Department of Biology, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA.
Zoology (Jena). 2013 Dec;116(6):336-47. doi: 10.1016/j.zool.2013.08.005. Epub 2013 Oct 4.
Biomechanical models of feeding mechanisms elucidate how animals capture food in the wild, which, in turn, expands our understanding of their fundamental trophic niche. However, little attention has been given to modeling the protrusible upper jaw apparatus that characterizes many teleost species. We expanded existing biomechanical models to include upper jaw forces using a generalist butterflyfish, Chaetodon trichrous (Chaetodontidae) that produces substantial upper jaw protrusion when feeding on midwater and benthic prey. Laboratory feeding trials for C. trichrous were recorded using high-speed digital imaging; from these sequences we quantified feeding performance parameters to use as inputs for the biomechanical model. According to the model outputs, the upper jaw makes a substantial contribution to the overall forces produced during mouth closing in C. trichrous. Thus, biomechanical models that only consider lower jaw closing forces will underestimate total bite force for this and likely other teleost species. We also quantified and subsequently modeled feeding events for C. trichrous consuming prey from the water column versus picking attached prey from the substrate to investigate whether there is a functional trade-off between prey capture modes. We found that individuals of C. trichrous alter their feeding behavior when consuming different prey types by changing the timing and magnitude of upper and lower jaw movements and that this behavioral modification will affect the forces produced by the jaws during prey capture by dynamically altering the lever mechanics of the jaws. In fact, the slower, lower magnitude movements produced during picking-based prey capture should produce a more forceful bite, which will facilitate feeding on benthic attached prey items, such as corals. Similarities between butterflyfishes and other teleost lineages that also employ picking-based prey capture suggest that a suite of key behavioral and morphological innovations enhances feeding success for benthic attached prey items.
摄食机制的生物力学模型阐明了动物在野外捕捉食物的方式,这反过来又扩展了我们对其基本营养生态位的理解。然而,人们很少关注建模那些具有可伸出上颚器官的鱼类,而许多硬骨鱼类都具有这种器官。我们使用一种广食性的蝴蝶鱼(Chaetodon trichrous,Chaetodontidae)来扩展现有的生物力学模型,该鱼在摄食中层和底栖猎物时会产生大量的上颚突出。我们使用高速数字成像记录了 C. trichrous 的实验室摄食试验;从这些序列中,我们量化了摄食性能参数,将其用作生物力学模型的输入。根据模型输出,在上颚关闭过程中,上颚对上颌总合力的贡献很大。因此,仅考虑下颚关闭力的生物力学模型会低估 C. trichrous 及其可能的其他硬骨鱼类的总咬合力。我们还量化了 C. trichrous 从水柱中捕食猎物和从基质上捕食附生猎物的摄食事件,以研究两种摄食模式之间是否存在功能权衡。我们发现,当 C. trichrous 捕食不同类型的猎物时,会通过改变上下颚运动的时间和幅度来改变其摄食行为,这种行为的改变会通过动态改变下颚的杠杆力学来影响下颚在捕食过程中产生的力。事实上,在基于拾取的猎物捕食过程中产生的较慢、较小幅度的运动应该会产生更有力的咬合,这将有利于捕食附着在基质上的猎物,如珊瑚。蝴蝶鱼和其他采用基于拾取的猎物捕食的硬骨鱼类谱系之间的相似之处表明,一系列关键的行为和形态创新提高了对附着在基质上的猎物的捕食成功率。