Higham Timothy E, Stewart William J, Wainwright Peter C
*Department of Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA; Whitney Laboratory, University of Florida, St Augustine, FL 32080, USA; Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA
*Department of Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA; Whitney Laboratory, University of Florida, St Augustine, FL 32080, USA; Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2015 Jul;55(1):6-20. doi: 10.1093/icb/icv052. Epub 2015 May 16.
Successful feeding and escape behaviors in fishes emerge from precise integration of locomotion and feeding movements. Fishes inhabit a wide range of habitats, including still ponds, turbulent rivers, and wave-pounded shorelines, and these habitats vary in several physical variables that can strongly impact both predator and prey. Temperature, the conditions of ambient flow, and light regimes all have the potential to affect predator-prey encounters, yet the integration of these factors into our understanding of fish biomechanics is presently limited. We explore existing knowledge of kinematics, muscle function, hydrodynamics, and evolutionary morphology in order to generate a framework for understanding the ecomechanics of predator-prey encounters in fishes. We expect that, in the absence of behavioral compensation, a decrease in temperature below the optimum value will reduce the muscle power available both to predator and prey, thus compromising locomotor performance, suction-feeding mechanics of predators, and the escape responses of prey. Ambient flow, particularly turbulent flow, will also challenge predator and prey, perhaps resulting in faster attacks by predators to minimize mechanical instability, and a reduced responsiveness of prey to predator-generated flow. Reductions in visibility, caused by depth, turbidity, or diel fluctuations in light, will decrease distances at which either predator or prey detect each other, and generally place a greater emphasis on the role of mechanoreception both for predator and prey. We expect attack distances to be shortened when visibility is low. Ultimately, the variation in abiotic features of a fish's environment will affect locomotion and feeding performance of predators, and the ability of the prey to escape. The nature of these effects and how they impact predator-prey encounters stands as a major challenge for future students of the biomechanics of fish during feeding. Just as fishes show adaptations for capturing specific types of prey, we anticipate they are also adapted to the physical features of their preferred habitat and show a myriad of behavioral mechanisms for dealing with abiotic factors during predator-prey encounters.
鱼类成功的摄食和逃避行为源于运动和摄食动作的精确整合。鱼类栖息在各种各样的栖息地,包括静止的池塘、湍急的河流和海浪拍打的海岸线,这些栖息地在几个物理变量上存在差异,这些变量会对捕食者和猎物都产生强烈影响。温度、环境水流条件和光照模式都有可能影响捕食者与猎物的相遇,然而,目前我们将这些因素整合到对鱼类生物力学的理解中还很有限。我们探索了运动学、肌肉功能、流体动力学和进化形态学的现有知识,以便生成一个框架,用于理解鱼类捕食者与猎物相遇时的生态力学。我们预计,在没有行为补偿的情况下,温度降至最佳值以下会降低捕食者和猎物可用的肌肉力量,从而损害运动性能、捕食者的吸力摄食机制以及猎物的逃避反应。环境水流,尤其是湍流,也会给捕食者和猎物带来挑战,这可能导致捕食者更快地发动攻击,以尽量减少机械不稳定性,同时猎物对捕食者产生的水流的反应能力也会降低。由深度、浊度或光照的昼夜波动引起的能见度降低,将缩短捕食者或猎物相互发现的距离,并且通常会更加强调机械感受在捕食者和猎物中的作用。我们预计能见度低时攻击距离会缩短。最终,鱼类环境中生物非生物特征的变化将影响捕食者的运动和摄食性能,以及猎物的逃避能力。这些影响的性质以及它们如何影响捕食者与猎物的相遇,是未来研究鱼类摄食生物力学的学生面临的一项重大挑战。正如鱼类表现出捕捉特定类型猎物的适应性一样,我们预计它们也适应其首选栖息地的物理特征,并在捕食者与猎物相遇时表现出无数应对非生物因素的行为机制。