Ferry-Graham Lara A, Wainwright Peter C, Lauder George V
Section of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, USA.
Zoology (Jena). 2003;106(2):159-68. doi: 10.1078/0944-2006-00110.
Nearly all aquatic-feeding vertebrates use some amount of suction to capture prey items. Suction prey capture occurs by accelerating a volume of water into the mouth and taking a prey item along with it. Yet, until recently, we lacked the necessary techniques and analytical tools to quantify the flow regime generated by feeding fish. We used a new approach; Digital Particle Image Velocimetery (DPIV) to measure several attributes of the flow generated by feeding bluegill sunfish. We found that the temporal pattern of flow was notably compressed during prey capture. Flow velocity increased rapidly to its peak within 20 ms of the onset of the strike, and this peak corresponded to the time that the prey entered the mouth during capture. The rapid acceleration and deceleration of water suggests that timing is critical for the predator in positioning itself relative to the prey so that it can be drawn into the mouth along with the water. We also found that the volume of water affected by suction was spatially limited. Only rarely did we measure significant flow beyond 1.75 cm of the mouth aperture (in 20 cm fish), further emphasizing the importance of mechanisms, like locomotion, that place the fish mouth in close proximity to the prey. We found that the highest flows towards the mouth along the fish midline were generated not immediately in front of the open mouth, but approximately 0.5 cm anterior to the mouth opening. Away from the midline the peak in flow was closer to the mouth. We propose that this pattern indicates the presence of a bow wave created by the locomotor efforts of the fish. In this scheme, the bow wave acts antagonistically to the flow of water generated by suction, the net effect being to push the region of peak flow away from the open mouth. The peak was located farther from the mouth opening in strikes accompanied by faster locomotion, suggesting faster fish created larger bow waves.
几乎所有以水生生物为食的脊椎动物都会利用一定程度的吸力来捕获猎物。通过加速一定体积的水进入口中并将猎物一并带入,从而实现吸力捕食。然而,直到最近,我们仍缺乏必要的技术和分析工具来量化捕食鱼类产生的水流状态。我们采用了一种新方法;数字粒子图像测速技术(DPIV)来测量蓝鳃太阳鱼捕食时产生的水流的几个属性。我们发现,在捕食过程中水流的时间模式明显被压缩。在攻击开始后的20毫秒内,流速迅速增加到峰值,而这个峰值与捕获时猎物进入口中的时间相对应。水的快速加速和减速表明,时机对于捕食者相对于猎物定位自身至关重要,以便猎物能与水一起被吸入嘴中。我们还发现,受吸力影响的水的体积在空间上是有限的。在20厘米长的鱼中,我们很少能测量到超过口腔开口1.75厘米处的显著水流,这进一步强调了诸如运动等机制的重要性,这些机制能使鱼嘴靠近猎物。我们发现,沿着鱼的中线朝向嘴部的最高流速并非在张开的嘴正前方产生,而是在嘴开口前方约0.5厘米处产生。在远离中线的地方,水流峰值更靠近嘴部。我们认为这种模式表明存在由鱼的运动努力产生的弓形波。在这个模型中,弓形波与吸力产生的水流起拮抗作用,其净效应是将峰值水流区域从张开的嘴推开。在伴有更快运动的攻击中,峰值离嘴开口更远,这表明游得更快的鱼产生的弓形波更大。