Title: Fish Locomotion
1Functional Morphology Locomotion
Feeding Chapter 8 (Helfman, Collette Facey)
2Fish Locomotion
- Primary forces involved in fish swimming
- Thrust - force that propels forward
- Drag - friction produced from passing an object
through a medium - Gravity force from earths magnetic pull
(partially counterbalanced by density of
water) - Lift - upward force that counteracts gravity
3Swimming Styles...Thrust Generation
- Body waves Anguilliform
- Partial body waves (Sub)Carangiform
- Caudal peduncle/fin beats Ostraciform
- Medial fin waves - Amiiform
- Pectoral fin beats -Labriform
4Swimming Styles Body waves Anguilliform
(eel-like)
Lateral curvature in spine and musculature that
moves in a posterior direction
Start lateral displacement of head, and then
passage of this displacement along the body axis
to the tail
Result backward-facing wall of body pushing
against the water
5Swimming Styles Partial body waves (Sub)
Carangiform, Thunniform (tuna-like)
Body wave begins posterior to head and increases
with amplitude as it moves posteriorly Redu
ced drag compared to full body wave
swimming Wave STARTS at the caudal peducle
(deeply forked, lunate)
6Swimming Styles Caudal peduncle/fin beats
Ostraciform (boxfish-like and puffer-like)
Sculling action of caudal finlike rowing No
body waves - body remains rigid - useful for
odd-shaped fishes
7Swimming Styles Medial fin wavesAmiiform -
bowfin-like
Body rigid, but medial fins generate posterior
waves (forward) or anterior (reverse) Good for
stalking or moving without disrupting body
musculature that serves as electric organ
(knifefish) Also used for sculling -
triggerfish others
8Swimming StylesPectoral fin beats Labriform
wrasse-likeSimilar to rowing
laterally-positioned pectoral fins- often
includes feathering as wellEspecially useful
for fine maneuveringe.g. by deep-bodied fishes
9Drag Reduction Features in Fish
- Fusiform body shape
- Reduction of body wave amplitude
- Reduction of fin surface area
- caudal fin (forked, lunate)
- paired and medial fins
- Boundary layer modifications
- mucous
- laminar jets of water
- microprojections
10Fusiform body shape
- pointed leading edge
- maximum depth 1/3 body length back from head
- posterior taper
- propellor (caudal fin) interrupts perfect
fusiform shape
11Body wave modifications
- Minimize lateral movement of head to reduce drag
- subcarangiform - Increase amplitude as wave moves in posterior
direction - Ultimate expression involves no body waves, but
alternate contraction and transfer of body
musculature energy to caudal peduncle and caudal
fin - thunniform
12Fin surface area reduction
- Area of fins increases drag
- Permanent design modifications forked caudal
fins, reduced length of medial fins - Adjustable design modifications variable
erection of fins - allows for minimizing surface
area when fin is not needed for thrust or turning
- ultimate expression fairings in tunas (dorsal
and pectoral fin pockets)
13Boundary layer modification
- Layer of water immediately adjacent to skin
causes most of friction - boundary layer - thickness of boundary layer is proportional to
amount of friction - three approaches to reducing thickness of
boundary layer - smoothing it - making it slicker
- roughing it - giving it tiny disruptions (golfers
learned from sharks??) - shortening it - reducing distance of contact
14Boundary Layer, continued
- Fluid jets - from gill chamber and out operculum
or in micropockets behind and beneath scales - mucous - slime adds to slipperiness, can reduce
drag by up to 65 - microprojections - disrupt boundary layer so it
cannot grow - ctenii
- placoid tips
15Buoyancy Control in Fishes
- Dynamic lift generated by propelling a hydrofoil
forward at an inclined angle of attack - Static lift generated by including low-density
substances and reducing mass of high density
substances in body.
16Dynamic Lift
- Hydrofoils fish use their fusiform body and some
use their pectoral fins as hydrofoils - Amount of lift is determined by angle of attack
and speed of propulsion - Ultimate expression of this is in pelagic rovers
- tunas, mackerel sharks - head, pectoral fins and peduncle keels all used
as hydrofoils - swim constantly
17Static Lift
- Reduction of high density substances
- cartilage less dense than bone
- use design features in bone that increase
strength while reducing mass of bone - Inclusion of low-density fluids
- lipids - squalene in sharks (sp. grav. 0.86)
- stored in liver
- gases - in swim bladder
- only in bony fishes
18Swim bladders
- Gas-filled appendix to the anterior digestive
system dorsal to abdominal organs - Two types of swim bladders
- physostomous - pneumatic duct connects swim
bladder to esophagous - physoclistous - no connection between swim
bladder and gut
19Food Aquisition Processing
- 1. Structure
- 2. Function (behavior, physiology)
- 3. Nutritional needs
- 4. Digestive efficiency
20Food capture
- Mouth and pharyngeal cavity
- upper jaw
- teeth - jaw, mouth, pharyngeal
- gill rakers
21More on teeth
22Food capture
- Mouth and pharyngeal cavity
- upper jaw
- teeth - jaw, mouth, pharyngeal
- gill rakers
23Food capture
- Mouth and pharyngeal cavity
- upper jaw
- teeth - jaw, mouth, pharyngeal
- gill rakers
24GI
- Esophagus
- Stomach
- large in carnivores, small in herbivores/omnivores
- Pyloric caecae
- Intestine
- short in carnivores, long in herbivores/omnivores
- Anus - separate from urogenital pore
25GI- auxiliary organs
- Liver
- produces bile (lipolysis)
- stores glycogen
- stores lipids
- Pancreas
- digestive enzymes
- proteases - protein breakdown
- amylases - starch breakdown
- chitinases - chitin breakdown
- lipases - lipid breakdown
26Fish Feeding - function
- Herbivores
- lt 5 of all bony fishes, no cartilaginous fishes
- browsers - selective - eat only the plant
- grazers - less selective - include sediments
- Detritivores
- 5 - 10 of all species
- feed on decomposing organic matter
27Fish Feeding - function, cont.
- Carnivores
- zooplanktivores
- suction feeding
- ram feeding
- benthic invertebrate feeders
- graspers
- pickers
- sorters
- crushers
28Fish Feeding - function, cont.
- Carnivores, cont.
- fish feeders
- active pursuit
- stalking
- ambushing
- luring
29Fish feeding behavior
- Fish feeding behavior integrates morphology with
perception to obtain food - Search
- --gt Detection
- --gt Pursuit
- --gt Capture
- --gt Ingestion
30Feeding behavior
- Fish show versatility in prey choice and
ingestion - Behavior tightly linked to morphology
- (co-evolution)
31Fish feeding behavior
- Behavior tends to be optimizing when choices are
available - optimal maximize benefitcost ratio
- basically...more for less!
- i.e., select the prey that yields the greatest
energetic or nutrient return on the energy
invested in search, pursuit, capture, and
ingestion
32Fish digestive physiology
- After ingestion of food, gut is responsible for
- Digestion (breaking down food into small, simple
molecules) - involves use of acids, enzymes
- Absorption - taking molecules into blood
- diffusion into mucosal cells
- phagocytosis/pinocytosis by mucosal cells
- active transport via carrier molecules
33Fish digestive physiology
- Digestion is accomplished in
- Stomach
- low pH - HCl, other acids (2.0 for some tilapia!)
- proteolytic enzymes (mostly pepsin)
34Fish digestive physiology
- Digestion is accomplished in
- Stomach
- Intestine
- alkaline pH (7.0 - 9.0)
- proteolytic enzymes - from pancreas intestine
- amylases (carbohydrate digestion) - from pancreas
intestine - lipases (lipid digestion) - from pancreas liver
(gall bladder, bile duct)
35Fish digestive physiology
- Absorption is accomplished in
- Intestine
- diffusion into mucosal cells
- phagocytosis/pinocytosis by mucosal cells
- active transport via carrier molecules
36Fish Nutritional Needs
- High protein diet
- carnivores - 40 - 55 protein needed
- omnivores - 28 - 35 protein needed
- (birds mammals - 12 - 25 protein needed)
- 10 essential amino acids (PVT. TIM HALL)
37Fish Nutritional Needs
- High protein diet
- Why so high?
- proteins needed for growth of new tissue
- proteins moderately energy-dense (dont need
dense source - ectotherms, low gravity) - few side-effects - ease of NH4 excretion
38Nutritional efficiency in fishes
- Fish more efficient than other vertebrates
- conversion factor kg feed required to produce 1
kg growth in fish flesh - fishes 1.7 - 5.0
- birds mammals 5.0 - 15.0
39Nutritional efficiency in fishes
- Fish more efficient than other vertebrates
- Why?
- ectothermy vs. endothermy
- energy/matter required to counterbalance gravity
- bias of a high-protein diet
40Nutritional efficiency
- Maintenance ration (MR) the amount of food
needed to remain alive, with no growth or
reproduction ( body wt./day) - MR is temperature-dependent
- MR increases as temperature increases
- MR is size-dependant
- MR decreases as size increases
41Temperature Size effects - red hind (Serranidae)