we do in the biological sciences.
Thus, a series of lectures on ichthyology may be conceived, based on the following elements:
·
show
FishBase pictures through an introductory lecture, to highlight the diversity
and colorfulness of fish and similarity of external morphology in related groups
(this hopefully would serve to generate interest in the course as a whole, and
introduce fish classification);
·
compare
the early classification schemes in Cuvier (1828) with a recent one, e.g., that
in the Catalog of fishes (Eschmeyer 1998), ‘hosted’ by FishBase and largely
identical with the widely used classification in Nelson (1994);
·
introduce
the species concept and its requirements (a formal description with figures, a
binomen, a holotype,
a type locality, etc.) and implications (synonymies, sister species, etc.),
using FishBase as source of examples, and its Glossary for definition of terms;
·
define
the characteristics (meristics,
morphometrics)
through which fish species are usually defined and hence identified, and compare
identification through keys with computer-based identification using the
appropriate FishBase routine (see ‘Quick Identification’);
·
show how
museum and other occurrence records, as included in FishBase, can be used to
define distribution ranges and habitats, which can then be used for ecological
inferences;
·
show how
the latitudinal ranges of fish species can be used to test various hypotheses,
e.g., on the relationship between fish biodiversity and shelf area (for marine
species) or land area (for freshwater species);
·
define
and illustrate various life history strategies, and analyze their frequency
distribution throughout the world. Show, e.g., that salmon-type anadromy
is extremely rare in subtropical or tropical species (it is well documented only
in hilsa, Tenualosa
ilisha, ranging from Iraq to Myanmar). Show
how students can identify the relative frequencies of different strategies and
draw inferences from these;
·
let each
student select a species, print out the relevant FishBase synopsis and
complement it based on a literature review (and send the result to the FishBase
Team); and
·
show or
let students derive quantitative relationships between different expressions of
fish physiology (e.g., respiration, growth) and temperature (and hence latitude)
and identify modifying factors (salinity, gill size, food type, etc.).
In the context of higher education, FishBase
may also serve as background for Bachelor’s or Master’s theses wherein an
area of ichthyology not presently or suitably covered by the tables in the
latest version of FishBase would be ‘broken up’ into choice, numeric and
text fields, entered and then analyzed on a comparative basis[4].
There are different ways in which objects can be classified and the human mind is very good at generating criteria for classification. This is why the following list, assembled by the Argentinean author Jorge Luis Borges, and purportedly extracted from an ancient Chinese encyclopedia (Lakoff 1987), strikes us as funny:
“…it is written that animals are divided into:
·
those
that belong to the Emperor;
·
embalmed
ones;
·
those
that are trained;
·
suckling
pigs;
·
mermaids;
·
fabulous
ones;
·
stray
dogs;
·
those
that are included in this classification;
·
those
that tremble as if they were mad;
·
innumerable
ones;
·
those
drawn with a very fine camel’s hair brush;
·
others;
·
those
that have just broken a flower vase;
·
those
that resemble flies from a distance.”
The two major criteria that are used to classify things (neither met by
Borges’ list), are utility or affinity:
·
Utility
generates
classifications whose objects are easy to
find. An example of such a classification would be a dictionary, whose
entries are arranged alphabetically;
·
Affinity,
on the other hand generates classification wherein adjacent objects s are
straightforward to compare (because
adjacent entries share important features).
In the European middle ages, animal books (‘Bestiarum’) were usually ordered alphabetically. However, such
ordering eventually struck people as odd, especially as people realized, in the
course of long debates on ‘universals’ (on whether names are ‘natural’
attributes of things, or not), that names are arbitrary labels.
Thus, authors gradually began seeking for natural classifications,
wherein organisms are ordered by affinities, these affinities being initially
conceived as reflective of the general rules which god used when creating these
organisms.
The work of Linnaeus, whose Systema
Naturae, the tenth edition of which in 1758 still marks the beginning of
zoological nomenclature, is an example of such attempts to identify the
underlying affinities among plants and animals. The resulting ‘natural’
classifications have started to make sense, however, only since Darwin, in The
Origin of Species (1859), provided a rationale for affinities, that is,
shared ancestry. Darwin not only provided a basis for the affinities between
organisms, however. He also provided a mechanism by which new species and higher
taxa emerged out of common ancestors. This mechanism he called natural
selection.
Natural selection is the core of Charles Darwin’s work and is best
defined in his own terms: “many of every
species are destroyed either in egg or [young or mature (the former state the
more common)]. In the course of thousand generations infinitesimally small
differences must inevitably tell; when unusually cold winter, or hot or dry
summer comes, then out of the whole body of individuals of any species, if there
be the smallest differences in their structure, habits, instincts [senses],
health, etc., <it> will on an average tell; as conditions change a rather
larger proportion will be preserved: so if the chief check to increase falls on
seeds or eggs, so will, in the course of 1,000 generations, or ten thousand,
those seeds (like one with down to fly) which fly furthest and get scattered
most ultimately rear most plants, and such small differences tend to be
hereditary like shades of expression in human countenance. (Darwin 1842)
Natural selection, thus, consists of three elements:
·
organisms
usually produce far more progeny than their habitat can accommodate;
·
each
member of the progeny differs in some inheritable
attributes or properties;
·
there is
a tendency for those progeny with attributes or properties that are more
suitable for the habitat in question to suffer a lower rate of mortality and to
reproduce better than their siblings.
These three features jointly cause animals and plants to try to track fluctuation of the environment. In this process, and in conjunction with other mechanisms such as the ‘founder effect’ and the effect of neutral selection, isolated populations can become so different from a mother species that they will not be able to mate if the barrier that once separated them disappears.
Species are “groups of actually (or potentially) interbreeding natural populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups” (Mayr 1942, p. 120).
Since species are the basic rank of biological nomenclature, naming
species is very important and we now follow for this a model proposed by
Linnaeus, (see above), wherein the species is defined by a so-called binomen
consisting of a unique genus name, always starting with a capital letter, and a species
epithet
, which is never capitalized; both are written in italics font. With regard to
the capitalization rule, simply recall that the binomen is the short version of
an earlier mode of description wherein a whole paragraph was used to describe,
and thereby define, a species. The binomen, thus, was the start of a sentence.
An important addition to a species name is the name of the author who
first described that species and the date of that description; as in, for
example, the Linnaean species Salmo
trutta Linnaeus, 1758. At times you will
encounter a species, e.g. Oncorhynchus
mykiss, with an author’s name and date in
brackets, e.g. (Walbaum, 1792). In this case, it means that the species whose
epithet is mykiss was originally
described as a memeber of another genus, in this case Salmo, and due to better understanding of its relationships with
other trouts, was subsequently moved into the genus Oncorhynchus which it
is now a member.
Another rule important to animal species names are that the genus part
of the name must be unique to the animal kingdom. From the year 2000 on, it must
also be unique among all organisms. Thus, when a generic name is coined, the
author must verify that this name has never been used by any other zoologist,
and, from 2000 on, by any botanist, bacteriologist, etc. The apparently daunting
task is not impossible, however, as global catalogues of organism names are now
being created; the most important of these is the Species 2000 catalogue (see www.sp2000.org).
Given the mechanism of natural selection, every fish population
can be conceived as being a potential new species. All one needs to imagine is
that populations become isolated from others long enough for their members to
lose the ability to mate with those of other populations. However, as long as
some members of each population continue to mate with members of other
populations of the same species, a mating barrier will not emerge (only a small
gene flow is required to prevent the emergence of a mating barrier). Thus
populations, though it might be easy to define them in terms of attributes such
as number of scales or spines or body proportions, should not be given full
taxonomic status because (contrary to species) they usually do not maintain
themselves over a long period. Not having taxonomic status also means they
should not have formal names, such as the trinomen
that are still frequently used today, e.g. Oreochromis
niloticus niloticus.
The third part of the trinomen refers to a subspecies, which is, in fact, a
population, or, to use a term much used in earlier times, a ‘race’.
Species differ as to the extent of their diversity. Some species consist of a single population of a few individuals — these are often endangered species. Others have wide ranges and a rich structure of populations – the situation which tempted authors to define subspecies as populations at opposite ends of a geographical range often differ in several characters. However, its is usually not objectively defined within-species diversity which has motivated authors to define subspecies, but national or local research traditions, and the resources available for taxonomy. Thus, Berg (1965) established numerous subspecies and even lower taxa for the fishes of adjacent lakes and rivers of the former Soviet Union, while subspecies are rarely proposed by taxonomists working on the many coral reef species of the Indo-Pacific, although their distribution spans thousands of kilometers, and detailed studies may justify this (at least if one believes in subspecies).
The common
names
of fish are what most people know about most fish. Thus, capturing the common
names of fish in various languages captures most of what people who speak these
languages know about fish. For this reason, FishBase includes over 90,000 names
of fish in over 100 languages, ranging from widespread languages such as English
or Spanish, to languages spoken by few speakers, such as Haida in Haida Gwaii,
British Columbia. Anthropologists, notably Berlin (1965), have established that
essentially all ethnic groups in the world spontaneously differentiate a similar
number (about 500) of ‘kinds’ of organisms, the kinds roughly corresponding
to genera, with important species being named, as well as some of their life
history stages.
The sounds in fish names also generate interesting patterns. Thus, small
fishes (i.e., fishes with small values of Lmax)
tend to have names containing high pitch sound such as ‘i’ or ‘ee’,
while large fish tend to have names with lower pitch sounds, such as ‘a’, or
‘aa’ (Berlin 1992; Palomares et al. 1999).
Task for the Student:
Classification related topics covered in FishBase:
|
The diversity of fish is larger than for any other vertebrate group. Not
only are there more species of fish (25,000) than of all other vertebrates
together, but also the range of body shapes and sizes of fish is larger than for
mammals, birds or reptiles. Consequently, the range of habitat occupied is
larger as well.
The triangle formed by Indonesia, the Philippines and New Guinea,
collectively referred to as the ‘East Indies’, form the center of marine
fish biodiversity in the Indo-Pacific, with about 2,800 species naturally
occurring there. These numbers drop with distance from this center to about 500
species in Hawaii and 120 species in the Easter Islands. The number of endemic
species, i.e., fishes that do not occur outside a given area, increases with
distance from the center, supporting one hypothesis that species evolved in the
outer region and accumulated in the center. Another hypothesis holds that
species evolved in the rich and stable habitats of the East Indies and were
carried to the periphery by currents. Randall gives 5 explanations for fish
biodiversity in the Indo-Pacific:
· Sea surface temperatures in the East Indies were more stable during the glacial periods and thus extinction rates were lower than in the periphery;
·
Shelf
area in the East Indies is much longer than that of the periphery, again making
extinctions less likely;
·
Dispersal
of shore fishes to remote islands occurs during the planktonic larval phase
which lasts from several days to several weeks. However, the larval phase of
many species is not long enough for long stretches of open ocean water, thus
restricting their distribution;
·
Existing
current patterns support dispersal of fish larvae from the area as well as
convergence of larvae of species that have evolved in the periphery towards the
East Indies;
·
During
the last 700,000 years, there have been at least 3 ice age events that reduced
the water level in the East Indies and separated populations long enough to
become different species.
Task for the Student:
Biodiversity related topics in FishBase:
|
The shapes of fish are also extremely diverse, and include – besides
the torpedo shape perceived as ‘typical’ for fishes and termed
‘fusiform’– shapes ranging from the serpentine (in the Anguilliformes
and other orders) to the avian (in ‘flying
fishes’), with Latimera
chalumnae sporting
limbs resembling, but not being used as, those of land-based tetrapods.
Shape and other morphological features are the key characteristics used
to date for classifying fishes, and hence understanding their classification
requires a basic overview of the basic shapes of fishes, as can be obtained from
the outline drawings included, for each of the existing 500 fish families.
Size is the most important attribute of individual organisms; it
determines what can be their food, and the extent to which they can be the prey
of other organisms. Size also determines how much food an animal requires to
eat, how fast it can swim, and to a large extent, where it can live.
The maximum size of fish can range from one centimeter in Philippine
gobies,
e.g., Pandaka pygmea to 13-15 meters in the Whale
shark, Rhincodon typus. This diversity of
size allowed widely different environments to be colonized, ranging from
temporary puddles to the central gyres of the open ocean. However, colonizing
these environments required other adaptations, involving growth and mortality
rates, and their various correlates, discussed below.
The brain size per body weight of adult animals is related to the
sensory and behavioral capabilities of the respective species. For example,
fishes with well-developed electrosensing capabilities are known to have large
brains. The brain is the organ with the highest energy and oxygen demand, and
thus, fishes as well as other animals have evolved brain sizes that are neither
too small nor too large respective to the niches they occupy in nature.
Task for the Student:
Brain size related topics covered in FishBase:
|
In spite of this wide diversity of fish sizes, clear patterns do emerge:
tropical fish tend to be smaller and faster-growing than their cold-water
counterparts and their natural mortality tends to be higher. This is due to high
temperature elevating the metabolic rates of tropical fish relative to their
cold-water counterparts.
Correspondingly, the natural mortalities experienced by fish, which are
a function of their sizes, range from values which exterminate an entire cohort
in a few months, e.g., the round
herring,
to 50 and more years in the lake
sturgeon
and 150 years in the orange
roughy. These enormous differences in life span
allow fish to respond differently to habitat variations. Small, short-lived fish
track such variations, for example, when growing up in temporary puddles and
laying desiccation-proof eggs before they dry up, thus being able to live
through dry periods or produce a successful cohort every 1-3 years or so (as may
happen in such long-lived fish as cod).
Task for the Student:
Size, growth and mortality related topics covered in FishBase:
|
Fish inhabit more diverse habitats than any other group of vertebrates,
ranging from Himalayan or Andean brooks at 4000 meters to abyssal depth at 10
kilometers, spanning an extremely high range of pressures. The range of
temperatures that can be tolerated is also very large, from minus 2oC
as tolerated by the Antarctic fish, Pagothenia
borchgrevinki (which sport anti-freeze substances in their blood; see
Eastman and Devries 1985); to up to 40o C for Oreochromis
alcalicus,
which lives at the edge of a hot spring in Lake Nakuru in Kenya. (This does not
consider the temperature tolerance of deep-sea vent fishes, which have not yet
been studied in detail).
Because fish occur only in habitats which they can tolerate, and tend to
be abundant in those habitats to which they are best adapted, occurrence records
kept by museums can be used to reconstruct the habitat preferences of fishes
whose ecology is otherwise unknown. Such records have been named bioquads
because they refer to biodiversity and consist of four key elements: (a) the
name of the organism; (b) the place where it was caught; (c) the source or
person who sampled or identified it; and (d) the date. FishBase makes wide use
of bioquads for documenting the distribution of fish and this can be emulated by
ichthyology students who may assemble bioquads from FishBase and other sources,
notably the Internet. (see Appendix
A
for sources of bioquads).
Task for the Student:
Distribution and occurrence related topics covered in FishBase:
|