Respiratory SystemAgnathans are characterized by seven or more paired gill pouches. The bronchial arches supporting the gill pouches lie close to the body surface. MetabolismAgnathans are ectothermic or cold blooded, meaning they do not have to warm themselves through eating. Therefore, Agnathan metabolism is slow as well as the fact that Agnathans do not have to eat as much. They have no stomach. Body coveringThe only modern Agnathan body covering is skin. There are no scales. Extinct Agnathans had thick body plates (see below). AppendagesAgnathans have no paired appendages, although they do have a tail and a coddle fin. SkeletonThe internal skeleton of the Agnatha is not bony but rather cartilaginous (made up of dense connective tissue). Also, Agnathans have a notochord their whole life, a characteristic distinctive of the class. This notochord is the first primitive vertebral column. ReproductionFertilization is external, as is development. There is no parental care. Fossil agnathans
Haikouichthys is a fossil agnathan.
Cephalaspis is another fossil agnathan.
Although a minor element of modern marine fauna, Agnatha were prominent among the early fish in the early Paleozoic. Two types of Early Cambrian animal apparently having fins, vertebrate musculature, and gills are known from the early Cambrian Maotianshan shales of China: Haikouichthys and Myllokunmingia. They have been tentatively assigned to Agnatha by Janvier. A third possible agnathid from the same region is Haikouella. A possible agnathid that has not been formally described was reported by Simonetti from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale of British Columbia. Many Ordovician, Silurian, and Devonian agnathans were armored with heavy bony-spiky plates. The first armored agnathans—the Ostracoderms, precursors to the bony fish and hence to the tetrapods (including humans)—are known from the middle Ordovician, and by the Late Silurian the agnathans had reached the high point of their evolution. Agnathans declined in the Devonian and never recovered. GroupsPteraspidomorphi References
See also
| |