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Use of sonomicrometry demonstrates the link between prey capture kinematics and suction pressure in largemouth bass
1 Department of Biology, 114 Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549,
USA
2 Section of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA
95616, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: christopher.p.sanford{at}hofstra.edu)
Accepted 12 August 2002
Suction feeding in fishes is the result of a highly coordinated explosive expansion of the buccal cavity that results in a rapid drop in pressure. Prey are drawn into the mouth by a flow of water that is generated by this expansion. At a gross level it is clear that the expansion of the buccal cavity is responsible for the drop in pressure. However, attempts using high-speed video recordings to demonstrate a tight link between prey capture kinematics and suction pressure have met with limited success. In a study with largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides, we adopted a new technique for studying kinematics, sonomicrometry, to transduce the movement of skeletal elements of the head during feeding, and synchronized pressure recordings at a sampling rate of 500 Hz. From the positional relationships of six piezoelectric crystals we monitored the internal movements of the buccal cavity and mouth in both mid-sagittal and transverse planes. We found that peak subambient pressure was reached very early in the kinematic expansion of the buccal cavity, occurring at the time when the rate of percentage change in buccal volume was at its peak. Using multiple regression analyses we were consistently able to account for over 90%, and in the best model 99%, of the variation in buccal pressure among strikes using kinematic variables. Sonomicrometry shows great promise as a method for documenting movements of biological structures that are not clearly visible in the external view provided by film and video recordings.
Key words: sonomicrometry, kinematics, feeding, buccal pressure, largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides
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