Modulation in Feeding Kinematics and Motor Pattern of the Nurse Shark Ginglymostoma cirratum

被引:0
|
作者
Michael P. Matott
Philip J. Motta
Robert E. Hueter
机构
[1] Eckerd College,Natural Sciences Collegium
[2] University of South Florida,Department of Biology
[3] Mote Marine Laboratory,Center for Shark Research
来源
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2005年 / 74卷
关键词
electromyography; elasmobranch; suction feeding; specialization;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Studies of feeding in bony fishes have almost universally demonstrated the ability of individuals to modulate their method of capture in response to differing stimuli. Preliminary evidence indicates that morphologically specialized inertial suction feeding sharks are the most likely fishes to lack inherent modulatory ability. We examined the ability of the nurse shark, Ginglymostoma cirratum, to modulate its feeding behavior based on different food types and sizes. G. cirratum is an inertial suction feeding fish that is apparently stereotyped in its food capture behavior. Electromyography showed no statistical difference between feeding motor patterns based on food type (squid or fish) or size (gape width or twice gape width), although there were slight inter-individual differences in the onset of muscle firing for some muscles. Kinematic analysis showed a statistical difference in variables associated with durations for different food types, with the durations for all variables being faster for squid bites than fish bites, but no difference based on the size of the food item. This apparent lack of modulation may be associated with specialization of the morphology and behavior of G. cirratum for obligate suction prey capture. This functional specialization constrains the method in which G. cirratum captures prey but does not appear to result in dietary specialization. An unusual post capture spit-suck manipulation allows this shark to handle and ingest large prey.
引用
收藏
页码:163 / 174
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Population genetics of the nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) in the western Atlantic
    Karl, Stephen A.
    Castro, Andrey L. F.
    Garla, Ricardo C.
    MARINE BIOLOGY, 2012, 159 (03) : 489 - 498
  • [22] RATE OF TOOTH REPLACEMENT IN THE NURSE SHARK, GINGLYMOSTOMA-CIRRATUM
    LUER, CA
    BLUM, PC
    GILBERT, PW
    COPEIA, 1990, (01) : 182 - 191
  • [23] BIOSYNTHESIS OF TRIMETHYLAMINE OXIDE IN NURSE SHARK, GINGLYMOSTOMA-CIRRATUM
    GOLDSTEIN, L
    FUNKHOUSER, D
    COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY, 1972, 42 (1A): : 51 - +
  • [24] ANALYSIS OF LOCOMOTOR BEHAVIOR OF NURSE SHARK (GINGLYMOSTOMA-CIRRATUM
    GRUBER, D
    MAYNARD, P
    KLEEREKOPER, H
    AMERICAN ZOOLOGIST, 1972, 12 (04): : 654 - 654
  • [25] Exact Enumeration of Sires in the Polyandrous Nurse Shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum)
    Heist, Edward J.
    Carrier, Jeffrey C.
    Pratt, Harold L., Jr.
    Pratt, Theo C.
    COPEIA, 2011, (04) : 539 - 544
  • [26] DISTRIBUTION OF THE NURSE SHARK, GINGLYMOSTOMA CIRRATUM, IN THE NORTHERN GULF OF MEXICO
    Hannan, Kristin M.
    Driggers, William B., III
    Hanisko, David S.
    Jones, Lisa M.
    Canning, Amanda B.
    BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2012, 88 (01) : 73 - 80
  • [27] Characteristics and Genomic Localization of Nurse Shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) IgNAR
    Tang, Wenjie
    Zheng, Kaixi
    Sun, Shengjie
    Zhong, Bo
    Luo, Zhan
    Yang, Junjie
    Jia, Lei
    Yang, Lan
    Shang, Wenna
    Jiang, Xiaofeng
    Lyu, Zhengbing
    Chen, Jianqing
    Chen, Guodong
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2024, 25 (23)
  • [28] Population genetics of the nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) in the western Atlantic
    Stephen A. Karl
    Andrey L. F. Castro
    Ricardo C. Garla
    Marine Biology, 2012, 159 : 489 - 498
  • [29] BLASTOGENIC RESPONSE OF NURSE SHARK LEUKOCYTES (GINGLYMOSTOMA-CIRRATUM)
    HAUNES, L
    MCKINNEY, EC
    AMERICAN ZOOLOGIST, 1984, 24 (03): : A34 - A34
  • [30] THE LYMPHOMYELOID (HEMATOPOIETIC) SYSTEM OF THE ATLANTIC NURSE SHARK, GINGLYMOSTOMA-CIRRATUM
    FANGE, R
    MATTISSON, A
    BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1981, 160 (02): : 240 - 249