Authors
Sam Van Wassenbergh, James A Strother, Brooke E Flammang, Lara A Ferry-Graham, Peter Aerts
Publication date
2008/3/6
Journal
Journal of the Royal Society interface
Volume
5
Issue
20
Pages
285-296
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
The exceptionally high speed at which syngnathid fishes are able to rotate their snout towards prey and capture it by suction is potentially caused by a catapult mechanism in which the energy previously stored in deformed elastic elements is suddenly released. According to this hypothesis, tension is built up in tendons of the post-cranial muscles before prey capture is initiated. Next, an abrupt elastic recoil generates high-speed dorsal rotation of the head and snout, rapidly bringing the mouth close to the prey, thus enabling the pipefish to be close enough to engulf the prey by suction. However, no experimental evidence exists for such a mechanism of mechanical power amplification during feeding in these fishes. To test this hypothesis, inverse dynamical modelling based upon kinematic data from high-speed videos of prey capture in bay pipefish Syngnathus leptorhynchus, as well as electromyography of the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Van Wassenbergh, JA Strother, BE Flammang… - Journal of the Royal Society interface, 2008