Abstract The majority of aquatic vertebrates are suction feeders: by rapidly expanding the mouth cavity they gen-erate a fluid flow outside of their head in order to draw prey into their mouth. In addition to the biological relevance, the generated flow field is interesting fluid mechanically as it incorporates high velocities, is localized in front of the mouth, and is unsteady, typically lasting between 10 and 50 ms. Using manometry and high-speed particle image velocimetry, this is the first study to quantify pressure within and outside the mouth of a feeding fish while simultaneously measuring the velocity field outside the mouth. Measurements with a high temporal (2 ms) and spatial (\1 mm) resolution were made for several feeding event...
A micro-thermistor probe was inserted into the buccal cavity of freely swimming paddlefish to measur...
Over the last five decades, an increasing number of studies on fish behaviour in turbulent flows hav...
To capture and swallow food on land, a sticky tongue supported by the hyoid and gill arch skeleton h...
This dataset consists of a single .csv text file containing mouth and body kinematics, flow speeds a...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
To capture prey by suction, fish generate a flow of water that enters the mouth, and exits at the ba...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
<p/>1. Suction feeding is the dominant way to obtain food in teleosts. Its high demands on str...
<p/>In this thesis hydrodynamic principles are used to quantify relations between form and fun...
Suction feeding is pervasive among aquatic vertebrates, and our understanding of the fun...
During aquatic suction feeding, the predator opens its mouth and rapidly expands its buccal cavity, ...
The hydrodynamics of suction feeding is critical for the survival of fish larvae; failure to capture...
Possible pitfalls of techniques used to record pressures in prey-sucking fish have been analysed by ...
Oreochromis aureus, a species of tilapia, is a suspension-feeding fish that employs a pumping action...
Although the motor control of feeding is presumed to be generally conserved, some fishes are capable...
A micro-thermistor probe was inserted into the buccal cavity of freely swimming paddlefish to measur...
Over the last five decades, an increasing number of studies on fish behaviour in turbulent flows hav...
To capture and swallow food on land, a sticky tongue supported by the hyoid and gill arch skeleton h...
This dataset consists of a single .csv text file containing mouth and body kinematics, flow speeds a...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
To capture prey by suction, fish generate a flow of water that enters the mouth, and exits at the ba...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
<p/>1. Suction feeding is the dominant way to obtain food in teleosts. Its high demands on str...
<p/>In this thesis hydrodynamic principles are used to quantify relations between form and fun...
Suction feeding is pervasive among aquatic vertebrates, and our understanding of the fun...
During aquatic suction feeding, the predator opens its mouth and rapidly expands its buccal cavity, ...
The hydrodynamics of suction feeding is critical for the survival of fish larvae; failure to capture...
Possible pitfalls of techniques used to record pressures in prey-sucking fish have been analysed by ...
Oreochromis aureus, a species of tilapia, is a suspension-feeding fish that employs a pumping action...
Although the motor control of feeding is presumed to be generally conserved, some fishes are capable...
A micro-thermistor probe was inserted into the buccal cavity of freely swimming paddlefish to measur...
Over the last five decades, an increasing number of studies on fish behaviour in turbulent flows hav...
To capture and swallow food on land, a sticky tongue supported by the hyoid and gill arch skeleton h...