The use of biting to obtain food items attached to the substratum is an ecologically widespread and important mode of feeding among aquatic vertebrates, which rarely has been studied. We did the first evolutionary analyses of morphology and motion kinematics of the feeding apparatus in Indo-Pacific members of an iconic family of biters, the marine angelfishes (f. Pomacanthidae). We found clear interspecific differences in gut morphology that clearly reflected a wide range of trophic niches. In contrast, feeding apparatus morphology appeared to be conserved. A few unusual structural innovations enabled angelfishes to protrude their jaws, close them in the protruded state, and tear food items from the substratum at a high velocity. Only one c...
Teleost fishes capture prey using ram, suction, and biting behaviors. The relative use of these beha...
The origins of novel trophic specialization, in which organisms begin to exploit resources for the f...
Several species of butterflyfishes (Chaetodontidae) possess extremely elongate jaws, and feed mostly...
The use of biting to obtain food items attached to the substratum is an ecologically widespread and ...
On coral reefs, biting teleosts form a major component of reef fish assemblages.\ud Nevertheless, th...
The diversity of fishes on coral reefs is influenced by the evolution of feeding innovations. For in...
We investigated the functional morphology and ecology of biting among the squamipinnes, an assemblag...
Diversity of feeding mechanisms is a hallmark of reef fishes, but the history of this variation is n...
We examined prey-capture morphology and kinematics in the angelfish, Pomacanthus semicirculatus (Cuv...
The Labridae (including wrasses, the Odacidae and the Scaridae) is a species-rich group of perciform...
Diversity of feeding mechanisms is a hallmark of reef fishes, but the history of this variation is n...
The diversity of fishes on coral reefs is influenced by the evolution of feeding innovations. For in...
The Labridae is one of the most structurally and functionally diversified fish families on coral and...
The origins of novel trophic specialization, in which organisms begin to exploit novel resources for...
Deep-sea inhabitants survive high pressure, limited food availability, lack of sunlight, and cold te...
Teleost fishes capture prey using ram, suction, and biting behaviors. The relative use of these beha...
The origins of novel trophic specialization, in which organisms begin to exploit resources for the f...
Several species of butterflyfishes (Chaetodontidae) possess extremely elongate jaws, and feed mostly...
The use of biting to obtain food items attached to the substratum is an ecologically widespread and ...
On coral reefs, biting teleosts form a major component of reef fish assemblages.\ud Nevertheless, th...
The diversity of fishes on coral reefs is influenced by the evolution of feeding innovations. For in...
We investigated the functional morphology and ecology of biting among the squamipinnes, an assemblag...
Diversity of feeding mechanisms is a hallmark of reef fishes, but the history of this variation is n...
We examined prey-capture morphology and kinematics in the angelfish, Pomacanthus semicirculatus (Cuv...
The Labridae (including wrasses, the Odacidae and the Scaridae) is a species-rich group of perciform...
Diversity of feeding mechanisms is a hallmark of reef fishes, but the history of this variation is n...
The diversity of fishes on coral reefs is influenced by the evolution of feeding innovations. For in...
The Labridae is one of the most structurally and functionally diversified fish families on coral and...
The origins of novel trophic specialization, in which organisms begin to exploit novel resources for...
Deep-sea inhabitants survive high pressure, limited food availability, lack of sunlight, and cold te...
Teleost fishes capture prey using ram, suction, and biting behaviors. The relative use of these beha...
The origins of novel trophic specialization, in which organisms begin to exploit resources for the f...
Several species of butterflyfishes (Chaetodontidae) possess extremely elongate jaws, and feed mostly...