Rajiform locomotion in fishes is dominated by distinctive undulations of expanded pectoral fins. Unlike other fishes, which typically interact with the fluid environment via multiple fins, undulating rays modulate a single control surface, the pectoral disc, to perform pelagic locomotion, maneuvering and other behaviors. Complex deformations of the broad, flexible pectoral fins occur as the undulating wave varies in three dimensions; pectoral fin kinematics and changes in waveform with swimming speed cannot be fully quantified by two-dimensional analyses of the fin margin. We present the first three-dimensional analysis of undulatory rajiform locomotion in a batoid, the freshwater stingray Potamotrygon orbignyi. Using three cameras (250fram...
From insect wings to tetrapod limbs, the appendages of animals have diversified with the functional ...
Pufferfish swim and maneuver with a multi-fin system including dorsal, anal, caudal, and pectoral fi...
The manta is the largest marine organism to swim by dorsoventral oscillation (flapping) of the pecto...
Fishes are the most speciose group of living vertebrates, making up more than half of extant vertebr...
We explored how the flattened and rounded pectoral disc of the ocellate river stingray (Potamotrygon...
The pectoral fins of ray-finned fishes are flexible and capable of complex movements, and yet little...
The pectoral fins of ray-finned fishes are flexible and capable of complex movements, and yet little...
Fishes exhibit an astounding diversity of locomotor behaviors, from classic swimming with their body...
SYNOPSIS. The great anatomical diversification of paired fins within the Actinopterygii (ray-finned ...
As a result of years of research on the comparative biomechanics and physiology of moving through wa...
Fish swimming has often been simplified into the motions of a two-dimensional slice through the hori...
Synchronized bipedal movements of the pelvic fins provide propulsion (punting) during displacement o...
Moving through a dense fluid such as water presents some unique challenges to minimizing energy use ...
SYNOPSIS. The shape and motion of the pectoral fins vary considerably among fishes that swim in the ...
The area of fish locomotion is infested with the prevailing and dominating model which violates the ...
From insect wings to tetrapod limbs, the appendages of animals have diversified with the functional ...
Pufferfish swim and maneuver with a multi-fin system including dorsal, anal, caudal, and pectoral fi...
The manta is the largest marine organism to swim by dorsoventral oscillation (flapping) of the pecto...
Fishes are the most speciose group of living vertebrates, making up more than half of extant vertebr...
We explored how the flattened and rounded pectoral disc of the ocellate river stingray (Potamotrygon...
The pectoral fins of ray-finned fishes are flexible and capable of complex movements, and yet little...
The pectoral fins of ray-finned fishes are flexible and capable of complex movements, and yet little...
Fishes exhibit an astounding diversity of locomotor behaviors, from classic swimming with their body...
SYNOPSIS. The great anatomical diversification of paired fins within the Actinopterygii (ray-finned ...
As a result of years of research on the comparative biomechanics and physiology of moving through wa...
Fish swimming has often been simplified into the motions of a two-dimensional slice through the hori...
Synchronized bipedal movements of the pelvic fins provide propulsion (punting) during displacement o...
Moving through a dense fluid such as water presents some unique challenges to minimizing energy use ...
SYNOPSIS. The shape and motion of the pectoral fins vary considerably among fishes that swim in the ...
The area of fish locomotion is infested with the prevailing and dominating model which violates the ...
From insect wings to tetrapod limbs, the appendages of animals have diversified with the functional ...
Pufferfish swim and maneuver with a multi-fin system including dorsal, anal, caudal, and pectoral fi...
The manta is the largest marine organism to swim by dorsoventral oscillation (flapping) of the pecto...