Fish Physiology
Require oxygen to produce sufficient energy to support metabolic needs
Acquiring Oxygen from water is challenging
Water is more viscoius than air
More energy is required to move water across respiratory surfaces
Saltwater holds less O2 due to diminished solubility of gases in water = more solute concentration, the less gas dissolution occurs
Warmer waters: gas solubility in liquids decreases with increasing temperatures
Also affected by:
High rates of decomposition that use O2 to break down organic matter
Deeper areas of still water; No oxygen mixing
Oxygen levels in water are 1% in volume
Aquatic Breathing
Efficient respiratory organs: Gills
Large surface area
Secondary Lamellae: thin membranes that uptake O2
Countercurrent Gas Exchange: blood in the secondary lamaellle flows in the opposite direction than the oxygen water flowing in
Oxygen rich blood meets oxygen-rich water: results in more oxygen being exchanged towards the end of the current because it is not all used up
Function only when water is kept moving over gills: from anterior to posterior
Methods of Water Movement
Actively pumping water across gills (energetically expensive)
RAM ventilation: Swimming with mouth open for water to pass over gills
Ex: tunas
Larger fish can rely on both mechanisms: ram ventilation for swimming, but rely on pumping while still or moving slowly
Ex: Sharks
Non-gill-driven respiration techniques:
Cutaneous respiration: gas exchange across skin
Improaint in smaller fishes with a larger SA/V ratio
This occurs in young fish whose gills have not fully developed
Aquatic Air breathers:
Facultative air-breathing: supplement gill respiration when necessary
Seen in areas with low oxygen conditions, such as tropical freshwaters
Obligate air breathing: must have access to air or will drown
Amphibious air breathers: ability to breathe oxygen and survive without water
Cope with drought: lungfishes
Forage marine intertidal area: mudskippers
Air Breathing Organs:
Derived from Gut: Lungs, Gas Bladder, Stomach, Intestine
Structures of the head: modifications of gills, mouth, pharynx, opercles
Walking Catfish: modified treelike branches above gill arches
Skin: Cutaneous respiration
Ex: mudskipper
Metabolism: sum total of all biochemical processes taking place within an organism
Rate of oxygen consumption: indicator of metabolism
Higher metabolic rates in higher temps
Temperature increases a fish's need for O2-> while warm wter holds less oxygen
Evolution of air-breathing in many tropical fishes
Metabolic Costs:
Swimming: favors traits that reduce metabolic costs of movement
Fusiform streamlined bodies
Fin shape and placement such as dorsal fin distance
Stream fishes
Body shape or use of fins to hold position
Buoyancy regulation
Tucking away fins in grooven when swimming
Ex: sailfish
Buouyancy regulation:
Also energetically expensive
Need to regulate the volume of the gas bladder-> effect of changing pressure as fish changes depth
Physostomous condition: connection of gas bladder to the gut
Physoclistous condition: gas bladder is sealed off
Gas bladder may disappear all together in evolution of benthic organisms
Bioenergetics Models:
Obtain energy to meet metabolic demands: feeding
Energy budgets:
How energy that is consumed is allocated
Energetic costs of activities:
Estimated by measuring the heat produced by an organism or the oxygen consumption (ask for clarification)
The energy remaining after basic needs-> used for growth and reproduction
C = E + R + P
C= energy consumed
E= energy excreted
R: energy used in respiration
P: energy used in production
Predicts individual growth, reproduction, or feeding rates
Energy budget: based on energy resvirors and transfers
Unit of energy flow: grams/C or cal/day
Balanced bodel: energy input is balanced by energy used or lost
Depend on:
Body size
Developmental stage
Water temperature
Food quality
Quantity of food
Includes component predictions based on body size, temperature and food parameters
Uses:
Predict fish population dynamics
Model-based on consumption or growth of an individual from ahtcling to death: multiple to create individual based models
Energetic Costs:
Some food is never digested
Mechanism of lose:
Excretion of nitrogenous waste
Providing energy for digestion
Routine metabolism
Swimming
Maintaining homeostasis
Immune system function
Physiological maintances
Affected by environmental factors-> affect the amount of energy needed to sustain metabolism
Regulated by the neuroendocrine system
Endocrine System:
Releases hormones in blood
EDC: Endocrine disruption compounds from industrial chemicals and pharmaceuticals
Effect all areas of the nervous system
Effects levels of sex homormes, creating intersex individuals
Affect hatching success
Regulation of internal osmotic environment cocnentration of ions (NaCl)
Most fish are Osmoregulators:
Regulation of internal osmotic enviroment
Within a narrow range
Osmoconformers: internal osmotic concentration is the same of that as sea water (isomotic)
Hagfishes(Class Mixini)
Occurs in environments where salinity is stable
Elasmobranchs:
Osmoregulators
Method:
Conversion of nitrogen water into urea and retain high concetrations of it in their blood
Hyperosmotic: saltier than the environment
Causes water to move into the fish and salt concentrations to move out
FW elamobranch(FW stingray) do not produce uera
Sacropterygians:
Osmoregulators
Hyperosomtic
Convergent evolution with sharks
Colecacanths: maintain elevated elvels of urea in their blood
Lungfishes(Dipnoi):
FW, so do not retain urea EXCEPT during estivation
Store nitrogen waste in a less toxic form than ammonia and as a way to retain water
FW Teleosts:
Hyperosmotic:
osmoregulators
Tend to gain water and loss solutes by diffusion across secondary lamaelle and oharnyx
Needs to prevent osmotic lysis:
Excrete a large volume of dilute urine and actively transport solutes back into their blood
Uptake of Ions:
NA and Cl are taken up through ionoregualtory cells in gills
Kidneys recover ions from urine before release
Marine Teleosts:
Osmoregulators
Hypoosmtoic (less salty than envriometn)
High salt concentrations draws FW out, and ions diffus in across the permeable membranes
Regulation techniques:
Prevent dehydration-> drinking seawater
Actively extreme excess salt in highly concentrated urine
Ionoregulatory cells: uptake ions from body fluids-> which then diffuse out of gills
Permeable bladder:
Diffusion within the fish-> excretion of urine that is isosmotic to their blood
Diarmous Teleosts:
Osmoregulatros
Adjustments must be made in the ionoregulatory cells at the gills
Regualted by hormones,
Growth hormoze
The number and size of chloride-transporting ionoregulatory cells is increased and the activity of enzymes associated with sodium-potassium exchange is enhanced
Occurs in euryhaline fishes
Various other hormones-> Increase water permeability, enhance gene expression of proteins that transport ions across cell membranes
Ectotherms
Lack of mechanism for heat production and retention
Make internal adjustments:
Genes switch on and off to cope with flucating temps
Heterothermic: evolutionary adaption in large, active, pelagic marine fishes
Use internally generated heat to maintain warm temps in swimming muscles, guts, brain, eyes(what ways do they do this that is different than other fish species)?
Heterothermy: evolved independently among fishes
Different mechanisms and diversity of heterothemic fishes
Manta and Sicklefin devil ray under debate
Accessories to nervous system that act as transducers
Mechanorecpetion (Pressure sensing)
Lateral line: detects disturbances in the water, helping fish detect currents, capture prey and maintain position in school
Inner part: fish equilibrium and balance, healing
Electroreception:
Evolved over 500 mya
Lost and secondarily evolved in several different groups of fishes
Organs:
Ampullary receptors: sensitive to low frequency electric fields; many groups of primitive fishes
Ampullae of Lorenzini
Ex: Lungishes, reedfishes, coelacanths, sturgeons paddlfish, chondrichtyes, lampresy
Tuberous receptors: detect higher frequency electric field
Produce their own electric field (active electrolocation)
Limitedto FW Fish
Used in prey detection
Also canbe used to attach and defend (electric eels)
Vision:
Eyes: corena, lens, pupil, and sensory cells: rods and cones
Rods: sensitive to low light
HIGH ROD:CONE RATIO: nocturnal and deep-sea fishes
Cones: require brighter light; provide greater resolution:
HIGH CONE:ROD Ratios: highest in diurnal fishes
Chemoreception:
Used for finding and identifying food, habitat, communication, avoiding predators
Olfaction(smell)
Detect a broad range of chemical stimuli
In anadromous species: identify suitable spawning streams(detect chemical released by juveniles, and male pheromones)
Gustation: focused on food recognition
Detection of magnetic fields, direction information with respect to compass headings
May be connected to spawning site location in mightly migrational species
Unknown
Adaptions in these two areas are the reasons teleosts diversified so quickly
Caudal Fin locomotry complex: homocercal tails:
Change of the caudal fin to heterocercal-> abbreviated heterocercal-> homocercal
Abbreviated heterocercal: moderately asymmetrical; bowfin, gar
Heterocercal tail:
Provides lift-> useful for heavily armored primitive actionpterygian species to get off the bottom
Axis of rotation: oblique-> push down as well as back
Upward and forward rotation of read end of the fish (somersault effect)
Sommersualt effet must be counteracted by large planning pectoral fins
Does not allow for frequent locomotion
Homocercal tail:
Vertical axis of rotation
Pushes directly backward
Fish is pushed forward
Increased efficiency in horizontal swimming=> thrust provided by the locomotory organ is purley horizontal
Locomotory organ (caudal peduncle and tail)
Associated with:
Loss of heavy bone armor and heavy scaltion
Modification of lungs to act as hydrostatic organ-> evolution of swim bladder makes body plan that accounts for lift obsolete
Increased veraility of pared fins:
Pectoral fins no longer serve as planning devices
Serve other locomotory functions
Shift from horizontal insertion low on the body to vertical insertion high on the body
Greater maneuverability
Feeding Mechanisms (upper-jaw mobility)
Greater upper-jaw mobility: protrusible upper jaw
Promoted highly successful food exploitation
Opened new trophic possibilities for teleosts
Increases in ecological niches and evolutionary potential of mouth parts
Variety of specialized predaceous and non-predaceous feeding types
Swimming in Sharks: alternative approach
Enhance efficiency of swimming despite not convegrning with fusiform shape (in most cases)
Trends towards homocercal tails in osteichthyan: capitalize off of stress than is placed on rigid, bony skeleton and the forces achievable by muscle masses attached directly to the skeleton
Sharks have a softer skeleton-> different path
Swim bia undulations of body or pectoral fins
Anguilliform locomotion
Increased thrust available from the large heterocercal tail
Homocercal tail: pelagic Lamniformes converged with tunas and dolphins
Large amplitude of wave in the casual fin region
Interaction between skin and body musculature: (read this chapter in the book)
Skin:
Inner sheath, stratum compactum(made up of collagen fibers)
Fibers from layers of alternately oriented sheets that run in helical paths around shark’s body-> readily bendable
Inside the skin: hydrostatic pressure varies from activity level
Faster swimming-> higher internal hydrostatic pressure
Hydrostatic pressure: fluid in the bloodstream is pulled down by gravity, causing higherpressure near the barrier, causing fluid to be forced out
Unkown source of hydrostatic pressure-> due to changes in surface area of contracting muscles relative to skin area and to changes in blood pressure in blood sinuses that are surrounded by muscle
Elastin covering
Pressure cylinder with an elastic covering
Higher internal pressure + stiff skin = increases the energy stored in the stretched skin
Body muscles attach via collagenous septa and the inside of the skin
Muscles on right side contract/ muscles and skin on left side area contracted->when right side releases, skin on left side releases energy, aiding muscles at a point when they provide little tension
Skin initiates the pull of the tail across the midline and increases the power output at the beginning of each propulsion stroke
Elastic recoil from stretched skin:
Muscles attached to skin form a large cylindrical external denon
Fibers of th dermis extend onto the peduncle and caudal fin
Adds rigidity to both
Stores elastic energy during each swimming stroke
Muscles pull on skin: propuslive energy that exceeds the thrust derived from muscles attached to verbal column
Swimming with a heterocercal tail”
Tail pushes back a down (F reactive)
Chases rotation around the center mass
Counteracted by head and pectoral fins
Shape and body angel: generate lift forces that are added to the lift of the tail
Equal and opposite to the weight of the shark in the water
Placement of dorsal fin:
First is larger than the second, separated by a gap
Dorsal lobe of heterocercal tail-> “third median fin” in line with dorsal fins, separated from second dorsal fin by a considerable gap
Fin tapers posteriorly, leaving behind a wake
Displaced laterally by sinusoidal waves passing down the fish, so the wake is sinusoidal path that moves posteriorly as the fish moves through the water
Ideal distance between fins: maximize the thrust of the second dorsal fin and tail
Trailing fins can push against water coming towards them laterally from the leading fin
Enhances thrust from trailing fin
Median fins as thrusters
Require oxygen to produce sufficient energy to support metabolic needs
Acquiring Oxygen from water is challenging
Water is more viscoius than air
More energy is required to move water across respiratory surfaces
Saltwater holds less O2 due to diminished solubility of gases in water = more solute concentration, the less gas dissolution occurs
Warmer waters: gas solubility in liquids decreases with increasing temperatures
Also affected by:
High rates of decomposition that use O2 to break down organic matter
Deeper areas of still water; No oxygen mixing
Oxygen levels in water are 1% in volume
Aquatic Breathing
Efficient respiratory organs: Gills
Large surface area
Secondary Lamellae: thin membranes that uptake O2
Countercurrent Gas Exchange: blood in the secondary lamaellle flows in the opposite direction than the oxygen water flowing in
Oxygen rich blood meets oxygen-rich water: results in more oxygen being exchanged towards the end of the current because it is not all used up
Function only when water is kept moving over gills: from anterior to posterior
Methods of Water Movement
Actively pumping water across gills (energetically expensive)
RAM ventilation: Swimming with mouth open for water to pass over gills
Ex: tunas
Larger fish can rely on both mechanisms: ram ventilation for swimming, but rely on pumping while still or moving slowly
Ex: Sharks
Non-gill-driven respiration techniques:
Cutaneous respiration: gas exchange across skin
Improaint in smaller fishes with a larger SA/V ratio
This occurs in young fish whose gills have not fully developed
Aquatic Air breathers:
Facultative air-breathing: supplement gill respiration when necessary
Seen in areas with low oxygen conditions, such as tropical freshwaters
Obligate air breathing: must have access to air or will drown
Amphibious air breathers: ability to breathe oxygen and survive without water
Cope with drought: lungfishes
Forage marine intertidal area: mudskippers
Air Breathing Organs:
Derived from Gut: Lungs, Gas Bladder, Stomach, Intestine
Structures of the head: modifications of gills, mouth, pharynx, opercles
Walking Catfish: modified treelike branches above gill arches
Skin: Cutaneous respiration
Ex: mudskipper
Metabolism: sum total of all biochemical processes taking place within an organism
Rate of oxygen consumption: indicator of metabolism
Higher metabolic rates in higher temps
Temperature increases a fish's need for O2-> while warm wter holds less oxygen
Evolution of air-breathing in many tropical fishes
Metabolic Costs:
Swimming: favors traits that reduce metabolic costs of movement
Fusiform streamlined bodies
Fin shape and placement such as dorsal fin distance
Stream fishes
Body shape or use of fins to hold position
Buoyancy regulation
Tucking away fins in grooven when swimming
Ex: sailfish
Buouyancy regulation:
Also energetically expensive
Need to regulate the volume of the gas bladder-> effect of changing pressure as fish changes depth
Physostomous condition: connection of gas bladder to the gut
Physoclistous condition: gas bladder is sealed off
Gas bladder may disappear all together in evolution of benthic organisms
Bioenergetics Models:
Obtain energy to meet metabolic demands: feeding
Energy budgets:
How energy that is consumed is allocated
Energetic costs of activities:
Estimated by measuring the heat produced by an organism or the oxygen consumption (ask for clarification)
The energy remaining after basic needs-> used for growth and reproduction
C = E + R + P
C= energy consumed
E= energy excreted
R: energy used in respiration
P: energy used in production
Predicts individual growth, reproduction, or feeding rates
Energy budget: based on energy resvirors and transfers
Unit of energy flow: grams/C or cal/day
Balanced bodel: energy input is balanced by energy used or lost
Depend on:
Body size
Developmental stage
Water temperature
Food quality
Quantity of food
Includes component predictions based on body size, temperature and food parameters
Uses:
Predict fish population dynamics
Model-based on consumption or growth of an individual from ahtcling to death: multiple to create individual based models
Energetic Costs:
Some food is never digested
Mechanism of lose:
Excretion of nitrogenous waste
Providing energy for digestion
Routine metabolism
Swimming
Maintaining homeostasis
Immune system function
Physiological maintances
Affected by environmental factors-> affect the amount of energy needed to sustain metabolism
Regulated by the neuroendocrine system
Endocrine System:
Releases hormones in blood
EDC: Endocrine disruption compounds from industrial chemicals and pharmaceuticals
Effect all areas of the nervous system
Effects levels of sex homormes, creating intersex individuals
Affect hatching success
Regulation of internal osmotic environment cocnentration of ions (NaCl)
Most fish are Osmoregulators:
Regulation of internal osmotic enviroment
Within a narrow range
Osmoconformers: internal osmotic concentration is the same of that as sea water (isomotic)
Hagfishes(Class Mixini)
Occurs in environments where salinity is stable
Elasmobranchs:
Osmoregulators
Method:
Conversion of nitrogen water into urea and retain high concetrations of it in their blood
Hyperosmotic: saltier than the environment
Causes water to move into the fish and salt concentrations to move out
FW elamobranch(FW stingray) do not produce uera
Sacropterygians:
Osmoregulators
Hyperosomtic
Convergent evolution with sharks
Colecacanths: maintain elevated elvels of urea in their blood
Lungfishes(Dipnoi):
FW, so do not retain urea EXCEPT during estivation
Store nitrogen waste in a less toxic form than ammonia and as a way to retain water
FW Teleosts:
Hyperosmotic:
osmoregulators
Tend to gain water and loss solutes by diffusion across secondary lamaelle and oharnyx
Needs to prevent osmotic lysis:
Excrete a large volume of dilute urine and actively transport solutes back into their blood
Uptake of Ions:
NA and Cl are taken up through ionoregualtory cells in gills
Kidneys recover ions from urine before release
Marine Teleosts:
Osmoregulators
Hypoosmtoic (less salty than envriometn)
High salt concentrations draws FW out, and ions diffus in across the permeable membranes
Regulation techniques:
Prevent dehydration-> drinking seawater
Actively extreme excess salt in highly concentrated urine
Ionoregulatory cells: uptake ions from body fluids-> which then diffuse out of gills
Permeable bladder:
Diffusion within the fish-> excretion of urine that is isosmotic to their blood
Diarmous Teleosts:
Osmoregulatros
Adjustments must be made in the ionoregulatory cells at the gills
Regualted by hormones,
Growth hormoze
The number and size of chloride-transporting ionoregulatory cells is increased and the activity of enzymes associated with sodium-potassium exchange is enhanced
Occurs in euryhaline fishes
Various other hormones-> Increase water permeability, enhance gene expression of proteins that transport ions across cell membranes
Ectotherms
Lack of mechanism for heat production and retention
Make internal adjustments:
Genes switch on and off to cope with flucating temps
Heterothermic: evolutionary adaption in large, active, pelagic marine fishes
Use internally generated heat to maintain warm temps in swimming muscles, guts, brain, eyes(what ways do they do this that is different than other fish species)?
Heterothermy: evolved independently among fishes
Different mechanisms and diversity of heterothemic fishes
Manta and Sicklefin devil ray under debate
Accessories to nervous system that act as transducers
Mechanorecpetion (Pressure sensing)
Lateral line: detects disturbances in the water, helping fish detect currents, capture prey and maintain position in school
Inner part: fish equilibrium and balance, healing
Electroreception:
Evolved over 500 mya
Lost and secondarily evolved in several different groups of fishes
Organs:
Ampullary receptors: sensitive to low frequency electric fields; many groups of primitive fishes
Ampullae of Lorenzini
Ex: Lungishes, reedfishes, coelacanths, sturgeons paddlfish, chondrichtyes, lampresy
Tuberous receptors: detect higher frequency electric field
Produce their own electric field (active electrolocation)
Limitedto FW Fish
Used in prey detection
Also canbe used to attach and defend (electric eels)
Vision:
Eyes: corena, lens, pupil, and sensory cells: rods and cones
Rods: sensitive to low light
HIGH ROD:CONE RATIO: nocturnal and deep-sea fishes
Cones: require brighter light; provide greater resolution:
HIGH CONE:ROD Ratios: highest in diurnal fishes
Chemoreception:
Used for finding and identifying food, habitat, communication, avoiding predators
Olfaction(smell)
Detect a broad range of chemical stimuli
In anadromous species: identify suitable spawning streams(detect chemical released by juveniles, and male pheromones)
Gustation: focused on food recognition
Detection of magnetic fields, direction information with respect to compass headings
May be connected to spawning site location in mightly migrational species
Unknown
Adaptions in these two areas are the reasons teleosts diversified so quickly
Caudal Fin locomotry complex: homocercal tails:
Change of the caudal fin to heterocercal-> abbreviated heterocercal-> homocercal
Abbreviated heterocercal: moderately asymmetrical; bowfin, gar
Heterocercal tail:
Provides lift-> useful for heavily armored primitive actionpterygian species to get off the bottom
Axis of rotation: oblique-> push down as well as back
Upward and forward rotation of read end of the fish (somersault effect)
Sommersualt effet must be counteracted by large planning pectoral fins
Does not allow for frequent locomotion
Homocercal tail:
Vertical axis of rotation
Pushes directly backward
Fish is pushed forward
Increased efficiency in horizontal swimming=> thrust provided by the locomotory organ is purley horizontal
Locomotory organ (caudal peduncle and tail)
Associated with:
Loss of heavy bone armor and heavy scaltion
Modification of lungs to act as hydrostatic organ-> evolution of swim bladder makes body plan that accounts for lift obsolete
Increased veraility of pared fins:
Pectoral fins no longer serve as planning devices
Serve other locomotory functions
Shift from horizontal insertion low on the body to vertical insertion high on the body
Greater maneuverability
Feeding Mechanisms (upper-jaw mobility)
Greater upper-jaw mobility: protrusible upper jaw
Promoted highly successful food exploitation
Opened new trophic possibilities for teleosts
Increases in ecological niches and evolutionary potential of mouth parts
Variety of specialized predaceous and non-predaceous feeding types
Swimming in Sharks: alternative approach
Enhance efficiency of swimming despite not convegrning with fusiform shape (in most cases)
Trends towards homocercal tails in osteichthyan: capitalize off of stress than is placed on rigid, bony skeleton and the forces achievable by muscle masses attached directly to the skeleton
Sharks have a softer skeleton-> different path
Swim bia undulations of body or pectoral fins
Anguilliform locomotion
Increased thrust available from the large heterocercal tail
Homocercal tail: pelagic Lamniformes converged with tunas and dolphins
Large amplitude of wave in the casual fin region
Interaction between skin and body musculature: (read this chapter in the book)
Skin:
Inner sheath, stratum compactum(made up of collagen fibers)
Fibers from layers of alternately oriented sheets that run in helical paths around shark’s body-> readily bendable
Inside the skin: hydrostatic pressure varies from activity level
Faster swimming-> higher internal hydrostatic pressure
Hydrostatic pressure: fluid in the bloodstream is pulled down by gravity, causing higherpressure near the barrier, causing fluid to be forced out
Unkown source of hydrostatic pressure-> due to changes in surface area of contracting muscles relative to skin area and to changes in blood pressure in blood sinuses that are surrounded by muscle
Elastin covering
Pressure cylinder with an elastic covering
Higher internal pressure + stiff skin = increases the energy stored in the stretched skin
Body muscles attach via collagenous septa and the inside of the skin
Muscles on right side contract/ muscles and skin on left side area contracted->when right side releases, skin on left side releases energy, aiding muscles at a point when they provide little tension
Skin initiates the pull of the tail across the midline and increases the power output at the beginning of each propulsion stroke
Elastic recoil from stretched skin:
Muscles attached to skin form a large cylindrical external denon
Fibers of th dermis extend onto the peduncle and caudal fin
Adds rigidity to both
Stores elastic energy during each swimming stroke
Muscles pull on skin: propuslive energy that exceeds the thrust derived from muscles attached to verbal column
Swimming with a heterocercal tail”
Tail pushes back a down (F reactive)
Chases rotation around the center mass
Counteracted by head and pectoral fins
Shape and body angel: generate lift forces that are added to the lift of the tail
Equal and opposite to the weight of the shark in the water
Placement of dorsal fin:
First is larger than the second, separated by a gap
Dorsal lobe of heterocercal tail-> “third median fin” in line with dorsal fins, separated from second dorsal fin by a considerable gap
Fin tapers posteriorly, leaving behind a wake
Displaced laterally by sinusoidal waves passing down the fish, so the wake is sinusoidal path that moves posteriorly as the fish moves through the water
Ideal distance between fins: maximize the thrust of the second dorsal fin and tail
Trailing fins can push against water coming towards them laterally from the leading fin
Enhances thrust from trailing fin
Median fins as thrusters