| Literature DB >> 28886161 |
Michalis Mihalitsis1,2, David R Bellwood1,2.
Abstract
Fish predation is important in shaping populations and community structure in aquatic systems. These predator-prey interactions can be influenced by environmental, behavioural and morphological factors. Morphological constraints influence the feeding performance of species, and interspecific differences can thus affect patterns of resource use. For piscivorous fishes that swallow prey whole, feeding performance has traditionally been linked to three key morphological constraints: oral gape, pharyngeal gape, and the cleithral gape. However, other constraints may be important. We therefore examine 18 potential morphological constraints related to prey capture and processing, on four predatory species (Cephalopholis urodeta, Paracirrhites forsteri, Pterois volitans, Lates calcarifer). Aquarium-based experiments were then carried out to determine capture and processing behaviour and maximum prey size in two focal species, C. urodeta and P. forsteri. All four species showed a progressive decrease in gape measurements from anterior to posterior with oral gape ≥ buccal ≥ pharyngeal ≥ pectoral girdle ≥ esophagus ≥ stomach. C. urodeta was able to process prey with a maximum depth of 27% of the predators' standard length; for P. forsteri it was 20%. C. urodeta captured prey head-first in 79% of successful strikes. In P. forsteri head-first was 16.6%, mid-body 44.4%, and tail-first 38.8%. Regardless of capture mode, prey were almost always swallowed head first and horizontally in both focal species. Most internal measurements appeared too small for prey to pass through. This may reflect the compressibility of prey, i.e. their ability to be dorsoventrally compressed during swallowing movements. Despite examining all known potential morphological constraints on prey size, horizontal maxillary oral gape in a mechanically stretched position appears to be the main morphological variable that is likely to affect maximum prey size and resource use by these predatory species.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28886161 PMCID: PMC5590994 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of internal gape measurements taken on each individual predatory fish.
| Morphological measurement | Description |
|---|---|
| ( | Vertical distance between anteriormost upper jaw (premaxilla-premaxilla joint) and lower jaw (dentary-dentary joint) |
| ( | Medial distance between the two articular bones, measured at the dorsoposterior margin |
| ( | Maximum medial distance between the left and right maxilla-premaxilla complexes, above the dentary articular margins |
| ( | Vertical distance between the dorsal buccal cavity roof just beneath the eye, and the midpoint of the basihyal |
| ( | Horizontal distance between anterior margins of the suspensoria (i.e. between the medial faces of the ectopterygoids) |
| ( | Dorsoventral distance between the 2nd basibranchial and roof of the buccal cavity |
| ( | Maximum horizontal distance between the 1st gill arch (1st ceratobranchials) |
| ( | Dorsoventral distance between the upper and lower pharyngeal jaws (3rd,4th pharyngobranchials and 5th ceratobranchials) |
| ( | Horizontal distance between the 4th ceratobranchials |
| ( | Dorsoventral distance between the inner walls of the anterior region of the esophagus, located posterior to the pharyngeal apparatus |
| ( | Lateral distance between the walls of the anterior region of the esophagus, located posterior to the pharyngeal apparatus |
| ( | Dorsoventral distance between the inner walls of the esophagus located anterior to the stomach |
| ( | Lateral distance between the inner walls of the esophagus located anterior to the stomach |
| ( | Distance between the ventral side of the spinal cord at the pectoral girdle, and the lowest point on the medial margin of the pectoral girdle (where the cleithra join) |
| ( | Maximum distance between the medial faces of the cleithral bones |
| ( | Maximum distance between the inner walls at the anterior end of the stomach |
| ( | Maximum distance between the soft tissue walls at the point where the stomach connects to the intestine |
| ( | Maximum distance between the inner walls at the posterior end of the stomach |
The order of measurements is shown according to the order they were taken. Each of these measurements was taken for both first resistance, and mechanical maximum, distending tissues until resistance prevented further movement with light pressure. For an illustration of the measurements on a fish, please see Fig 1.
Fig 1Morphological gape measurements.
A) Gape measurements of the oral, buccal, pharyngeal, and pectoral girdle area. B) Gape measurements of the esophagus and stomach. For a detailed description of the measurements, please see Table 1. Please note k, m, and n are internal horizontal measurements.
Fig 2Prey processing by predatory fishes.
A) the predator Cephalopholis urodeta (SL = 98.4), ingesting a 52.7 mm SL, 27 mm MD Acanthochromis polyacanthus in a horizontal, head-first position, and B) a 109 mm SL Paracirrhites forsteri that failed to swallow a 45.6 mm SL, 23.1 mm MD, A. polyacanthus.
Fig 3Regression Tree Analysis on key gape measurements.
A) Cephalopholis urodeta, B) Paracirrhites forsteri, C) Pterois volitans, and D) Lates calcarifer. Measurements (x-axis) are displayed in terms of % of SL (y-axis) (mean ± SE), where shaded horizontal lines represent groupings resulting from the Tree Analysis. Measurements are also grouped into oral (O.), buccal (B.), pharyngeal (P.), pectoral girdle (P.g.), esophagus (E.), and stomach (S.). Colors in graphs represent terminal nodes partitioned by the Regression Tree models.
Fig 4Gape measurements of predators relative to maximum prey size.
Gape measurements of A) Cephalopholis urodeta (n = 3) and B) Paracirrhites forsteri (n = 3) in terms of % SL (mean ± S.E), compared to the mean maximum depth of the largest prey successfully swallowed. Black bars show the vertical oral gape (see `a`Table 1, Fig 1), while grey bars (b, c, e, g, i, q) show hard structure measurements, and white bars (k, m, n1, n2, n3) soft tissue measurements. The red line indicates the mean maximum prey size as a % of predator SL (± S.E dashed lines). The blue line is the mean maximum prey size after accounting for the compressibility of prey (compressed MD).
Fig 5Compressibility of Acanthochromis polyacanthus.
A) Scatter plot of SL (x-axis) and MD (y-axis) of A.polyacanthus. Red dots represent natural (non-compressed) MD for individuals, while blue dots represent compressed MD for the same individuals when compressed by a set of calipers with approximately 2.9 N across all sizes. B) Scatter plot of SL (x-axis) and compressibility of individuals, in terms of their ability to be compressed from their natural (non-compressed) MD relative to their size.
Fig 6Percentage of successful head-first, mid-body first, or tail-first strikes.
A) Cephalopholis urodeta (n = 14), and B) Paracirrhites forsteri (n = 18).
Summary of predicted and experimental maximum prey size (maximum depth) as a percentage of predator SL.
| Species | Predicted | Observed |
|---|---|---|
| 29% | 27% | |
| 20% | 20% | |
| 28% | - | |
| 22% | - |
Predicted values are the horizontal maxillary oral gape (see Table 1 and Fig 1) for each species, while experimental (observed) values are the mean MD of the largest prey size that predators were able to successfully capture and ingest under experimental conditions.