Twist and Snout: Head and Body Morphologies Determine Feeding Kinematics in Substrate-Biting Fishes.

IF 1.9 4区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY
Integrative Organismal Biology Pub Date : 2025-07-25 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/iob/obaf032
Tal Perevolotsky, Jacob M Brotman-Krass, Yarden Ratner, Yael Avigad, Adam P Summers, Cassandra M Donatelli, Roi Holzman
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Abstract

Across teleosts, feeding by biting substrate-attached prey has evolved multiple times and is associated with convergent morphologies that include a deep body and an elongated, tapered head. However, the functional role of these morphologies in substrate-biting fish is not established. Here, we tested the hypothesis that these morphologies function as control surfaces that affect feeding kinematics during biting. To test this hypothesis, we used simplified physical models of substrate-biting reef fish and examined the role of head, body, and fin morphology in determining feeding kinematics that facilitate the removal of substrate-attached prey. Models simulated the swift lateral movement of the head, previously documented in species biting substrate-attached algae. Using models that capture the natural morphological variation of biters, we tested (i) how different head morphologies affect the speed of the head and (ii) how different body morphologies affect the stability of the body during head movements. We found that the moment of inertia (MOI) of the head and body explained most of the variation in head speed and body displacement. A decrease in head MOI resulted in faster lateral head movements, known to facilitate removal of attached prey. An increase in body MOI, relative to that of the head, stabilized the lateral displacement of the body during bites. Overall, our results suggest that the laterally compressed bodies and tapered snouts function as control surfaces during feeding in substrate-biting fish. We propose that a selective pressure to extend the lateral surface area underlies the prevailing morphological convergence of biting reef fishes.

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扭曲和鼻子:头和身体形态决定了咬底鱼的摄食运动学。
在硬骨鱼中,通过咬咬附着在底物上的猎物已经进化了多次,并且与包括深身体和细长锥形头部在内的趋同形态有关。然而,这些形态在咬底鱼中的功能作用尚未确定。在这里,我们测试的假设,这些形态的功能作为控制面,影响进食运动学在咬。为了验证这一假设,我们使用了咬底珊瑚鱼的简化物理模型,并检查了头部、身体和鳍的形态在决定进食运动学中的作用,这些运动学有助于移除附着在基质上的猎物。模型模拟了头部的快速横向运动,以前在咬底物附着的藻类物种中有记录。利用捕捉叮咬者自然形态变化的模型,我们测试了(i)不同的头部形态如何影响头部的速度,(ii)不同的身体形态如何影响头部运动时身体的稳定性。我们发现头部和身体的转动惯量(MOI)解释了头部速度和身体位移的大部分变化。头部MOI的减少导致头部侧向运动更快,这有助于去除附着的猎物。相对于头部,身体MOI的增加稳定了咬伤时身体的侧向位移。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,在咬底鱼的摄食过程中,侧向压缩的身体和锥形的嘴起到了控制表面的作用。我们提出,一个选择的压力,以扩大侧表面积的基础上,咬礁鱼类的普遍形态趋同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
48
审稿时长
20 weeks
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