Ictalurus punctatus can use body muscles for suction feeding

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bekateen
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Ictalurus punctatus can use body muscles for suction feeding

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Camp, A. L., Olsen, A. M., Hernandez, L. P., & Brainerd, E. L. (2020). Fishes can use axial muscles as anchors or motors for powerful suction feeding. Journal of Experimental Biology, 223(18). jeb225649. doi:10.1242/jeb.225649

https://jeb.biologists.org/lookup/doi/10.1242/
PDF: https://jeb.biologists.org/content/jexb ... 9.full.pdf
Supplemental material: https://jeb.biologists.org/lookup/doi/1 ... pplemental
https://jeb.biologists.org/content/jexb ... 49supp.pdf
(supplementary pdf has videos animating jaw action)
ABSTRACT
Some fishes rely on large regions of the dorsal (epaxial) and ventral (hypaxial) body muscles to power suction feeding. Epaxial and hypaxial muscles are known to act as motors, powering rapid mouth expansion by shortening to elevate the neurocranium and retract the pectoral girdle, respectively. However, some species, like catfishes, use little cranial elevation. Are these fishes instead using the epaxial muscles to forcefully anchor the head, and if so, are they limited to lower-power strikes? We used X-ray imaging to measure epaxial and hypaxial length dynamics (fluoromicrometry) and associated skeletal motions (XROMM) during 24 suction feeding strikes from three channel catfish (). We also estimated the power required for suction feeding from oral pressure and dynamic endocast volume measurements. Cranial elevation relative to the body was small (<5 deg) and the epaxial muscles did not shorten during peak expansion power. In contrast, the hypaxial muscles consistently shortened by 4–8% to rotate the pectoral girdle 6–11 deg relative to the body. Despite only the hypaxial muscles generating power, catfish strikes were similar in power to those of other species, such as largemouth bass (), that use epaxial and hypaxial muscles to power mouth expansion. These results show that the epaxial muscles are not used as motors in catfish, but suggest they position and stabilize the cranium while the hypaxial muscles power mouth expansion ventrally. Thus, axial muscles can serve fundamentally different mechanical roles in generating and controlling cranial motion during suction feeding in fishes.
KEY WORDS: Hypaxial, Epaxial, Craniovertebral, Pectoral girdle, XROMM
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Re: Ictalurus punctatus can use body muscles for suction feeding

Post by Bas Pels »

On the one hand interesting altough not practical for use in a tank. But on the oither hand, studying 1 species of catfish, comparing the results with 1 species of non-catfish, and drawing conclusions for asll catfish does seem a logical error.

One would expect to have studied a few more species before coming to such conclusions.
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Re: Ictalurus punctatus can use body muscles for suction feeding

Post by bekateen »

Indeed. Although as proof of concept, it holds up.

Cheers, Eric
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