Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Department of Biology, Knox College, Galesburg, IL 61401, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2022 Feb 1;225(3). doi: 10.1242/jeb.243283. Epub 2022 Feb 14.
Many fishes use substantial cranial kinesis to rapidly increase buccal cavity volume, pulling prey into the mouth via suction feeding. Living polypterids are a key lineage for understanding the evolution and biomechanics of suction feeding because of their phylogenetic position and unique morphology. Polypterus bichir have fewer mobile cranial elements compared with teleosts [e.g. immobile (pre)maxillae] but successfully generate suction through dorsal, ventral and lateral oral cavity expansion. However, the relative contributions of these motions to suction feeding success have not been quantified. Additionally, extensive body musculature and lack of opercular jaw opening linkages make P. bichir of interest for examining the role of cranial versus axial muscles in driving mandibular depression. Here, we analyzed the kinematics of buccal expansion during suction feeding in P. bichir using X-ray Reconstruction of Moving Morphology (XROMM) and quantified the contributions of skeletal elements to oral cavity volume expansion and prey capture. Mouth gape peaks early in the strike, followed by maximum cleithral and ceratohyal rotations, and finally by opercular and suspensorial abductions, maintaining the anterior-to-posterior movement of water. Using a new method of quantifying bones' relative contributions to volume change (RCVC), we demonstrate that ceratohyal kinematics are the most significant drivers of oral cavity volume change. All measured cranial bone motions, except abduction of the suspensorium, are correlated with prey motion. Lastly, cleithral retraction is largely concurrent with ceratohyal retraction and jaw depression, while the sternohyoideus maintains constant length, suggesting a central role of the axial muscles, cleithrum and ceratohyal in ventral expansion.
许多鱼类利用大量的颅部运动来快速增加口腔容积,通过抽吸将猎物吸入嘴中。活的多鳍鱼是理解抽吸进食的进化和生物力学的关键谱系,因为它们的系统发育位置和独特的形态。与硬骨鱼相比,多鳍鱼的可移动颅部元素较少[例如不可移动的(前)上颌骨],但通过背部、腹部和侧面口腔扩张成功产生抽吸。然而,这些运动对抽吸进食成功的相对贡献尚未量化。此外,广泛的身体肌肉和缺乏鳃盖颌开口连接使得多鳍鱼成为研究颅部与轴部肌肉在驱动下颌骨下凹中的作用的理想选择。在这里,我们使用 X 射线重建运动形态学(XROMM)分析了多鳍鱼在抽吸进食过程中口腔扩张的运动学,并量化了骨骼元素对口腔容积扩张和猎物捕获的贡献。在攻击中,口裂最早达到峰值,随后是最大的匙骨和角质鳃弓旋转,最后是鳃盖和悬索的外展,保持了水的前后运动。使用一种新的方法来量化骨骼对体积变化的相对贡献(RCVC),我们证明了角质鳃弓的运动是口腔容积变化的最主要驱动因素。除了悬索的外展,所有测量的颅部骨骼运动都与猎物的运动相关。最后,匙骨的回缩与角质鳃弓的回缩和下颌骨的下凹基本同时发生,而胸骨舌骨肌保持恒定的长度,这表明轴向肌肉、匙骨和角质鳃弓在腹侧扩张中起着核心作用。