Knower T, Shadwick RE, Katz SL, Graham JB, Wardle CS
Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0204, USA and SOAEFD Marine Laboratory, PO Box 101, Aberdeen AB11 9DB, UK.
J Exp Biol. 1999;202(Pt 16):2127-2138. doi: 10.1242/jeb.202.16.2127.
To learn about muscle function in two species of tuna (yellowfin Thunnus albacares and skipjack Katsuwonus pelamis), a series of electromyogram (EMG) electrodes was implanted down the length of the body in the internal red (aerobic) muscle. Additionally, a buckle force transducer was fitted around the deep caudal tendons on the same side of the peduncle as the electrodes. Recordings of muscle activity and caudal tendon forces were made while the fish swam over a range of steady, sustainable cruising speeds in a large water tunnel treadmill. In both species, the onset of red muscle activation proceeds sequentially in a rostro-caudal direction, while the offset (or deactivation) is nearly simultaneous at all sites, so that EMG burst duration decreases towards the tail. Muscle duty cycle at each location remains a constant proportion of the tailbeat period (T), independent of swimming speed, and peak force is registered in the tail tendons just as all ipsilateral muscle deactivates. Mean duty cycles in skipjack are longer than those in yellowfin. In yellowfin red muscle, there is complete segregation of contralateral activity, while in skipjack there is slight overlap. In both species, all internal red muscle on one side is active simultaneously for part of each cycle, lasting 0.18T in yellowfin and 0.11T in skipjack. (Across the distance encompassing the majority of the red muscle mass, 0.35-0.65L, where L is fork length, the duration is 0.25T in both species.) When red muscle activation patterns were compared across a variety of fish species, it became apparent that the EMG patterns grade in a progression that parallels the kinematic spectrum of swimming modes from anguilliform to thunniform. The tuna EMG pattern, underlying the thunniform swimming mode, culminates this progression, exhibiting an activation pattern at the extreme opposite end of the spectrum from the anguilliform mode.
为了解两种金枪鱼(黄鳍金枪鱼Thunnus albacares和鲣鱼Katsuwonus pelamis)的肌肉功能,在其体内红色(有氧)肌肉沿身体长度方向植入了一系列肌电图(EMG)电极。此外,在与电极同侧的尾柄深尾肌腱周围安装了一个扣式力传感器。当鱼在大型水隧道跑步机上以一系列稳定、可持续的巡航速度游动时,记录肌肉活动和尾肌腱力。在这两个物种中,红色肌肉激活的起始沿头-尾方向依次进行,而所有部位的偏移(或去激活)几乎是同时发生的,因此EMG爆发持续时间向尾部逐渐缩短。每个位置的肌肉占空比在尾拍周期(T)中保持恒定比例,与游泳速度无关,并且在所有同侧肌肉去激活时,尾肌腱记录到峰值力。鲣鱼的平均占空比长于黄鳍金枪鱼。在黄鳍金枪鱼的红色肌肉中,对侧活动完全分离,而在鲣鱼中则有轻微重叠。在这两个物种中,一侧的所有内部红色肌肉在每个周期的部分时间内同时活跃,黄鳍金枪鱼持续0.18T,鲣鱼持续0.11T。(在包含大部分红色肌肉质量的距离范围内,即0.35 - 0.65L,其中L为叉长时,两个物种的持续时间均为0.25T。)当比较各种鱼类的红色肌肉激活模式时,很明显EMG模式呈现出一种渐变,与从鳗鲡形到金枪鱼形游泳模式的运动学谱平行。金枪鱼的EMG模式是金枪鱼形游泳模式的基础,在这个渐变过程中达到顶点,呈现出与鳗鲡形模式在频谱极端相反端的激活模式。