Flammang Brooke E, Lauder George V
Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2008 Feb;211(Pt 4):587-98. doi: 10.1242/jeb.012096.
There are approximately 50 muscles that control tail fin shape in most teleost fishes, and although myotomal muscle function has been extensively studied, little work has been done on the intrinsic musculature that controls and shapes the tail. In this study we measured electrical activity in intrinsic tail musculature to determine if these muscles are active during steady rectilinear locomotion, and to compare intrinsic muscle recruitment patterns to previous data on myotomal muscle fibers. Five bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) were anaesthetized and electrode wires surgically placed into a total of 24 intrinsic caudal muscles, up to 13 at a time, and activity was correlated with synchronous recordings from myotomal fibers in the caudal peduncle. After recovery, fish swam steadily at speeds of 0.5, 1.2 and 2.0 L s(-1), while filmed from lateral, posterior and ventral views simultaneously at 250 frames s(-1). Comparison among speeds confirmed that muscle recruitment varies significantly with speed. At 0.5 L s(-1), the caudal fin was generally not used for propulsion, and swimming was accomplished primarily through body undulations. Intrinsic caudal muscle activity at this speed was intermittent and variable. At 1.2 and 2.0 L s(-1), the supracarinalis and infracarinalis muscles acted on the dorsal- and ventral-most fin rays, respectively, to expand the surface area of the caudal fin. The interradialis muscles adducted individual fin rays, dorsally to ventrally, following activation of the hypochordal longitudinalis. Contralateral muscle activity of interradialis muscles occurred as the caudal fin crossed the mean direction of travel and fin height was greatest, whereas ipsilateral activity of carinalis muscles occurred near points of maximum excursion of the fin, at speeds of 1.2 and 2.0 L s(-1), after fin height was lowest. Burst intensity increased with swimming speed, suggesting stiffening of the tail fin against imposed hydrodynamic loads. Activity patterns of intrinsic caudal muscles suggest that these most posterior muscles in fishes, located within the tail, are among the very first recruited as swimming speed increases, and that slow undulatory swimming is powered by muscle fibers located posteriorly in the caudal peduncle and tail.
在大多数硬骨鱼类中,大约有50块肌肉控制尾鳍的形状。虽然体节肌的功能已得到广泛研究,但对于控制和塑造尾巴的内在肌肉组织,却鲜有人开展相关工作。在本研究中,我们测量了尾巴内在肌肉组织的电活动,以确定这些肌肉在稳定直线游动过程中是否活跃,并将内在肌肉的募集模式与先前关于体节肌纤维的数据进行比较。对五条蓝鳃太阳鱼(Lepomis macrochirus)实施麻醉后,通过手术将电极线插入总共24块尾巴内在肌肉中,每次最多插入13块,并将其活动与尾柄处体节肌纤维的同步记录相关联。恢复后,鱼以0.5、1.2和2.0 L s⁻¹的速度稳定游动,同时从侧面、后面和腹面以250帧/秒的速度拍摄。不同速度之间的比较证实,肌肉募集随速度显著变化。在0.5 L s⁻¹时,尾鳍通常不用于推进,游泳主要通过身体波动完成。此时尾巴内在肌肉的活动是间歇性的且变化不定。在1.2和2.0 L s⁻¹时,背嵴肌和腹嵴肌分别作用于最背侧和最腹侧的鳍条,以扩大尾鳍的表面积。辐间肌在内侧纵肌激活后,将单个鳍条从背侧向腹侧内收。当尾鳍越过平均游动方向且鳍高最大时,辐间肌出现对侧肌肉活动;而在鳍高最低后,在1.2和2.0 L s⁻¹的速度下,嵴肌在鳍的最大偏移点附近出现同侧活动。爆发强度随游泳速度增加,这表明尾鳍针对施加的水动力负荷变硬。尾巴内在肌肉的活动模式表明,鱼类中这些位于尾巴内的最后部肌肉,是随着游泳速度增加最先被募集的肌肉之一,并且缓慢的波动式游泳是由位于尾柄和尾巴后部的肌肉纤维提供动力的。