Harrison Jacob S, Higgins Benjamin A, Mehta Rita S
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Long Marine Laboratory, University of California Santa Cruz,100 Shaffer Road, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, USA.
Zoology (Jena). 2017 Jun;122:16-26. doi: 10.1016/j.zool.2017.02.002. Epub 2017 Feb 12.
Scaling patterns of tooth morphology can provide insights on prey capture strategy and dietary patterns as species grow through ontogeny. We report the scaling of dentition and diet and how it relates to body size in the California moray, Gymnothorax mordax. We sampled lengths, widths, and curvature for teeth lining five distinct regions of the oral jaws across 21 G. mordax individuals ranging from 383 to 1110mm total length. Absolute tooth length in relation to moray size shows positive allometry only for the outer maxillary teeth, while teeth lining the inner maxilla display positive allometry in tooth base width. All other regions exhibit isometric growth in both length and width relative to moray size. Similar to previous descriptions of other moray species, the longest teeth in the oral jaws are the median intermaxillary teeth. This series of three teeth are depressible and rooted in the center of the ethmovomer, the bone that forms the roof of the rostrum. We hypothesize that caudal mobility of the median intermaxillary teeth aids in prey transport by enabling the pharyngeal jaws to remove pierced prey without requiring full abduction of the oral jaws. The predominantly isometric tooth growth in G. mordax suggests that the oral teeth grow proportionately as individuals increase in size. Stomach contents from the field suggest that G. mordax is highly piscivorous. While a strong positively allometric relationship between vertical gape and head length supports the expectation that moray increase relative prey size over ontogeny, we found no relationship between prey standard length and moray size. This suggests that while larger individuals are capable of consuming larger prey, individual G. mordax are opportunistic predators that do not specialize on prey of a specific size over ontogeny.
随着物种个体发育成长,牙齿形态的缩放模式能够为捕食策略和饮食模式提供见解。我们报告了加州海鳝(Gymnothorax mordax)的牙列和饮食缩放情况,以及它们与体型的关系。我们对21条全长在383至1110毫米之间的加州海鳝个体口腔颌部五个不同区域的牙齿进行了长度、宽度和曲率的采样。相对于海鳝体型,绝对牙齿长度仅在上颌外侧牙齿呈现正异速生长,而位于上颌内侧的牙齿在齿根宽度上呈现正异速生长。所有其他区域相对于海鳝体型在长度和宽度上均呈现等速生长。与之前对其他海鳝物种的描述相似,口腔颌部最长的牙齿是中间的颌间齿。这三颗牙齿可以下压,并且根植于筛骨犁骨的中心,筛骨犁骨是形成吻部顶部的骨头。我们推测,中间颌间齿的尾部可动性有助于猎物运输,因为它能使咽颌在无需完全展开口腔颌部的情况下移除被刺穿的猎物。加州海鳝主要呈现等速的牙齿生长,这表明随着个体体型增大,口腔牙齿也按比例生长。野外采集的胃内容物表明,加州海鳝是高度食鱼性的。虽然垂直口裂与头部长度之间存在强烈的正异速生长关系,这支持了海鳝在个体发育过程中会增加相对猎物大小的预期,但我们发现猎物标准长度与海鳝体型之间没有关系。这表明,虽然较大的个体能够捕食更大的猎物,但加州海鳝个体是机会主义捕食者,在个体发育过程中不会专门捕食特定大小的猎物。